An education board in western Japan will end observation of mokushoku – or silent eating but some parents said the move was premature

After two years of eating in near-monastic silence, children in Japan have been given permission to chat to their classmates over lunch, as Covid cases in the country continue to fall.

Throughout the pandemic, primary and middle school classrooms have reverberated to the sound of cutlery meeting crockery and, in some cases, piped music, but the young diners have been silenced as part of efforts to prevent the spread of the virus.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

IMF chief warns world heading towards age of greater instability

Kristalina Georgieva points to ‘fundamental shift’, with fragile global ties and more…

Owen Farrell hopes England’s Six Nations win lifts nation’s spirits

Eddie Jones’s side secure title on dramatic final day ‘We know how…

Two-child limit on UK welfare benefits ‘has failed to push parents into jobs’

Exclusive: Policy misunderstands realities of caring roles and has left hundreds of…