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Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Sun Dec 29, 2013 6:48 pm
by pandaphil
Liminaut wrote:
pandaphil wrote:Well lets see, how about during the day, the pool is staffed by aquatic therapists who're there to work with students. After school there are student volunteers who serve as lifeguards. Then of course after cerfew the buildings locked up.
It makes a ton of sense for Yamaku to have an aquatic therapist. There are a lot of students for which aquatic therapy would be the best way to get some exercise.
I could swear this was actually mentioned in the story. That its mainly used for therapy.

But I can see it being open for recreational use for a few hours in the evenings, and on weekends, when you'd need one of the student volunteer lifeguards on duty.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Sun Dec 29, 2013 8:33 pm
by Potato
Liminaut wrote:I've known two diabetics pretty well; they both had multiple incidences of downing a pint of ice cream and then passing out [occasionally quite far from where they started] as a f-you to the universe.

I don't know what the Japanese court system is like, but in the U.S. letting disabled students swim without supervision would be begging for a school-ending lawsuit.
"Do what you can't, just because you ca- BUT DON'T BE STUPID ABOUT IT!" - Rin, supplemented by Misha!Shizune.

If Ace Attorney is any indication, the Japanese court system is run by Santa and it's more lax than stories around a campfire.

And as for those "extensive rules about running in the hallways"...We never once see Emi get any consequences for doing exactly that. :lol: I dunno how extensive it could be if the worst result is flak from Shiichan.

We never see the pool...And also never see any medical staff other than Nurse. Presumably, the rest could be lifeguards. :lol: And if the students volunteer as lifeguards, one has to wonder which among them would be doing so. *cue Kenji slo-mo running topless toward the water, ala Baywatch*

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 1:55 am
by Oddball
We never see the pool...And also never see any medical staff other than Nurse.
We never see any, but Hisao does mention a female nurse at one point.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 4:29 am
by Atario
pandaphil wrote:I could swear this was actually mentioned in the story. That its mainly used for therapy.
Yep.
The game itself wrote:Shizune: "…"

Misha: "This is the auxiliary building here. There's a lot of official and important stuff inside, like the Yamaku Foundation office and all the nurses' offices. They even have a swimming pool!"

Hisao: "How is that official?"

Shizune: "…"

Misha: "Don't be silly, Hicchan! It's for physical therapy of course.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 8:16 am
by emmjay
Potato wrote: And if the students volunteer as lifeguards, one has to wonder which among them would be doing so. *cue Kenji slo-mo running topless toward the water, ala Baywatch*
And then smacking into a pole he didn't see, still in slo-mo. :lol:
Something just occurred to me. If Lilly were the swimming type, she would totally own at Marco Polo with her hearing.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 2:47 pm
by Steinherz
emmjay wrote:
Potato wrote: And if the students volunteer as lifeguards, one has to wonder which among them would be doing so. *cue Kenji slo-mo running topless toward the water, ala Baywatch*
And then smacking into a pole he didn't see, still in slo-mo. :lol:
Something just occurred to me. If Lilly were the swimming type, she would totally own at Marco Polo with her hearing.
I lost my shit imagining Kenji doing that :lol:

And yeah, Lilly would own at Marco Polo

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:04 pm
by Xaredian
Liminaut wrote:Yamaku is very conscious of the student's well-being: note the full-time nursing staff and extensive rules about running in the hallways.

Teenagers can do very stupid things [surprise!]. I've known two diabetics pretty well; they both had multiple incidences of downing a pint of ice cream and then passing out [occasionally quite far from where they started] as a f-you to the universe. So I could easily an epileptic teenager going for a solo swim -- just because it would be such an outstandingly stupid idea.

So my personal suspicion would be that the pool is closed unless there is a lifeguard on duty. As a pure guess, I could imagine the nursing staff being trained in lifeguard duties, so the school doesn't have to have a dedicated lifeguard position.

I don't know what the Japanese court system is like, but in the U.S. letting disabled students swim without supervision would be begging for a school-ending lawsuit.
Just a pint? I'm insulted.
Potato wrote:
Liminaut wrote:I've known two diabetics pretty well; they both had multiple incidences of downing a pint of ice cream and then passing out [occasionally quite far from where they started] as a f-you to the universe.

I don't know what the Japanese court system is like, but in the U.S. letting disabled students swim without supervision would be begging for a school-ending lawsuit.
"Do what you can't, just because you ca- BUT DON'T BE STUPID ABOUT IT!" - Rin, supplemented by Misha!Shizune.

If Ace Attorney is any indication, the Japanese court system is run by Santa and it's more lax than stories around a campfire.

And as for those "extensive rules about running in the hallways"...We never once see Emi get any consequences for doing exactly that. :lol: I dunno how extensive it could be if the worst result is flak from Shiichan.

We never see the pool...And also never see any medical staff other than Nurse. Presumably, the rest could be lifeguards. :lol: And if the students volunteer as lifeguards, one has to wonder which among them would be doing so. *cue Kenji slo-mo running topless toward the water, ala Baywatch*
Lol.
I was more thinking people like Misha would be the lifeguard. You know, the one's without disabilities.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 7:37 pm
by Kyler Thatch
Oddball wrote:
We never see the pool...And also never see any medical staff other than Nurse.
We never see any, but Hisao does mention a female nurse at one point.
The Nurse could not possibly handle all the medical needs of 200+ students single-handedly. But the other staff don't really become relevant enough to mention, especially considering Hisao doesn't need anything like physical therapy.

Anyway, the only time you'd need an on-duty lifeguard is when the pool is being used recreationally, I think. When it's being used for physical therapy, one of the staff is there with them. If it's for PE classes or (hypothetically) the swimming club, there's going to be a teacher supervising.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Mon Dec 30, 2013 10:18 pm
by Lianam
Mirage_GSM wrote:
216 is a low number
Not really. Hisao's class has 18 people including himself. There are four classes in his year and three years of High School.
So if Hisao's class is average, the school has exactly 216 students.
That is of course, assuming that there is no class 3-5 or higher, or classes 1-5 or 2-5 for that matter. :P

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 6:54 am
by Guest Poster
I don't think there's a class 3-5. I recall a statement from the devs saying that there were 4 separate 3rd grade classes.
If Ace Attorney is any indication, the Japanese court system is run by Santa and it's more lax than stories around a campfire.
Never played Ace Attorney, but I doubt an over-the-top VN is representative of a real life court.

That said, Japanese are skeptical of courts and lawyers. In fact, they like to keep the amount of lawyers in their country limited. (law exams are crazily tough, even for the academic elite, for that specific purpose) They abhor the idea of a "claim culture" and prefer to settle things privately outside of court. Japanese companies, when not dealing with foreign businesses (and even sometimes when dealing with foreign companies), dislike convoluted business contracts with lots of fine prints and they like to keep their contracts simple. Instead of fine prints, they use the personal honor of the people involved as leverage.

So parents concerned about the absence of a life guard would probably complain to the school a lot, but wouldn't file a lawsuit unless somebody drowned.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 8:38 am
by pandaphil
Oh shit son, someone pushed Emi in the pool. Don't let that adorable expression fool you. There's gonna be hell to pay.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 5:02 pm
by Liminaut
Guest Poster wrote: So parents concerned about the absence of a life guard would probably complain to the school a lot, but wouldn't file a lawsuit unless somebody drowned.
It might be that after a drowning there is no lawsuit, but instead after the school has lost honor by failing to protect the children the vast majority of the parents pull their children out of Yamaku -- still basically an end-of-school event.

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 5:18 pm
by Guest Poster
True, that'd also be a somewhat feasable possibility, though pragmatism may kick in before it'd get to that. It's not like there's a Yamaku in every town, you know?

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 5:33 pm
by bhtooefr
Although, it could be that an administrator is forced to quit over it, by someone.

(The special school (specializing in behavioral handicaps, learning disabilities, and mental health treatment) that I went to, after I graduated, actually had an incident (not involving a student) that led to their director being forced out. Most of the staff quit with the director, and a new school was started 7 miles down the road - actually in the building that the original school had just moved out of 3 or so years prior. Most of the students were switched to the new school, to stay with the old staff.)

Re: Yamaku's Swimming Pool

Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 5:44 pm
by Guest Poster
Or rather, quit themselves. In shame. Or jump off the school's roof.