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The Student News Site of Daegu International School

Jets Flyover

Daegu International School's Student News Site
  • Wednesday, August 12: First Day of School
  • Don't forget your spirit shirts on Friday
The Student News Site of Daegu International School

Jets Flyover

The Student News Site of Daegu International School

Jets Flyover

A K-Gen Zer glares at her uncertain reflection, dazed, as her identity splinters into multiple chambers. Loose alphabets wait patiently to be compressed into a tidy four-letter answer.

A K-shortcut to being understood

Agnew Kim, Writer and Photographer January 22, 2026

From Korean middle school cafeterias to white-collar break rooms, MBTI results casually roll off the tongue of someone at some point. As near greetings, MBTI labels pepper doses of entertainment and gossip...

Previously, the carrot knife could only be purchased by those 14 years of age or older. As stores started handing the toy to children without an ID check, the Office of Education started to enforce such previous laws and even issued its ban in academic environments.

Joy and safety in the balance due to children’s toy craze

Raina Lee, Multimedia Director February 27, 2024
Children carved out trouble for themselves when they brought popular new toy knives to schools in Korea over the past few months. Known as the “carrot knife” in English, 당근칼 is a plastic toy knife that operates similarly to the classic fidget spinner but resembles a switchblade. Consumers can easily purchase the toy on the internet or at local stores. Advanced flickers of the toy film and share videos on how to spin them stylishly like professional knife performers.
The media sensationalizes green energy and recycling as a solution to the climate crisis. However, this poses further concerns such as deforestation.

The uncomfortable truth about sustainability

Jerome Kwon, Writer January 15, 2024
Environmental activists crowd social media news feeds with provocative messages about an imminent apocalypse. New “striking research” on global warming constantly makes headlines - For the past 35 years, the New York Times published 13,389 articles on climate alone. 
Secondary principal Mrs. Cameron and Jamila Karam(12) shares a worksheet on which they wrote down things that make up their core identity. The two lines then switch partners by sliding down a row, which allows participants to meet diverse individuals.

Diversity consultant guides consortium of international schools through EARCOS Weekend Workshop

Selina Son, Managing Editor December 11, 2023
To embrace the four pillars of DEIB — diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging — DIS met with Jessica Wei Huang, an educational equity consultant, and constructed a panel to learn about the school’s sense of “belonging” within the student body. With the freshly equipped spirit of determination, Huang hosted a workshop for the East Asia Regional Council of Schools(EARCOS) the next day. 
SOAR hashed over racial slurs in our community in October's SOARing Discussion.

Discrimination Dialogue: Racial slurs

Leanne Yoon, Selina Son, and Catherine Park October 29, 2023
Offensive racial jokes often take the spotlight on social media and garner thousands of likes. It often starts with a slight jab at a stereotype, but eventually expands to full on disrespect. These jokes, despite seeming innocuous, affect real people, relationships, and cultures. So, as president and vice of the Students Organizing Against Racism(SOAR), Selina Son and Leanne Yoon give you the ins and outs of the lunch club’s October discussion topic: racial slurs. 
Greta Gerwig's Barbie faces criticism in Korea due to its women's rights awareness and feminism messages.

I’m a Barbie girl in a Korean world

Serena Travers, Catherine Park, and Leanne Yoon September 4, 2023
Greta Gerwig’s Barbie boasted unmatched box office sales as the billion-dollar movie of the year. In the Western world, Barbie mania peaked to the point of total media saturation alongside release date teammate Oppenheimer. Strangely, this global phenomenon missed its mark in a few countries, including Korea.
Especially in Korea, the stigma around periods is apparent from the linguistics behind it – many people refer to it as "the day."

Period shaming affects everybody

Leanne Yoon, Catherine Park, and Luna Kang August 28, 2023
We hear the phrase “periods happen naturally” whenever teachers bring it up during sex ed. However, despite all this “education”, people still shy away from and stigmatize the topic. The shame society associates with menstruation manifests itself in many aspects of people’s lives.
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