In most schools it is more like a gong. I added some links below.
Yes, most German schools have bells that signal the start and end of classes, breaks, and other important times during the school day. These bells help students and teachers know when to move between classes or activities.
a old prose schools
German schools typically begin between 7:30 and 8:30 in the morning, depending on the location and type of school.
The missing letter is "ö". The word is "Klingglöckchen," which means "jingle bells" in German.
The possessive form of the plural noun bells is bells'.Example: The bells' sound can be heard all over town.
During World War 1, due to anti-German sentiment, schools in the United States stopped teaching the German language and sauerkraut was sometimes renamed "liberty cabbage." This was part of efforts to dissociate from German culture and avoid associations with the enemy during the war.
The German word for bells is "Glocken", but don't say to a German speaking woman she has nice "Glocken" this means something different. *G*
Glocken
American schools talk in English, and German schools talk in German.
Large bells are out of fashion in schools today, but the electric version (sounding more like buzzers to be true) replaced them in most schools to signal the end of classes or recess.
German is a classified subject in schools. Not all primary schools have to teach it though. All secondary/high schools have to teach it. Most secondary schools give students the option on French, German or Spanish. So schools do other languages as well though. But yes, German is a classified subject under the National Curriculum.
a old prose schools
Yes, it is a compulsory subject in German schools
Most german schools don't.
german schools have no uniform which is cool but still australian schools look more official and show pride by wearing a uniform you can also tell the diffrence between schools by wearing a uniform.
most of them do
Grundschule.
Yes pupils in German schools also participate in activities after school just like we do in UK and usa