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how south korea respond to teach you a lessons?

South Korea has responded to Teach You a Lesson mostly as a mix of policy interest and public debate rather than as a single official action. The show has pushed real discussion about restoring teachers’ authority, and a ruling- party think tank even proposed a teacher-protection bureau inspired by the drama.

What happened

The drama’s fictional “Educational Rights Protection Bureau” has become part of real education-policy talk in South Korea. A June 2026 report said education officials were citing the show in discussions about school violence, disruptive students, and stronger protection for teachers.

Public reaction

The reaction has been divided. Some teachers and viewers see the series as cathartic and as a harsh reminder of problems in the school system, while others worry that its vigilante-style approach could normalize violence or oversimplify school conflict.

Policy response

A major concrete response came from the Institute for Democracy, which proposed a real-world support agency to protect teachers from complaints and legal pressure. Their idea was not a vigilante unit, but a support structure inside the education system to handle mediation, protection, and case classification.

In plain English

So, South Korea is not “copying” the drama outright, but it is clearly treating the show as a pressure test for real education reform. The overall response is: the show struck a nerve, and policymakers are using it to talk about how to protect teachers better.

TL;DR: South Korea’s response has been a real-life policy debate, split public opinion, and a proposal to strengthen teacher protection — not an official adoption of the drama’s vigilante style.