This review may contain spoilers
What lesson are they trying to teach?
I caved and watched Teach You A Lesson. Let me tell you: a student getting slapped around should be the least of your concerns about this kdrama.
There are some serious WTF moments and the way some issues are dealt with are definitely laced with korean right wing ideology.
Spoilers ahead.
As usual, when talking about social issues from other countries, disclaimer: I am not Korean. Just an art curator studying asian cultures and histories to better understand the creative processes. I am not here to put my western POV into this story, just to point out some things I found interesting.
Yes, Teach You A Lesson is a fantasy-action kdrama about confronting severe school bullying and protecting victims when institutions fail. I will also say it puts in the table school violence and educational issues that are rarely dealt with in a proper way in South Korea.
First, you should approach it as part of the kdrama family of Weak Hero Class 1 and Study Group. Except here, it’s a government agency doing the dirty work and not students beating the lights out of each other. The power dynamics are not the same.
Second, some episodes are really well done. I liked the one about a primary teacher being harassed by an overly critical parent telling them how to treat their “precious” children. There’s been several reports primary teachers taking extreme desicions because of it and government remains inactive.
I also liked the episode dealing with a mother pressuring her son to get into one of SKY med schools. It shows how children are pushed to extremes (mentally, emotionally and physically) to the point of pill dependency and burn out before they are even in university.
There are other issues such as online game gambling, something that has become a problem for high school student and parents around the world. Also, wealthy parents paying teachers to get exams ahead of time to the detriment of middle class/poor families whose children work and excel on their own.
BTW, the kdrama treats all kind of addictions as a crime and uses prison as “rehabilitation” but never questions if there should be new legislation to deal with this crisis, nor offers any message about access to psychological treatment.
And sure, a few episodes are pure fantasy.
With that said, let’s move on to the episodes that made me rise by eyebrows: A teen influencer accuses her male teacher of sexual harassment that leads to his death. Spoiler, she lied. This my first red flag.
Teach You A Lesson ot once takes this girl’s accusation seriously and offhandedly writes it off as a bully acting out. Using THIS particular issue to make a point about “teachers right to protect themselves against kids” is wild.
This episode could have been a good opportunity to explore the complicated relationship between teachers and students in a hyper-mediated environment. How both are left to become victims due to lack of government legislation or the naturalisation of a culture of online shaming, doxxing and harassment. Some reports published lately could have been enough for a solid episode if Teach You A Lesson really wanted to lean into a more realist approach. But this is not that kind of kdrama and you should be aware of that when watching it.
There’s also a direct or underhanded commentary, depending on the story, about kids hierarchy according to social status and economic circumstances. As well as “broken families” being an excuse to dwell into crime, even when we see some of these rich kids are probably the worst of all.
There’s a lot of talking about violence when it comes to this kdrama but I don’t see anyone saying anything about corporal punishment becoming an issue in South Korea only in the 2000s. And it was only by 2021 that all corporal punishment of children was banned under South Korean law. This means that, until 5 years ago, physical punishment was widely accepted in families, schools, the military and the justice system. And it’s likely still very much a thing today (when people are not looking… or not). Just giving context for those following the discourse of Teach You A Lesson.
Now, the most WTF moment of them all (for me): a governmental office illegally holding in prison four juvenile delinquents (shaved heads and all), refusing their parents habeas corpus, and exposing them to hardened criminals for bullying and dealing drugs is perhaps a right winger’s wet dream.
The fact this comes in the coattails of Shinsegae Group’s Starbucks Tank Day campaign leaves me speechless. This episode is truly tone deaf or outright propaganda.
Teach You A Lesson’s production team had no way to know this “controversy” would happen weeks before the release of the kdrama. But it does give pause, to say the least, they everyone involved in this kdrama thought that practices usually seen during dictatorships or extreme right wing regimes was a proper resolution to the issue of juvenile delinquency. Characters are criminals or victims. There’s no middle ground.
I said at the beginning this kdrama belongs to a particular genre of kdrama but, unlike those, Teach You A Lesson seems to want to deliver a message about the education system. That’s why I think it’s a missed opportunity to point out the need for legislation and educational reforms.
You can read more about the very real social issues the kdrama and original webtoon are based on here:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-66655572
https://thediplomat.com/2025/06/south-koreas-education-obsession-is-a-national-emergency/
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/2187691/how-south-koreas-metoo-generation-fights-sexual-abuse-schools
https://world.kbs.co.kr/service/news_view.htm?lang=e&Seq_Code=192623
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwangju_Inhwa_School
https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/southkorea/society/20260515/80-of-teachers-fear-child-abuse-accusations-for-routine-classroom-guidance
https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10576776
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/06/starbucks-south-korea-tank-day-promotion-blunder
There are some serious WTF moments and the way some issues are dealt with are definitely laced with korean right wing ideology.
Spoilers ahead.
As usual, when talking about social issues from other countries, disclaimer: I am not Korean. Just an art curator studying asian cultures and histories to better understand the creative processes. I am not here to put my western POV into this story, just to point out some things I found interesting.
Yes, Teach You A Lesson is a fantasy-action kdrama about confronting severe school bullying and protecting victims when institutions fail. I will also say it puts in the table school violence and educational issues that are rarely dealt with in a proper way in South Korea.
First, you should approach it as part of the kdrama family of Weak Hero Class 1 and Study Group. Except here, it’s a government agency doing the dirty work and not students beating the lights out of each other. The power dynamics are not the same.
Second, some episodes are really well done. I liked the one about a primary teacher being harassed by an overly critical parent telling them how to treat their “precious” children. There’s been several reports primary teachers taking extreme desicions because of it and government remains inactive.
I also liked the episode dealing with a mother pressuring her son to get into one of SKY med schools. It shows how children are pushed to extremes (mentally, emotionally and physically) to the point of pill dependency and burn out before they are even in university.
There are other issues such as online game gambling, something that has become a problem for high school student and parents around the world. Also, wealthy parents paying teachers to get exams ahead of time to the detriment of middle class/poor families whose children work and excel on their own.
BTW, the kdrama treats all kind of addictions as a crime and uses prison as “rehabilitation” but never questions if there should be new legislation to deal with this crisis, nor offers any message about access to psychological treatment.
And sure, a few episodes are pure fantasy.
With that said, let’s move on to the episodes that made me rise by eyebrows: A teen influencer accuses her male teacher of sexual harassment that leads to his death. Spoiler, she lied. This my first red flag.
Teach You A Lesson ot once takes this girl’s accusation seriously and offhandedly writes it off as a bully acting out. Using THIS particular issue to make a point about “teachers right to protect themselves against kids” is wild.
This episode could have been a good opportunity to explore the complicated relationship between teachers and students in a hyper-mediated environment. How both are left to become victims due to lack of government legislation or the naturalisation of a culture of online shaming, doxxing and harassment. Some reports published lately could have been enough for a solid episode if Teach You A Lesson really wanted to lean into a more realist approach. But this is not that kind of kdrama and you should be aware of that when watching it.
There’s also a direct or underhanded commentary, depending on the story, about kids hierarchy according to social status and economic circumstances. As well as “broken families” being an excuse to dwell into crime, even when we see some of these rich kids are probably the worst of all.
There’s a lot of talking about violence when it comes to this kdrama but I don’t see anyone saying anything about corporal punishment becoming an issue in South Korea only in the 2000s. And it was only by 2021 that all corporal punishment of children was banned under South Korean law. This means that, until 5 years ago, physical punishment was widely accepted in families, schools, the military and the justice system. And it’s likely still very much a thing today (when people are not looking… or not). Just giving context for those following the discourse of Teach You A Lesson.
Now, the most WTF moment of them all (for me): a governmental office illegally holding in prison four juvenile delinquents (shaved heads and all), refusing their parents habeas corpus, and exposing them to hardened criminals for bullying and dealing drugs is perhaps a right winger’s wet dream.
The fact this comes in the coattails of Shinsegae Group’s Starbucks Tank Day campaign leaves me speechless. This episode is truly tone deaf or outright propaganda.
Teach You A Lesson’s production team had no way to know this “controversy” would happen weeks before the release of the kdrama. But it does give pause, to say the least, they everyone involved in this kdrama thought that practices usually seen during dictatorships or extreme right wing regimes was a proper resolution to the issue of juvenile delinquency. Characters are criminals or victims. There’s no middle ground.
I said at the beginning this kdrama belongs to a particular genre of kdrama but, unlike those, Teach You A Lesson seems to want to deliver a message about the education system. That’s why I think it’s a missed opportunity to point out the need for legislation and educational reforms.
You can read more about the very real social issues the kdrama and original webtoon are based on here:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-66655572
https://thediplomat.com/2025/06/south-koreas-education-obsession-is-a-national-emergency/
https://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east-asia/article/2187691/how-south-koreas-metoo-generation-fights-sexual-abuse-schools
https://world.kbs.co.kr/service/news_view.htm?lang=e&Seq_Code=192623
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwangju_Inhwa_School
https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/southkorea/society/20260515/80-of-teachers-fear-child-abuse-accusations-for-routine-classroom-guidance
https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10576776
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/06/starbucks-south-korea-tank-day-promotion-blunder
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