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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Moving to the US – Am I Bonkers?

877 replies

keithmoo · 08/02/2025 16:28

DH has just been offered a job in the US, and it’s a really good opportunity – more money, career progression, and all that jazz. It would mean uprooting the DC (6 and 3) and moving to a completely new country, which is giving me the absolute fear. We’d likely be going to a mid-sized city in the Midwest (think Ohio/Indiana sort of area), which I know very little about apart from what I’ve seen in films – which I assume isn’t entirely accurate!

Has anyone done this? What’s the reality of life in the US as a Brit? I’m worried about things like healthcare (I’ve heard horror stories), schooling (seems like it varies wildly), and just generally settling in. Also, I’m a bit concerned about making friends – I’ve heard Americans can be friendly but in a surface-level way, and I don’t want to be stuck in some weird expat bubble.

Would love any advice from those who’ve made the move. What were the biggest culture shocks? Any regrets? What do I need to know that no one tells you?

Also, please reassure me that I won’t have to live off terrible coffee and weird chocolate for the foreseeable…

OP posts:
Thread gallery
9
JoyousGreyOrca · 09/02/2025 21:34

sabbii · 09/02/2025 21:25

I actively researched this. I could double my salary but the cost of living is very high (Bay area, SF) where the good careers are. Plus taxes on everything.
Remember health insurance is expensive and only ever works if you never get sick otherwise get prepared to drain your bank account.
Finally, 1/3 of the hols and a work till you drop culture.
All in all Blighty worked outbest for quality of life and work /life balance

And migrants often forget to factor in property taxes

StrikeAlways · 09/02/2025 21:39

JoyousGreyOrca · 09/02/2025 21:17

There have been KKK flyers distributed in Ohio, there are 50 extremist white hate groups, Springfield City is currently suing a Neo Nazi group after months of harassment, some months ago there was a Neo Nazi march.
There are other states where racism is a big issue as well, and others where it is not.
I would happily visit Ohio. I would not raise children there.

Jesus! 😡

BruFord · 09/02/2025 21:44

sabbii · 09/02/2025 21:25

I actively researched this. I could double my salary but the cost of living is very high (Bay area, SF) where the good careers are. Plus taxes on everything.
Remember health insurance is expensive and only ever works if you never get sick otherwise get prepared to drain your bank account.
Finally, 1/3 of the hols and a work till you drop culture.
All in all Blighty worked outbest for quality of life and work /life balance

@sabbii Yes, California is hugely expensive, we have relatives in SF and the COL is off the scale. I wouldn’t move there, we couldn’t afford it!

Megsy81 · 09/02/2025 21:57

Cornishclio · 08/02/2025 19:07

Providing you retrain in certain professions and take a US driving test. Someone we knew was a critical care pediatric nurse in UK but had to retrain and take US qualifications. It used to be if you stayed in US more than three months on spousal visa you need to take a US driving test. You can't just move to US and transfer automatically re jobs etc especially if on spousal visa.

That’s different to women not being able to drive though isn’t it!

For the record, I moved to Ohio on a spousal visa in May last year. I was able to drive without issue on my UK licence but applied for an Ohio licence when I received my green card to add to my official status. Yes I had to take a test but so much easier than the UK test.

Yes in some very specific professions you will need to retrain, as is the case for people moving countries the world over, but again that is specific circumstances and not a general rule. I’m in medical ops and although very different, I didn’t need to retrain

DdraigGoch · 09/02/2025 21:58

HellsBalls · 09/02/2025 14:54

Chance of being shot dead in US is 0.02%.
Chance of being stabbed to death in UK is 0.05%.
Courtesy of ChatGPT.

What a load of drivel, you're seriously using ChatGPT as a source? AI is of course well known for being such a reliable source which never makes anything up... (sarcasm by the way, in case the hard of thinking don't spot it)

Some reliable figures:
UK homicide rate: 1.1 per 100k pop (2023)¹
US homicide rate: 6.4 per 100k pop (2023)¹
Ohio homicide rate: 8.5 per 100k pop (2022)²
Indiana homicide rate 8.4 per 100k pop (2022)²

Want to talk specific murder weapons?
US stabbing death rate: 0.53 per 100k pop (2021)³
UK stabbing death rate: 0.08 per 100k pop (2021)³
Yes, you read that right, you're more than six times more likely to be stabbed in the US than the UK. So stop listening to ChatGPT which probably took Marjorie Taylor Greene seriously
US firearm homicide rate: 5.41 per 100k pop (2021)⁴
UK (E&W) firearm homicide rate: 0.05 per 100k pop (2021)⁴

Sources:

  1. https://ourworldindata.org/homicides
  2. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/sosmap/homicide_mortality/homicide.htm
  3. https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/stabbing-deaths-by-country
  4. https://dataunodc.un.org/dp-intentional-homicide-victims (select "by mechanisms" and filter by firearms)

Homicides

How common are homicides? How does this differ across countries? And how is this changing over time? Explore global data on homicides.

https://ourworldindata.org/homicides

Megsy81 · 09/02/2025 22:05

Delatron · 09/02/2025 16:39

Leading cause of death for children in the US is firearms..

The firearms element for me was a massive concern before I moved to Ohio …. It terrified me so I am absolutely not pro gun in any way!! What you don’t hear about with that stat though is that it’s the leading cause of death for children NOT as a result of mass shootings as lots assume but by mishandling and storage of firearms in the home. Now if there were no firearms allowed , as should be the case, that would obviously remove it as the number one reason but I think it’s important to provide context

PetuniaT · 09/02/2025 22:06

If you are bonkers you'll fit right in

DdraigGoch · 09/02/2025 22:07

OonaStubbs · 09/02/2025 15:25

Your chances of being shot or stabbed to death in either country are miniscule. You are far more likely to die in a car accident in either country.

Yeah, road safety would concern me more than violent crime. Some road traffic fatality rates:
UK: 2.4 per 100k pop (2021)
US: 14.2 per 100k pop (2021)
So the UK has some of the safest roads in the developed world, whereas the US has the most dangerous. And posters wonder why I think right-on-red is a bad idea (among other things).

www.who.int/data/gho/data/indicators/indicator-details/GHO/estimated-road-traffic-death-rate-(per-100-000-population)

DdraigGoch · 09/02/2025 22:16

RingoJuice · 09/02/2025 16:50

Not really. Why would you think there would be? Even Latinos have their own spaces, it’s just what we prefer.

What did you think diversity meant?

Sounds like more of a series of ghettos than a "cultural melting pot"

Booboobagins · 09/02/2025 23:38

My BF moved to USA - her hubby was relocated there by his employer. Their kids were 5 and 7 yo.

They've all taken to it like ducks to water. They love it. Bought a house with a pool in a fab part of New Jersey. But funnily don't have American accents.

They found Americans love Brits. I don't think they'll move back. Their youngest is studying at a London College cos it's cheaper than doing a degree at an American uni - they pay overseas student fees of £24k pa.

I spent 4 weeks at her place a few years back - loved it.

I wish I'd pushed more for a job out in the USA. Yes I think there may be trouble ahead - its super expensive to grocery shop already and with Trumps tariffs, ethnic cleansing and discriminatory edicts it may get bump soon - but you can always come back if it becomes unbareable.

If you don't go you'll never know.

CanadaNotAMum · 09/02/2025 23:41

Itsbetterbythebeach · 09/02/2025 18:21

@CanadaNotAMum Can I ask do you live in the US or Canada.? Just wondering from your user name. I think you’ll find that Trumps dickish comments are a very bullying negotiating tactic rather than a declaration of war. However if my DH gets call up papers to join up to invade Canada I’ll hold up my hands and you can say I told you so…..

I’m in Canada. 80% of Canadians live within 200km of the border. And I don’t think it’s a negotiation tactic anymore. Our own Prime Minister was caught in a hot mic a few days go admitting that the annexation threat is “very serious”. We are rich in natural resources, we provide electricity to huge swaths of the eastern seaboard, we have oil sands and oil under the ocean, and…we have the North. Trump wants it.

Edit to add: the actual quote by Trudeau was "Mr. Trump has it in mind that the easiest way to do it is absorbing our country and it is a real thing."

DdraigGoch · 09/02/2025 23:56

Itsbetterbythebeach · 09/02/2025 20:03

Guessing you have been living in the UK for quite a few years. US health insurers cannot exclude pre existing health conditions since the Affordable Care Act came into effect in 2014. It is likely that the OP will get an excellent family health care package (fairly standard for an executive in a multinational company and we normally have the perk of a healthcare advocate thrown in who will negotiate any care issues for you). Where the US healthcare system fails badly is for the families who earn too much to qualify for the state subsidized programs but too little to get the gold plated benefits of the more senior employees. For them co pays & deductibles can run into multiple ‘ 000 if things go wrong and they do chase you for payment (I was horrified when I was in hospital over here once, drugged up on pain killers, & one of the admin staff did actually visit me to ask how I intended to settle my co pay. I gave her a credit card & she took the payment right at my bedside 😱.j so believe me I know it’s not a fair system. Ironically one of the things that is making me hesitant to move back to the UK is the fact that I have MS so I cannot get private health insurance to cover me in the UK. From what I’ve read in the UK papers I think I might find the NHS a bit of a culture shock…

Hasn't the new President promised to repeal the ACA?

knitnerd90 · 10/02/2025 00:02

He promised that last time too and failed to do it. The GOP only has a majority of 3 seats. The odds of passing meaningful legislation are slim.

JoyousGreyOrca · 10/02/2025 00:10

He can't repeal it. He has already made changes to the Affordable Care Act. There may be more to come.

On January 20, 2025, President Trump signed a series of executive orders. Two were aimed at reversing several key elements of the Affordable Care Act that were implemented during the Biden administration. This included rescinding President Biden's 2021 executive order 14009, which expanded open enrollment periods for ACA plans, as well as 2022 executive order 14070, which aimed to lower ACA premiums.
Executive Order 14009, titled "Strengthening Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act," includes several key components designed to increase access to affordable health care and reduce the number of uninsured Americans:
Reversal of Trump administration policies: The order sought to undo measures that limited ACA provisions or made healthcare less accessible.
Longer enrollment periods: The order encouraged states to lengthen enrollment periods and provided additional federal support. As a result, many states extended their enrollment windows to ensure broader access to affordable healthcare.

DdraigGoch · 10/02/2025 00:14

Megsy81 · 09/02/2025 22:05

The firearms element for me was a massive concern before I moved to Ohio …. It terrified me so I am absolutely not pro gun in any way!! What you don’t hear about with that stat though is that it’s the leading cause of death for children NOT as a result of mass shootings as lots assume but by mishandling and storage of firearms in the home. Now if there were no firearms allowed , as should be the case, that would obviously remove it as the number one reason but I think it’s important to provide context

Yes, half of firearm deaths are accidents or suicide. That's not terribly reassuring. I spent time in the forces and weapon safety was taken very seriously. Multiple keys (from different locations) and codes required to get a weapon out of the armoury. Even for private gun owners there are rules about secure storage and routine police checks. The casual attitude to this from some owners in the US is concerning. Lethal weapons need treating with respect (the same applies to cars, BTW)

BruFord · 10/02/2025 00:20

@DdraigGoch @JoyousGreyOrca Also, this is an area where individual states can decide how to proceed. 10 states have never adopted the ACA mandates, for example, and if it were repealed, others states may decide to stick with its mandates anyway or even expand them.

Where I live, that’s what happened when Roe vs. Wade was repealed. Instead of restricting services, the state released additional funds for women’s healthcare.

Thats why we keep saying that the OP must research the particular location where her DH has been offered a job.

DdraigGoch · 10/02/2025 00:20

knitnerd90 · 10/02/2025 00:02

He promised that last time too and failed to do it. The GOP only has a majority of 3 seats. The odds of passing meaningful legislation are slim.

Last time there were adults in the room to rein in his excesses. This time the adults have been fired. Even if he can't repeal it in full, he'll do everything he can to sabotage it. It's one of the uncertainties about the current political situation that people should be very wary about.

Megsy81 · 10/02/2025 00:25

DdraigGoch · 10/02/2025 00:14

Yes, half of firearm deaths are accidents or suicide. That's not terribly reassuring. I spent time in the forces and weapon safety was taken very seriously. Multiple keys (from different locations) and codes required to get a weapon out of the armoury. Even for private gun owners there are rules about secure storage and routine police checks. The casual attitude to this from some owners in the US is concerning. Lethal weapons need treating with respect (the same applies to cars, BTW)

The condition of some of the cars on the road here continues to shock me every day. I thought the driving standards in the UK had diminished in recent years but positively perfect driving in comparison certainly where I am in Ohio. Drivers, certainly where I am, are only concerned with what they’re doing and where they are going ….. car length stopping distances are laughable!!

mivona · 10/02/2025 00:27

saltinesandcoffeecups · 09/02/2025 19:36

pre-existing conditions you or your family have, because they are likely to be excluded from coverage.

Unequivocally wrong.

Only because the ACA prohibited insurance companies from refusing to cover pre-existing conditions, or charge more for covering them or chronic conditions.

How long do you think the ACA is going to last under Trump? The US healthcare system will revert to the old rules as fast as the GOP dominated Congress can overturn the ACA, with or without any kind of alternative to offer.

mathanxiety · 10/02/2025 00:39

Goldenbear · 09/02/2025 20:34

Goodness, do they teach you how to accurately reference your work when attending these superlative U.S. universities- I think you'll find Bouledeneige, posted the comment: 'poor access to objective news and information'. I was in utter disbelief (falling over laughing) that someone would proclaim U.S. news outlets to be the best and most free in the whole entire world😬. Equally, you are making stuff up to suit your argument as personally I have not spoken about the superior UK uni system, I have challenged another, America is the greatest poster, who wrote of her children being 'light years ahead' in their maths work than her friend's British children, It sounds ridiculous and it is ridiculous to suggest the UK education system is light years behind the U.S. Your experience of the UK education system is via a highly selective private school, which is frankly no experience at all, given most of the population aged 4-18 do not attend private school! Everybody knows that in the British private school system, Rote learning is the order of the day, leave your imagination at the door!

I don't know what circles you move in at these private schools but I literally don't know anybody that reads the Sun or the Daily Mail and they certainly don't watch GB news!

Can you supply any evidence for the assertion "It sounds ridiculous and it is ridiculous to suggest the UK education system is light years behind the U.S...Everyone knows that in the British private school system, Rote learning is the order of the day, leave your imagination at the door" - all of which sounds like a knee jerk reaction and a load of cobblers.

People pay good money to send their children to private schools in the UK in order to avoid the massive problems of the state sector and up to very recently, to give their children a chance to get into the better UK universities, which for some mysterious reason have tended to prefer the products of the alleged rote learning mills.

The beauty of the American approach is that all abilities are catered for, whereas British students are sorted via the exam system. Vocational and academic interests are catered to as well. Special ed provision tends to be much better in the US.

mivona · 10/02/2025 00:39

Itsbetterbythebeach · 09/02/2025 20:03

Guessing you have been living in the UK for quite a few years. US health insurers cannot exclude pre existing health conditions since the Affordable Care Act came into effect in 2014. It is likely that the OP will get an excellent family health care package (fairly standard for an executive in a multinational company and we normally have the perk of a healthcare advocate thrown in who will negotiate any care issues for you). Where the US healthcare system fails badly is for the families who earn too much to qualify for the state subsidized programs but too little to get the gold plated benefits of the more senior employees. For them co pays & deductibles can run into multiple ‘ 000 if things go wrong and they do chase you for payment (I was horrified when I was in hospital over here once, drugged up on pain killers, & one of the admin staff did actually visit me to ask how I intended to settle my co pay. I gave her a credit card & she took the payment right at my bedside 😱.j so believe me I know it’s not a fair system. Ironically one of the things that is making me hesitant to move back to the UK is the fact that I have MS so I cannot get private health insurance to cover me in the UK. From what I’ve read in the UK papers I think I might find the NHS a bit of a culture shock…

Yes, I have been here for quite awhile, but I doubt that the ACA will exist for much longer. Trump has no alternative planned and will simply have it overturned as soon as possible with a compliant Congress.

When that happens, you may find the NHS much more kindly. But given the unrelenting privatisation of the NHS, and the desire of the likes of Farage to move us on to an American-styled health insurance system, maybe we will see some similar prohibition on excluding pre-existing conditions from private health insurance in order to make it more "attractive". I'd rather fight for a properly funded and modernised NHS.

DdraigGoch · 10/02/2025 00:40

Megsy81 · 10/02/2025 00:25

The condition of some of the cars on the road here continues to shock me every day. I thought the driving standards in the UK had diminished in recent years but positively perfect driving in comparison certainly where I am in Ohio. Drivers, certainly where I am, are only concerned with what they’re doing and where they are going ….. car length stopping distances are laughable!!

Road safety is a big concern for me. I hate driving, so I cycle a lot - outside of the Netherlands or Denmark one really is placing one's life in the hands of a bunch of psycopaths on four wheels by doing so. Despite our roads in the UK being among the safest, I'd go much further to reduce risks. The standards of driving in the US are appalling, and the vehicles (even the ones which are properly maintained) are deathtraps, this is reflected in the fatality statistics. That some people modify their trucks (why can't they just get cars like any other office workers?) to chuck out black smoke on cue is horrific.

Some places would be acceptable. Culdesac Tempe has been designed to be carfree, but the downside is dealing with the Arizona climate. Otherwise some walkable places exist, but they're so rare that most are really inflated in property prices. Grand Junction, CO would seriously tempt me though. A surviving Main Street is a serious plus in the land where Stroads dominate the landscape.

OonaStubbs · 10/02/2025 01:10

I would be happy to move to any US state if given the opportunity. Even Alaska.

Goldenbear · 10/02/2025 01:30

mathanxiety · 10/02/2025 00:39

Can you supply any evidence for the assertion "It sounds ridiculous and it is ridiculous to suggest the UK education system is light years behind the U.S...Everyone knows that in the British private school system, Rote learning is the order of the day, leave your imagination at the door" - all of which sounds like a knee jerk reaction and a load of cobblers.

People pay good money to send their children to private schools in the UK in order to avoid the massive problems of the state sector and up to very recently, to give their children a chance to get into the better UK universities, which for some mysterious reason have tended to prefer the products of the alleged rote learning mills.

The beauty of the American approach is that all abilities are catered for, whereas British students are sorted via the exam system. Vocational and academic interests are catered to as well. Special ed provision tends to be much better in the US.

Why would the U.S system be light years ahead, why would it not just be of the same quality or god forbid, not as good? If you want evidence for this, the onus is on those who have asserted this as fact.

Do you live in Britain, do you have any clue of the the British private school system? It is hardly cobblers, they need to prove they are worth the money, unlike a state school, it is completely logical to do this via repetition of practicing methods to gain the best grades possible for the most possible as otherwise they aren't going to be able to sell their product are they!

'people pay good money', well, very few actually when you consider there are currently only 556,551 children attending private school. Not many really is it and certainly not representative of the UK education system as a PP believed it to be. You do realise that many teenagers attend these problematic state schools/colleges and are still able to get into the top universities without setting foot in a private school and the parents haven't had to pay thousands in fees to get there- I know, mind blowing isn't it! That said, don't worry as the gap between private school pupils and state school pupils attending top universities is currently the widest it has ever been so your wish for limited social mobility may be realised in the next few years.

mathanxiety · 10/02/2025 01:33

Mirone · 09/02/2025 19:56

As a kid I had this rose tinted view of the US and always imagined I'd move there. I haven't and I wouldn't especially now I have a child who has a close relationship with his extended family but I'm very curious about these threads.

I have lived in a few different countries and if people ask me about the cultural differences my instinct would be to explain it with examples of situations I was in. However on here and Reddit, it's absolutely full of people saying things like "it's a completely different culture, nothing like the UK" and "it's an awful place to live" with no detail or examples at all.

I know very little of the US but have worked with US expats when I lived abroad.

"Divided by a common language"

I do get that we have a different sense of humour but other than that I'm not sure what it is that's so culturally different. I found my US colleagues easy to chat to and I think having the same native language is a massive help in making a connection. Also because we import so much US entertainment we had a lot of the same references and memories of childhood.

I did notice a couple of my US colleagues were so patriotic that it was unlike anything I'd seen. They did really genuinely believe that the USA was the best country in the world but would never speak about things they liked about the US. They just stated it as a fact as it they were stating the sky blue. Other than that I found them pleasant, positive and good communicators.

I've heard that Americans a lot more confident and less self deprecating which I did notice but I don't see as a bad thing. I know it's not what we're used to but I don't think it's good that we are so negative about ourselves and often have a crabs in the bucket mentality. There's a real feeling of anti-intellectualism anti-ambition in the UK in my opinion.

I think the American confidence is much more likely to result in success and while it's too late for me to ever really take that on, it's not something I would be opposed to my son having.

Likewise, I feel a lot of Americans seem quite good at communicating and sharing their feelings and asserting their boundaries. So many people here, especially in the very working class town I've grown up take the "stiff upper lip" thing to the extreme. I have immediate family members who I know very little about as all our interactions are basically small talk and banter. Speaking sincerely and earnestly about feelings would often be ridiculed or just subtly discouraged.

On the other hand, there's this stereotype that Americans are sort of cheesy and you know, all routinely in therapy, but again I don't see this as a bad thing. Its instinctively uncomfortable for me to be around more emotionally open people but I think it's a healthier way to be.

The education - I keep hearing it's worse but in what way? This I have no idea or experience of and all I see is American movies which I know are not going to be based on reality.

What is it about he curriculum that's so much worse? From what I've gathered it seems there's a lot more emphasis on sports and other extra curricular activities. Is it really like movies where everyone's either a theatre kid or on the football team or on the debate team? It sounds like there's a lot more opportunities open to them and culturally it's expected that they'll engage in these which again seems good? In school only the kids exceptional at music or art or music seemed to do anything outside of school and the vast majority of us did nothing. Is Is the actual content they're learning worse somehow?

Work culture - one of the big things that would put me off. Seemingly less rights and less work life balance. Very little annual leave and the expectation you don't take it all is a big thing as I like to work to live.

The health care - the only criticism I really see is the cost but this is negated by very good insurance packages right? Presumably OP wouldn't go without this being very solid? Or theres the criticism that a lot of the preventative stuff is excessive and unnecessary? I get that but also the NHS is very much about statistics and what works best for cheapest. Mental health is a great example. I hope a few sessions of CBT works because if it doesn't we will imply it's your fault and you didn't try hard enough. CBT is not often appropriate for complex issues such as trauma but it can be a big challenge to get a diagnosis let along actual help.

The NHS is particularly bad for chronic health issues that tend to take many years to get diagnosed or less common "zebra" illnesses. There's a lot of dismissing of peoples worries or only doing the most basic tests. That's if you can even get a GP appointment.

My maternity care was so awful that it was genuinely traumatic. There's this pervasive "tough love" attitude which I think is odd and I feel a lot of people assume immediately that someone is being dramatic or making it up if a basic round of blood tests returns no clues. Having to fight to be taken seriously for my newborns cows milk allergy was particularly eye opening and really made me lose a lot of trust in the system.

I appreciate that free health care exists especially for emergencies but the NHS is not in a good state.

The US seems like a place where it's very bad to be poor but if you're well off it's a good life. The political situation at the moment would put me off as well as the erosion of reproductive rights. I totally get why guns and trump and all that stuff would put people off. I'm just more interested in hearing more about the cultural reasons people often refer to. My impressions are based off very little experience but those who make these comments often do not tend to elaborate.

I think all of your observations about interpersonal communication ring true. Americans don't have the stiff upper lip or the British reticence. Americans are hard to draw on the topics of religion and politics, preferring to avoid these because contentiousness is considered bad form, while the ability to create harmony and find interests or feelings in common is valued.

Many of the comments you hear or run across here wrt American education are based on British jingoism and not on direct experience.

Both systems have their strengths. However, I personally place far more value on those elements the US does better. These are (imo) - emphasizing and facilitating the individual child's ability and leanings, superb facilities in state (public) schools, the GPA system, which rewards consistency and develops good work habits, the explicit teaching of grammar, rhetoric, and writing, the depth of mathematics teaching, the systematic training children receive in speaking / presenting work in front of a group and doing group work, excellent career and university counseling in schools, evidence based discipline approaches, and encouragement to participate in the activities schools offer. There's also the flexibility to make up a failed class or advance to a higher level via summer school. Plus driver's ed in your sixteenth year (usually sophomore year). You can also earn university credits while still in high school via the local community college (saving $thousands). Overall, there is encouragement to take charge of your own education and to excel at your own level - students from 14 to 18 can find themselves sitting in the same classes as a result.(students do not advance through high school in one age based cohort).

You would have to pay a small fortune in the UK to receive the extracurricular opportunities open to students in public high schools in the US.

Here's an example of an academic catalogue from a midwest suburban school district:
www.newtrier.k12.il.us/domain/40

You will see course options and levels in different faculties. The rest of the website details extra curriculars. The menu button will help you navigate.