<P> Of the 110,000 Japanese Americans detained by the United States government during World War II, 30,000 were children . Most were school - age children, so educational facilities were set up in the camps . Allowing them to continue their education, however, did not erase the potential for traumatic experiences during their overall time in the camps . The government had not adequately planned for the camps, and no real budget or plan was set aside for the new camp educational facilities . Camp schoolhouses were crowded and had insufficient materials, books, notebooks, and desks for students . Not only that the education / instruction was all in English, the schools in Japanese Internment Camps also didn't have any books or supplies to go on as they opened . The state decided to issue a few books only a month after the opening . Wood stoves were used to heat the buildings, and instead of using separate rooms for different kinds of activities only partitions were used to accomplish that . Japanese Internment Camps also did not have any libraries (and consequently no library books), writing arm chairs or desks, and no science equipment . These' schoolhouses' were essentially prison blocks that contained few windows . In the Southwest, when temperatures rose and the schoolhouse filled, the rooms would be sweltering and unbearable . Class sizes were immense . At the height of its attendance, the Rohwer Camp of Arkansas reached 2,339, with only 45 certified teachers . The student to teacher ratio in the camps was 48: 1 in elementary schools and 35: 1 for secondary schools, compared to the national average of 28: 1 . This was due to a few things . One of them was that there was a general teacher shortage in the US at the moment, and the fact that the teachers were required to live in those poor conditions in the camps themselves . "There was persistent mud or dust, heat, mosquitoes, poor food and living conditions, inadequate instructional supplies, and a half mile or more walk each day just to and from the school block". Despite the triple salary increase in the internment camps, they were still unable to fill in all the needed teacher positions with certified personnel, and so in the end they had to hire non-certified teacher detainees to help out the teachers as assistants . </P> <P> The rhetorical curriculum of the schools was based mostly on the study of "the democratic ideal and to discover its many implications ." English compositions researched at the Jerome and Rohwer camps in Arkansas focused on these' American ideals', and many of the compositions pertained to the camps . Responses were varied, as schoolchildren of the Topaz camp were patriotic and believed in the war effort, but could not ignore the fact of their incarceration . To build patriotism, the Japanese language was banned in the camps, forcing the children to learn English and then go home and teach their parents . </P> <P> Although life in the camps was very difficult, Japanese Americans formed many different sports teams, including baseball and football teams . In January 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued what came to be known as the "Green Light Letter," to MLB Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, which urged him to continue playing Major League Baseball games despite the ongoing war . In it Roosevelt said that "baseball provides a recreation," and this was true for Japanese American incarcerees as well . Over 100 baseball teams were formed in the Manzanar camp so that Japanese Americans could have some recreation, and some of the team names were carry - overs from teams formed before the incarceration . </P> <P> Both men and women participated in the sports . In some cases, the Japanese American baseball teams from the camps traveled to outside communities to play other teams . Incarcerees from Idaho competed in the state tournament in 1943, and there were games between the prison guards and the Japanese American teams . Branch Rickey, who would be responsible for bringing Jackie Robinson into Major League Baseball in 1947, sent a letter to all of the WRA camps expressing interest in scouting some of the Nisei players . In the fall of 1943, three players tried out for the Brooklyn Dodgers in front of MLB scout George Sisler, however, none of them made the team . </P>

Of the ethnic japanese who were relocated during world war ii the majority were