At Tokugawa North, the students are taugh about the ins and outs of ethics, morals and philosophy. Through this rather piously constructed educational program, the students enroll in the various public safety and military ROTC programs on campus. Graduates move on to become civil defenders and other types of legal and military professionals. The motto of the school is the same as that of most police organizations worldwide, "To protect and serve."
Being a relatively secluded campus, the descendants of the ancient Tokugawa Shogunate, who founded the schools, require that the students board there throughout the duration of the year. Living on campus with their classmates through the whole school year gives the students the opportunity to learn true responsibility by being held accountable to only two entities: Themselves and their commanding officers.
Even though the only "clubs" on campus are the various public safety and ROTC groups, the service training is underscored by the standard educational subjects. Those that don't take too quickly to the life of a full-time public service officer take their skills into various law practices or detective work. Others still don't join the clubs and focus, instead, on one particular subject, like Literature, and proceed through an accellerated program to earn an Associates degree by the time they graduate high school.
In order to enroll at this higher echelon school, students are taken through a rigorous physical training period not unlike military bootcamp. Also, the students records (both criminal and educational) are pulled up for a comprehensive background check. If the battery of checks and tests is passed, then one final factor will decide wether or not the student will be accepted. That factor being a written statement on the part of the student explaining why they wish to go into public service and what particular part of service interests them the most.
Constructed on the principles of defending the streets and the country, Tokugawa North is the breeding ground for New Tokyo's Modern-day "Samurai."