Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Welcome, Blue!

I got a cat! He's 8 months old and I named him Blue. A woman in Itaewon runs a cat shelter, and I adopted him from there. Dean and I picked him up last night. He's playful and very affectionate. I felt so bad going to work today and leaving him alone in the tiny apartment.

So I started my new session of my extra class began today...and it's the same students, plus two boys! I was really, really happy when a teacher gave me the new list. Honestly, I expected only two or three of the girls to definitely re-sign, so I couldn't stop smiling as I ran down the list of almost all familiar names. The school is trying to cram the 10 classes in before December 29, so next week, we have FOUR extra classes. It's going to be intense. I didn't notice until my girls showed me the schedule and were like, "Oh, teacher...so much! Oh! So tiring!" So I told them that we would be decorating the English classroom for Christmas and that we could watch a Christmas film, as long as they were willing to do worksheets on it. They happily obliged, so that will make next week go by a lot faster.

Dean and I ordered our plane tickets today! We'll be flying to Dulles in D.C. on Jan 19 (Dean finishes work on Jan 18, I finish work Dec 29), and then we'll be flying back to Korea on Feb 3. It'll be a nice, nice break, and I'm really looking forward to it. I feel like it will be hard to come back...even though I love Korea, I'm going to feel nervous. The Korean school year starts in Feb/March, so I'm going to have 820 new students. It's a lot of pressure, so the idea of flying back to all new students is not exactly something I relish. Even though some of my students are quite the handful right now, I'm going to miss them when they graduate.

Two of my students during lunch. The camera did something crazy just as they were walking away, but I like this picture. The boy on the right is quite the enthusiastic participant, despite his tough demeanor outside of class. He enjoys rap, soccer, and--apparently--learning English.


Some of my 7th grade girls. Whenever I turn the camera on them, they just flee!! This caught them right before they flat out ran away from me. :(


This is Blue! I'm not sure on his middle name. Blue Rochester Murphy? Blue Diablo Murphy? Noooot sure yet.



Another picture of my special Blue.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Our first Thanksgiving abroad

Yesterday, we celebrated our first Thanksgiving abroad. The day felt like any other. I tried to tell my last period class that it was Thanksgiving in America, but after three half-hearted tries, I gave up (it was the end of the day and they were restless).

Dean and I met up with the rest of the CUA gang at Gecko's in Itaewon, where we celebrated Thanksgiving with other Americans. Gecko's set up a really nice buffet with turkey, beef, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, etc. It was pretty awesome! We had a chill time just talking and eating until 11 pm.

Overall, this week was really chill. My 9th graders were still taking their final exams during the early part of the week, so I had some days where I was only teaching one or two classes. The classes I *did* have were stellar! Dean and I made a Powerpoint presentation and a quiz game about middle/high school life in America. I did that for half of my classes, then did a tongue twister game with the others. I divided them into four teams, taught them a tongue twister, gave them three minutes to practice, then they had to stand up and recite the tongue twister as fast as they could. The team who could recite it the fastest (without anyone skipping a word) won.

In other news...I think I'm going to adopt 2 cats/kittens! There is a Korean woman in Itaewon who runs a shelter with two other people. She speaks English and Korean fluently (she lived in NYC for 7 years)--I found her number on the internet and called her about adopting a cat. Dean and I are going to go look at them tomorrow afternoon!! I'm excited but slightly nervous.

Me with my Thanksgiving plate. This was the first taste of homestyle cooking I've had since July, so it tasted *amazing*.


It was the last day of my extra class for this session! To celebrate, I bought a cream cake from Paris Baguette, plus some other snacks. We had an English Only Party--so fun.


One of my favorite students. She's quite the little artist who also loves playing soccer (a HUGE rarity in Korea) and wants to be the lead singer of a rock band. I think she and her crazy (but lovable) friend are signing up for my extra class next session.


Our group picture! We all gave each other nicknames, so from left to right they are....The Queen, Magical Princess Seiri, The Princess, Kim Yoo Jin, Rice Boy, Sleeping Pig Bear, Raccoon, Hwang Jini, Moth, and they nicknamed me simply "The King", since I rule all. MUAHAHAHA.


The video of my students practicing "Larry sent the latter a letter later."
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Sunday, November 18, 2007

Liz's birthday

Yesterday was Liz's 23rd birthday, so we had a big evening planned. First, we went to Seoul Tower, then we went to nearby Myeongdong for dinner and a birthday cake from Paris Baguette. We ended the evening in Hongdae, of course, meeting up with Junior and Kevin. It was a great night and everyone seemed to have a really, really fun time. By the time we went home, the subways and buses were running again, and shops were beginning to open. It was a bit crazy, but that's the way Seoulites roll--they work hard and play hard.

Speaking of work, I actually didn't have much this week. My 9th graders had their final exams on Wednesday and Friday, and we had school canceled on Thursday due to college entrance exam day. On this day, the high school students take a really, really important test relating to the types of colleges they can apply to, and since my middle school is quite close to Doksan High, they needed teachers to come proctor the exam. They took fifteen of the teachers, so the principal shut the school down for the day. On Friday, I only taught one class (my first period), but had to stick around all day to participate in "Teachers' Sports Day", which was a 45 minute game of kickball. It was quite amusing, actually, and the utter girlishness of my female colleagues somehow made me appear really athletic in comparison. Our team lost 5-4, but our consolation prize was a box of toothpaste. So...yay for toothpaste?

It's been getting colder and colder in Seoul--last night was absolutely freezing. And yet the young Korean ladies are still strutting around in tiny, tiny shorts and miniskirts! I don't understand how they do it! A winter jacket is on my list of things to buy once I get my next paycheck, since the heat hasn't been turned on in my school yet, and the classrooms are frigid. The teacher's office is heated, but my classroom is just...wow. My kids enter the room and go, "Ahhhhh!! Chu ah! Chu ah!", which is cold/very cold. The big talk at the school was that I dyed my hair this week. The students (and the teachers) were really shocked and kept coming up to me all week to give compliments. Although two students did express that "old hair better tee-chuh. Old hair better."

Yongseo, my tutor, and I have been quite neglectful of each other! Today was the first lesson we'd had in almost a month! I'd been studying on my own at work on my down time, so I've been trying to stay on my toes. But it's good to have the pressure of someone so you KNOW you have to constantly review. I've learned some basic verbs so I can put together some simple sentences, and I learned 3 of the main verb tenses. According to Yongseo, my pronunciation has improved a lot, as well! Being completely immersed in Korean in my workplace is a great advantage.

The teachers warming up for the "big game"--the main teachers' office vs. the 4th floor teachers' office.


Yunhee got this of me kicking the ball! Oh, so exciting.


Dean, Erica, me, Andrea, Liz, Kirsten, and Amber at the top of Seoul Tower.
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Myeongdong at night. It's a really sprawling area packed with food, bars, a some clubs, and amazing shopping.


Lighting the candles for Liz's 23rd birthday cake.


Then, we went to OI for some drinks.



We went to Hooper's and then...of course...Tinpan.


Junior, Dean, and I ended our evening/morning at the huge fish restaurant that is always packed. At 5:30 AM, the place was still packed. We got a big thing of spicy chicken and rice cakes.


Check out my flickr site for the rest of the photos! There are a lot.

Friday, November 9, 2007

Finally feeling like fall in Seoul

It's been a beautiful week in Seoul. Dean and I were discussing how the weeks have been flying by lately. My job isn't a chore like it was in my first two weeks--I thought I was going to be miserable with this job. But now that I don't have to teach the book for 90% of the my classes (it depends on the co-teacher), I can plan my own lessons. Most of the teachers prefer me to play ESL games with the kids, and I have a great time with it. On a Sunday night, I am extremely nervous--what if the kids hate it? Will they understand it? Is it going to engage all the students or only the ones participating? How can I get them all interested? What is the goal of the lesson? Is it too easy for them? Too advanced? I honestly have nightmares about my classroom games going wrong. With 40 kids per class, when things go wrong, they go very, very wrong.

But I've been lucky in choosing games that can be adapted well for my classes. This week, I played a sort of ESL Pictionary. I split them into 3 teams and one person from each team had to come to the chalkboard. I would give a sentence (the sillier = the better) like, "There is a monster under my bed", "I am cooking dinner but there are problems", or "My friend does not like my cat." They had to draw a picture (5 points), write the sentence correctly (10 points), and the team with the most creative drawing received an extra 5 points. The kids made some really, really amusing drawings and I had a great time with them (for the most part).

Yesterday, my co-teacher with the best English, Yunhee, and I had a class canceled so we sat outside on the benches and talked. She said she was really pleased to see how well I have adjusted and how I'm really comfortable in the classroom now. She also said that the kids love the games, which made me feel *so relieved*. Middle school kids can be brutal.

This is one of my favorite classes--they make my Thursdays awesome. The boy in the front told me I looked like Tinkerbell yesterday. It was strange.


Playing Pictionary...didner? Dindner? Ding...DINNER! Fourth time's the charm.


The three teams competing.


Munsung in the fall. This was taken from where I sit after I finish my lunch. There are some nice benches in front of the school. It's amusing to watch the kids play soccer, although NO females join in...at all. It's ONLY boys. According to my co-teachers, the girls in Korea are not encouraged to play sports as an extracurricular activity at all. I spied the three girls on the left with a soccer ball and was really happy for a moment, then I realized they were just throwing it up into the nearby tree to see how many leaves they could get to fall.


Gyeonghye, one of my best students in my extra class. We were playing 20 questions with Post-Its--she was Ban Ki Moon (the current Secretary General of the UN).


One of my best students--one of the few that actually is really interested in having conversations when I'm not teaching. It's nice to talk to students who don't look like they are constantly in pain listening to you speak! I think he's going to a high school next year that specializes in the study of foreign languages. In Korea, the students apply to high schools the way Americans apply for college. Most of the kids from my area are going to the high school very close to Munsung, but some are going to high schools to study traditional arts, technical science, and foreign language. The third year middle schoolers have their SATs 14th-19th and they are pretty strung out.


This video is of my extra class playing 20 Questions.
Online Videos by Veoh.com

Check out the rest of my Korean videos at http://www.veoh.com/userVideos.html?username=caligalux I also updated my flickr page, so you can check out the rest of my Munsung pictures there.