Thursday, March 22, 2012

Guess who's back for Round 2?

I've gotta say, I'm thrilled to be back to Korea. Everything seems new again: I'm stuffing my face with kimchi and rice. I feel exhilarated after simple two-sentence conversations with new Korean coworkers. I'm snapping phone-camera pics of signs like this:

A lot of this is because coming to Korea the second time around is not scary like coming the first time is. I know how to use the subway and buses now. I've got enough Korean to get by and I knew what questions to ask when I moved into my new apartment (ie What day is compost recycling day? Koreans are excellent recyclers!) All of the hard stuff is already done, like bank accounts and phone contracts. The only thing left to worry about is the new job and it turns out, that it's a lot less stressful than last time as well! Hell, I've nothing to complain about!


So this year in Korea, it's a new job! Last year I was teaching in one of the private "cram schools," also known as, "hagwons," where students go to study in the afternoon after normal school hours. (Korean students are hard-core; many of them study from 8:30am to 7 or 8 or 9 at night!)  This year I'm employed by the government to work in the public schools assisting the Korean teachers.

There are many differences between the public and private school systems but one thing that stood out to me was the way they hire native teachers like myself. For instance, this year I actually got trained! For all the incoming teachers, the Korean government sponsors a 9-day orientation to Korean culture and teaching Korean students. And this was no week-long vacation! We were put through a rigorous schedule of lectures and lesson planning projects as well as cultural excursions and survival Korean classes!
We were issued matching grey sweatshirts for the duration of the training.
Much of the information was old news to me and the few others who had already lived here, but I think it was vital for the other 200 odd teachers just starting out. I was impressed with the organisation and money that went into preparing everything, but I was most excited to find out where I would be teaching. In public schools, we are not allowed to specify a location beyond a city name, so I was impatient to know where my new apartment was located and what age level I'd be working with. The organizers of orientation cruelly let everyone speculate until the very last day when we are each given envelopes with our new school name and contracts.

So where did I end up? At Choup Elementary School! I'm very pleased with my location this year: it's centrally located, close to my swing dancing venue and right next to an olympic sized swimming pool. I've got 3 fabulous new co-teachers and I'm teaching grades 3 through 6. It's been 3 weeks so far and I'm starting to settle in. Here's a little tour:

Haphazard shot of the front of my school. It's actually comprised of two 4-story buildings and one 2-story building which form a horseshoe around the playground. The whole lot is up a steep hill, about a 10 minute bus-ride from my apartment.  
Shot from my office. Before class starts in the morning, all the students walk in a big circle on the playground and they blast opera music from the loudspeakers. 
Some 4th graders outside their classroom. In Korea, everyone wears slippers in the house and the same goes for the schools. Their shoes go in little cubbies outside the homeroom. 

My classes this year are between 25 and 30 students. (They wear coats inside because the heating is not the greatest)
Typical school lunch: Bean sprouts, salty bean paste, kimchi, thinly sliced pork in chili sauce, rice and seaweed and soybean paste soup. This day we also had some lettuce which we ate filled with pork, rice and beanpaste. Delish!
Some of my new students! 
 Monday is the anniversary of the day our school was opened so we get the day off! It'll be a 3-day weekend for me so Sandra and I are planning a trip up to Seoul to sightsee a bit. I'll let you all know how it goes!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Back to our regularly scheduled programing

I've got some catching up to do, eh?

Well here's what you all missed while I've been away:

Home for the holidays!
Yes, after I finished my teaching contract in Korea, I spent a glorious 2 months back home in sunny Florida visiting my family. It was the first time I've been home and not been scrambling to find summer employment and can I just say: how relaxing! In celebration of this, I've decided to never seek seasonal work again, ever. It's so much better to seek seasonal relaxation, don't you think? We celebrated my favorite food holiday, Thanksgiving, and exchanged Christmas gifts a month later. I drank delicious American beer and ate popcorn with my mother daily. Heaven. Here are some highlights:

Me and the Sibs at the beach! I love Florida in the winter!
"Gemblo" the family game of strategically placed glittering bacteria 
No explanation needed?
Dad made everyone new tie-dye for Christmas!



Fáilte go hÉireann
In January I left the homeland to visit my girlfriend in Ireland. There we did important Irish things like visiting the Guinness Factory in Dublin and walking in muddy rain boots through green fields of sheep. Also this other important thing known as Meeting the Girlfriend's Parents. Of course, her family was so warm and welcoming and we drank a lot of tea while discussing the weather!

The Guinness factory was a little pricey but totally worth it for the panoramic view of the city at the end of the tour. (Of course, I'm showing you the beer, not the view. The beer is still important! 

We drove around the Ring of Kerry one day and stopped frequently in tiny towns for refreshments and leg-stretching.
Cobh [pronounced "cove"], a small southern coastal town near Cork. Historically it has been visited by many great ships, including the Titanic!

More of the Ring of Kerry. It was winter when I was there but still so green!
And of course, we took advantage of some traditional Irish pizza. This one had full strips of bacon, none of that bacon bits crap.

Famille Francaise et al
In February I traveled to France to visit a few friends and my French host-family from '04-05! It felt strange and familiar to be back in the land of cheese and wine. I loved catching up with friends from college and gorging myself on Parisian pastries and chocolate. I spent a week visiting my host parents and, as luck would have it, two of my host-brothers had just come back from living abroad. Barni has been living in South Africa and is dating an Italian girl, and Coco was back from Mexico and skyping his Mexican sweetheart every night! Foreign girlfriends are clearly a trend! My host dad has finally retired an my host sister had a baby soon after I left! What a lot of big adventures, eh?  We did a lot of sightseeing while I was in Paris, as my host-mom says I'm her "excuse" to be a tourist.

Astou was a glorious hostess while I was in Rouen. Highlights included stealing sand from a construction site through a fence with a spoon taped to a pole, and befriending French cats. 
Chantal and me at La Piscine, an old pool turned into a museum near Lille.
View from the top of the Musée d'Orsay, which I finally visited this time! I loved it. We arrived early one Sunday morning only to discover that the first Sunday of every month is free! What luck!
Chantal and Coco in a Brasserie in Lille. We treated ourselves after a morning spent hauling Coco's furniture down 6 flights of stairs and over to his new apartment. 
Visiting with a very pregnant Célestine, who recently gave birth to a beautiful baby boy, Ulysse. It was freezing and we weren't allowed into the park of the Château de Versailles (they were afraid of people falling into the pond) but we snapped a pic outside.
Another great thing that happened was a little mini-reunion of my old friends from my French high school when I lived there. They have barely kept in touch with each other but one of them came in 3 hours from out of town to have coffee with us. The more people I meet the more difficult it is to keep in touch with everyone, but then there are moments like this, where we come together after 7 years and It's as if nothing's changed. We spent the afternoon laughing and chatting about nothing and everything and what started as an early afternoon coffee morphed into a whole evening together. And the most amazing part? We hardly talked about high school at all! Contrary to my fears, our friendship has grown and matured as we have and it is no longer confined to a specific year in a specific milieu. How cool!



Can you guess where I am now?