Jul 21 2011

Journal: My Best Friend

To Anna (Young Ok)

Hi~ How are you?
umm…Young ok…. I’m serious…
Are you angry at me??
Every morning you are face serious.. are you okay??
But I think you my best friend~~ you too?? HaHaHa
When I was happy with you! in my room eating and talking!
I like talking with you! Because when I speak to you my mind peaceful
So I love talking with you!!
Young ok! You have cute laughter! Okay? HaHa
Bye-bye Young ok!
I love you

-Seulgi-

Dear Daisy (Seulgi)

Hi~ How are you? I think you always. hahaha.
But you don’t know my mind. I’m sad…
I’m angry reason your joke. But I like joke to you.
My best memorie with you, we meet night and together talk and eating food.
We will never fighting, okay??
Bye~bye~
I love you.

From~ Anna (Young Ok)


Jul 13 2011

Birthday letters.

To Amanda Teacher
Hello? Amanda Teacher! I’m Jeong Haram.
How are you?
I’m excellent! Because Today is Amanda Teacher’s Birthday!! Wow!!
Happy birthday, sincerely Amanda~
Have a happy day today!
Enjoy a delicious chocolate and confectionary. ^^
Do you have any plans for vacation?
During vacation, I’m planning to study English a lot~!! >.< But... Now. We don't have a lot of time with Amanda Teacher. I'm sorry a lot of But! I won't forget Amanda!! Also, please Remember my name and face, Amanda! I'll pray to be able to meet again at a later time~ I take English classes with Amanda, these classes are very informative and fun It's really the best class! Beautiful Amanda Please always happy and healthy Amanda! I love you~ Amanda Teacher! Thank you very much ^^ From, your disciple, Jeong Haram


Jul 12 2011

All in an hour.

Things I wasn’t told, in the order in which I wasn’t told them.

9.05 AM. I wasn’t told my class was cancelled. I proceeded to gather up the necessary materials in my arms, walk down the staircase, cross the courtyard, unlock my classroom, sigh at the lack of students and lack of notification, sit peacefully at my teacher desk in front of the silent classroom to listen to the rain through the open windows as I sipped my coffee and wrote a letter home.

9.40 AM, back in the teacher’s office, at my desk skimming through websites. Though I had drawn reasonable conclusions as to the location of my students, I wasn’t directly told that my students were testing. Generally, student testing is irrelevant to my schedule, provoking nothing but cancellations, and I acted on this assumption of irrelevance.

9.41 AM. I wasn’t told that I was supposed to be proctoring an exam that started thirty-one minutes prior. Immediately after notification, which was unclear and frantic, involving Mr. Choi waving a piece of paper at me and pointing to one time slot that read my name in Hangeul, a piece of paper whose existence I had been completely oblivious to until that exact moment… after this, I was frantically ushered down the hallway into a classroom, where I walked in, thirty-three minutes late, bowed in embarassment to the teacher proctoring the exam, bit down my frustration and anger and walked past the students and their half- completed exams to take my position at the back of the classroom.

Sometimes Korea just makes me crazy, crazy crazy.

Communication, baby, communication is everything. Gathering pertinent information from subtle context clues and rumors floating between other clueless foreign teachers is lame, lame lame. Korea, you make me crazy.


Jun 28 2011

“I’m so sorry, but I love you.”

As with any language, there are certain phrases students are taught that really seem to stick out when used in conversation. Korean students have some very specific phrases they have been taught and use frequently, the most common being, upon given the prompt, “How are you?” a robotic, super-speed response of: “IAMFINETHANKYOUANDYOU,” followed by hysterical giggles. The following are some of my personal favorite phrases from students, that when used are especially touching and sweet. I think you’ll begin to see how easy it is to fall for these students.

Just now, a couple of students stood giggling behind my desk for at least two minutes before I turned around and said, “Oh, hello!” They then, giggling and holding each other’s hands for confidence said, “Oh, teacher, oh. Teacher. Teacher, could I, you, paper? Pleasemumblemumblestickynotemumble.” I listen patiently and expectantly before I laugh and respond with, “A sticky note? Of course,” as I rip off a small sticky note and hand it to one student.

“One, or two?” I rip off another and hand it to the other student. Both stand giggling, a pink sticky note now stuck on each of their hands. They look so surprised and happy. “Oh, teacher, one, oh, thank you, thank you for your kindness!” and they quickly, still giggling, still holding hands, walk away.

“Thank you for your kindness.” How sweet. That kind of phrase just melts your heart and makes you smile.

Earlier today, a student didn’t understand the instructions I gave in class, and looked at me with such a confused look that I walked over to her and asked if she understood. She shook her head, and I slowly explained what she should do. When she understood, she looked up at me, very cheerfully, and said, “Oh! Teacher! Thank you for your kindness!” Makes me laugh and melts my heart.

After all, how could you not fall for the students when they respond with a soft, super sweet, “Pardon?” upon not understanding, or greet you when you walk in the room, still, ten months later, with, “Oh! Teacher! Beautiful!” or write notes to me in their notebooks, of, “Amanda- teacher, fighting! Good luck!” or written in very large, special bubble letters at the end of a tough week for me, “Amanda teacher, are you okay? You look so tired! Cheer up! I love you!”

I honestly love these girls. It’s almost as though I have inherited six hundred younger sisters, some of them michevious trouble makers in class, caught wearing short skirts and walking with boys outside of school, others of them sweet and gentle and shy, some loud, class clowns that are fun to tease in class, others artistic, their notebooks full of sketches and drawings they did in class, their journal entries scribbled in around the drawings, completed on their own time outside of my class… and when I ask to see their uncompleted journals as they sit chatting during work time in class, they say, “Oh, teacher, I’m so sorry, but I love you.”

“I’m so sorry but I love you!” Impossible to be angry.

I feel that what is most important for these girls, the reason behind their having to write journals, is that I want them to feel comfortable with English. Language is something foreign and challenging up to the point when you are able to successfully manipulate those confusing symbols into something meaningful, something about yourself and your own, individual thoughts, something only you are thinking that you have painstakingly coded into what others can understand. When they manage to write a sentence that makes sense to me, that I can understand and respond to… that’s something cool. That’s something really unique. That’s something Korean education doesn’t do enough of, in making English something real, something more than bi- weekly intensive vocabulary tests, more than standardized essays the students must crank through, more than fill- in bubble questions that have intense consequences in their day to day life, whether it be in the public announcement of their grades, the constant shifting of classes according to test scores, or the serious and heavy burden of needing exemplary grades for University.

Think. What do you want to say? Write it. Say it. Write it again. Say it again. I will stand here and patiently wait as you try to figure out what you want to say. I don’t understand. Explain this to me. All together, all of you, help her and explain this to me. Write it down. Speak it. Practice speaking it together. Say it again. Again. Write it. You can do it. Speak it. Write it.

You did it, I’m proud of you. Cheer. Lead the whole class in a clap. Smile. Tell jokes. Be myself, a more patient and genuine version of my self than I ever knew before coming to Korea. My dear students, you really cannot know how proud I am of you.

It’s hard. I make them work hard. I have to work hard to grade their journals, harder than most foreign teachers I know, putting in extra hours on top of the extra classes I teach. But it is worth it. When they complain, “Teacher, difficult!” I make a huge heavy sigh and pretend to melt on my desk in front of the classroom… and after a long dramatic moment, I look up and smile at them, “You can do it. I know you can do it! You’re so smart!” and then they laugh and stop complaining and write.

It’s not uncommon for students to be amazed by certain parts of my physical appearance. The high bridge of my nose, my wide eyes, the color of my eyes, the dirty blonde color of my hair, generously called golden, as in, “Golden- hair teacher! Question!”, my ‘small face’, which is endlessly and continually commented on… all the way down to the color of the hair on my arms.

“Teacher! This!” As a student pinches the hair on her own arm and swoops in close to inspect the hair on my arms… “Wooooaaaa… Teacher! White!” Last week, a student was so fascinated with my arm hairs that she asked if she could have one. I, currently being in such an endearing, nostalgic state for my students, willingly obliged and held out my arm. She pinched and pulled, and I laughed and walked away.

One moment later, she gasped, “Oh! Teacher! Lost!” and I walked back to her desk and held out my arm again as she dug in her pencil pouch, pulled out a tweezers and proceeded to pluck out one arm hair and hold it out for all her nearby desk buddies to see.

“Don’t lose that one!” I told her as I continued to walk around and monitor the students’ journal writing. Another student on the opposite side of the classroom waved me over and asked what happened, to which I pinched some of my arm hair, and she nodded in a half- surprised, half- knowledgeable manner.

Curiosity and honesty.

“I’m so sorry, but I love you.”

My heart swells bigger than my chest, bigger than my self, and it takes the whole world in with this nostalgic, beautiful, bittersweet, giddy, innocent love.


Jun 20 2011

American Impressions 1502

Lesson warmup:

Write what you have heard about American High School Life.

Student 1502:

1. Very Free

2. Dance with men! Every year dance party

3. Big ground playing US soccer (football)

4. Men sweat and Adam’s Apple

Student 1502 pen pal letter:

“Dear American pen pal friend.

Hello! American pen pal friend! How about your school life? Korean school life is very hard, bad, sad, upset, angry and cry! But little fun. Korean school have school uniform. Very comfortable. Korean school finish late. For dinner and night self study 2 hour. Very sad. American school students have a driving licence? It’s wonderful! My dream is have a driving licence. You American school life what? Fun? Boring? I wonder your school life. Bye bye.”


May 24 2011

Journal Entry 1323: English

“I think about English is like a maze
because it is confusing but not.
good… or bad I’m very confusing… hahaha : (
so, I think about English maze.
but, I love English
so, more and more love English!!”

From my first grade student, Lee Su-hee, English name Grace.
Very honest and unique response on her opinion of English.


May 24 2011

Journal Entry 1322: Introduce Yourself

“Dear, new friend.

Hello, I Glad meet you!

Umm… You don’t know me. So I introduce myself of face & body.

I have a little mole under my nose.
It is a complex. but my mother say “it comes for luck.”
I think “oh, I love it very much.”

I have black hair, short hair.
I wish long hair and more black hair.

oh, I have glasses. maybe big glasses!

my friends say “You charm is legs!”
Yes. My legs turn on the charm.

That’s it for now. I waiting you letter!
good bye! 🙂

From,
Sophia”

From one of my first grade students, Korean name Lee So-Jin.


May 13 2011

Journal Excerpt 1531: Journal One

“My name is HyeBin Lee.
I hope character very very kind.
My favorite singer TVXQ.
My dream is to be a doctor but people say, “You can’t do it.”
Ha…ha… I will be a doctor!!!
I love to play the piano.
It makes my soul clean.”

From one of my first grade high school students.


May 4 2011

The Volleyball Ventures

I tell you, not understanding the language of the country you’re in can play with your emotions like nothing else. For example, let’s take a simple scenario: volleyball.

Say you’re playing a game of volleyball with your fellow teachers. Actually, for unbeknownst reasons, you’ve started playing volleyball every single day. Sometimes, you play twice a day. Occasionally, they make you serve for an hour straight, so your wrist varies between bruised, swollen, painful, or after the weekend’s rest, back to normal.

You try to keep up your spirits. You wish somebody would tell you the reasoning behind the sudden vigorous devotion to the game of volleyball. You continue to go to practice, even though your notification of practice usually goes something like this:

(Time: roughly anywhere between 8am and 2pm. Scene: You are sitting at your desk, lesson planning. Or maybe you’re walking to a lesson. Or maybe you’re packing up your books at 4:55, ready to go home for the day.)

“Excuse me, Amanda.”

“Yes?”

“Yes, today… (volleyball hand motion) today… six o’clock… (hand motion numbers) game.”

“Volleyball, today? Again?”

“Yes, today.”

“But… we played volleyball yesterday. And the day before that.”

“Yes. But you have to go today.”

“But I have plans tonight.”

“I’m sorry, you must go. Principal says you have to be there.”

So you go. And turns out, it’s a game! So you get a little excited, okay, this can be fun. I mean, you’re here, you’re in Korea, you’re the only white person for miles around, you’re playing with a bunch of teachers as they hoo- and haa- and scream, “Fighting!” and “Powaa'” and “TEAM A TEAM A” and “OOUUUUUTAAA'” and it’s entertaining, right? Sieze the day. Look at the bright side. If you have to be here, you have to be here. Try all that positive brainwashing stuff until you decide you’re going to have a good time. Just take it for what it’s worth and go home afterwards.

But then you start to play.

The Principal is in the back row, the PE Teacher is in the center, and the other girl on the team is shoved in the back corner where she can serve and be invisible. You were put in the back corner, but then switched with this other teacher who is not as good as you. There is a really bashful player in front of you, but he never really gets a chance to touch the ball because the PE Teacher is a ball hog who runs all around the court, stealing people’s glory and putting the ball in the middle where the front- center guy will hit it up before the PE Teacher can spike it down to the other court.

This is pretty much how it goes every time. PE Teacher steals it, Principal screams in a high voice, front- center guy batts it into the air, PE Teacher spikes it. You’re irritated but you go along with the show.

However, scenario change. The ball enters your area and you start to hit it but the PE Teacher is running at you, you stand your ground and are about to hit it when he runs into you, you both biff it and the ball is lost. The Principal starts screaming at you, pointing and yelling, the same thing over and over, angry at you for messing up the play. All you want to do is defend yourself, or tell her to back off, or tell the PE Teacher to quit being such a ball hog, but you can’t.

You just have to listen to this woman scream at you in a foreign tongue, which is terrifying, and then continue to play this stupid game until it’s over.

The game goes from fun and entertaining, to a nightmare. You’re on the brink of tears. Everyone is screaming words you can’t understand and everything sounds angry and the whistle is never ending and you feel frazzled and irritated and angry.

The whistles go and you severly warn yourself that you are not to cry during this game, and it goes and goes and goes.

However, for no matter how bad it gets, you still have Moon: the best, most amazing, most happy and excited office administrator ever, who gives you a salute in the hallway every time he sees you, who cheers the loudest and for every point the team makes, he jumps up on his feet, throws his arms in the air and shouts “OOOHHHHH!!!!!” at the top of his lungs.

You decide that you’ll continue to play, for Moon.

***

What makes it all worse is that I don’t like volleyball. Really, I don’t. Unless I’m on a beach or sand court, drinking a delicious IPA and possibly running back and forth from the food table to the court, summer sun and the boombox beating, enjoying time with friends, joking and laughing, what’s the point of volleyball? Unless it’s a game where you don’t care who wins or loses, because everyone will go home happy either way, what is the point!?

I like soccer. But my Principal doesn’t believe that we, the teachers, should have the liberty to play soccer: instead, we have to play volleyball, under her severe direction, every single day. Apparently when she’s there screaming at us, we won’t feel we have the liberty to talk about her behind her back.

Furthermore, despite our having a game this afternoon, which I angrily walked out of afterwards, Mr. Choi sprinted after me to say, “Amanda, where are you going?”

“Mr. Choi, I’m going to my desk.”

“Oh. I’m sorry. Well, the Principal wants me to tell you that we have volleyball practice tonight.”

“But… Mr. Choi… we just finished a game.”

“Yes, I’m sorry. 6pm tonight. You have to be there.”

Volleyball, you have become my mortal enemy.


Apr 21 2011

….your boyfriend?

Last week my new round of extra English classes began, after school on Fridays. Unlike last semester’s round of extra classes, this one is only once a week, and they go from 4-5:40.

Also new this year, we have to have two native teachers at the school to teach, because I said that 40 students for extra class, on my own, was too much.

Consequently, I recruited my friend Dylan, a Canadian that lives near me and teaches at a different high school. He is tall, has a beard, and is male.

Consequently consequently, after he entered my all- girls’ school, nearly every teacher has asked me, in one form or another, if Dylan is my boyfriend. Just to clarify, Dylan is not my boyfriend. Nope. Nope nope nope.

But, the best form of the question just happened again… One of the older, new teachers, whose English is very poor but who very much wants to have conversation with me, just asked…..

“Before… Friday… your… love-man?”

Nope, just a tall white guy I’m with. Not my boyfriend.

Sorry to disappoint, Korea.