This blog is dedicated to my adventure as an English teacher in South Korea. It will be a totally different experience then what I am used to and I would like to take you along with me on my one year journey.
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Walking the Neighborhood
Friday, September 9, 2011
Chuseok (Korean Thanksgivng)
This weekend is one of the big holidays for Koreans. It is a time when family members come together to share food and stories with each other and to give thanks to their ancestors for an abundant harvest. At my school they wanted the little kindergarten kids to learn some of the customs that go along with Chuseok. This includes all the children wearing their hanboks (traditional Korean clothes), and that includes me wearing one too!
For the games, we learned jegi chagi, which is basically a form of hacky sack. We also learned how to play paengi-chigi, which is a game where you spin a top and have to try and knock it over with a rope. Another game we learned is called tuho, which is where we throw an arrow into a large pot. We played another game (I don't remember what it was called) where we had a small basket on our head with a wooden block inside and we had to walk to the other side of the room and drop the block out of the basket on our head to try and knock down a block that is on the ground.
You can find more photos on my flickr account!
Find out more at these websites!
Friday, August 26, 2011
End of my First Week of Teaching
Hey yall, it has been one week since I have been teaching on my own now. I feel pretty confident that everything is going very well. Even when I was still in training my co-teachers and the person who is in charge were surprised how well I was able to jump in and teach well. I have experience with working with younger kids and so that gives me a bit of an advantage. I have also heard from some of the other teachers that when they first started, there was always someone watching their classes but so far in this last week my classes have only been watched a couple times.
Here in Korea they are all about discipline, so I have to discipline my children. It’s nothing really bad but if they get in trouble a couple times I would either have them stand in front of their chairs or stand in the corner with their hands up. And those aren’t even the worse of them. If they keep acting up I would send them to the principal and he will discipline them much more than I would. But that is just how Korean culture is. It is much different from the states. In the states, to even put a child in the corner with their hands up, I would get in trouble.
So about the classes I teach, I have a class of kindergarteners that are about 4 or 5 years old (and I think that is their Korean age). There are four of them, one girl and three boys. So far they are my favorite class. They are able to speak in English a lot better than some of my older kids and they are able comprehend a lot better too. I have one class of 1st graders, two classes of 2nd graders, and two classes of 3rd graders. And then I have a class of 6th graders, but they use a different program then my other classes. With the MeySen program, we teach children English through songs, poems, and stories. So I have been singing a lot since I have gotten here but it is fun.
The week has been very tiring but once I start to get used to teaching and all I will most likely be less tired as the week’s end. That’s all for know. I will post again soon!
Monday, August 15, 2011
Trickeye Museum
In celebration of having the day off, me and some of the other english teachers at my school decided to go to Hongdae. It is one of the many neighborhoods within the Seoul. Hongdae is where Hongik University is and is known as the entertainment area and clubbing district, though we did not go for clubbing. One of the teachers found out about a museum called the Trick Eye Museum and so we all decided to go on our day off.
The introduction of the pamphlet states:
"Trickeye Museum is an interactive museum with a new concept that simulates your creativity and imagination by Trompe-l'œil (eye-tricking, French) technique through your vision. The time has come when you can enter the picture, which you used to only watch and become the subject of the picture yourself! You are invited to the world of various masterpieces and wonderful three dimensional pictures."
It was a very fun and interesting. Here are some of my favorite images.
If you want to find out more about the museum here is a link to their Facebook page because it is in English as opposed to their website.
Trickeye Museum Facebook