Thursday, October 4, 2007

MOVIN ON UP!




Hello queridos. Hooray! We have our own space, own schedules, own roommates, own kitchen, own students, own everything! As you might be able to tell, we were getting tired of living in other people´s spaces but now we have no reason to complain! We moved in on Sunday afternoon and met our first roommate, Estefan. Estafan is Czech and an Erasmus student (Euro equivelant to study abroad program). Surprisingly, he went to a Czech/Spanish biligual high school and speaks Spanish as well as he speaks English (his mom is an English teacher and they learn English in school). He is very nice, clean, and funny. He was surprised to see us cooking because he told us he thought Americans cook everything in the microwave. We met our other roommate, Constancia, on Monday. She is from Germany and is also an Erasmus studet. She learned some Spanish in school but speaks English better. We told her about the American stereotypes/knowledge of Germans, funfun, bratwurst, being strict and orderly, etc. She was surprised we weren´t fat. Our room is very big and our closet is a monster which is nice. We still do not have a very good internet connection so ichatting and skyping isn´t working so far.
Alcalá de Henares is such a nice town! It has a beautiful Plaza and very old main street. Our place is right out side of the center of the city and still has all of life´s necessities including a library down the street where Paul signed up for one of his book clubs.
We have been trying our best to intergrate ourselves here, Paul signed up for two book clubs in the library and I am taking a painting class in the community center for young people. Paul has really enjoyed the last two sessions that he attended even though he was not able to read the book on time of course. He said that the people were very friendly and he loved listening and learning from the conversation. I am really enjoying the painting class. The fellow painters are very nice and the teacher has been helpful and supportive.
And what better way to intergrate your self than becoming a teacher! We started classes Wednesday! Paul´s first day was almost a joke. He met the school principal, the director of the program, and the other young teacher helpers and then pretty much sat around until school got out because the school had not yet organized their schedules.
My day was almost a nightmare. The way my school works is that you are scheduled with 1 or 2 teachers and help them teach English and Science which is taught in English. 1 of my 2 teachers, who I have the majority of my classes with is out because her mother is ill and they do not know when she will return. They still have not gotten a sub for my teacher which means that the other teachers from the school are scrambling around the school in order to cover all of her classes. Every period my second graders get a new teacher who most likely does not know what they are studying and may or may not speak English. As you can tell my school is also disorganized. So, on the first day, during my first period a teacher came in to teach the English lesson but she did not teach English so...i had to teach the lesson plan for the day, control the kids and most importantly improvise. It was awful, the kids didnt listen to me, they were chatting, throwing things, not paying attention, hitting, etc. I need a lesson in discipline because I have know idea how to control 7 year olds. But wait, that is not my job. So I was very discouraged and annoyed the rest of the day. Lucky for me today was better and we have Fridays off so I am feeling all right.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Good job on your drawings. It's nice to see you pursue your artistic side. Too bad about the school,I'm sure they'll settle down once there is better structure. Miss our video chats, can't wait until the connection is up.

I love you.

-mom