four of my coworkers finished their contracts; three left the country. among them are besties ryan and abby, who are currently tanning and doing drugs in thailand and regularly reminding me how wonderful their lives are now. super jealz.
we have new teachers, both foreign and korean, and it's definitely changed the work atmosphere. more importantly, i have a new kindergarten class. my old 6b kids still go to our school (thank god), but they're in seven-year-old classes now, and i'm teaching the lowest-level six-year-olds we have. it's already been an insane challenge - it's already hard to get a room full of four-year-olds (they're six by the korean system, but most of my kids won't even turn american age five until the fall) to sit down and stop talking, but when they don't understand what you're saying it's borderline impossible. it's incredible what they've picked up already, though: in a period of five weeks, all of my kids can fluently say, "may i go to the bathroom, please?" and "can i please go get some water?" they can repeat pretty much everything i say to them, and today laura said, completely on her own, "teacher, i love you very very many." my heart melted.
i haven't gotten that many pictures of them, unfortunately - i'm too busy wrestling them into their chairs or trying to distract them with "do, re, mi" - something else they've been picking up pretty quickly. i did manage to catch a few during easter, since my amazing coteacher chloe was in the room and kept them under control for me.
aside from the new class, not much has changed in my life. kindergarten is definitely far more exhausting than it used to be, physically speaking. we get to do fun kindergarten-y activities, like coloring and singing songs, and way less in the way of book work like i used to do (but will do again soon, worry not!) i do FAR more wrestling/holding/running than before, though, so it evens out. elementary has gotten easier, as i have one less story class, which means one less class to do intensive planning for, so i can devote more time to the three i have, and i have more subject classes, which are generally more low-key.
the geography class that i created for kindergarten seems to be going pretty well, but i haven't really bothered to sit down and plan much farther than i already had, so i'm a little concerned about what's going to happen in the coming weeks. i had a sort of show-and-tell thing for class this week, and the majority of the school's parents seemed to misunderstand the instructions, even though the korean teachers clearly understood when they communicated it. the problem here is that i just discovered that i'd planned show and tell for next week, too. oh well, we're moving onto world geography soon ... i hope.
quick recap of non-work things (which make up an extremely minor portion of my life):
1. i've started going to seoul during the day now that it's warm out! i actually haven't been out partying in the city since ryan and abby left, which is actually kind of embarrassing, but kind of refreshing in that i'm no longer spending 100 000 won every time i want to drink. instead, i do things like go to museums! namely, the seoul city museum to see some warhollllll.
2. i bought a bike! i haven't bothered to take a picture yet, but i've been riding it to school and we're planning on many a bike ride in the near future. as in, this weekend, during which we will have a picnic lunch and read books and generally be awesome.
3. i have a library card! hopefully i will finally become well-read, but it's doubtful. the jukjeon library has a pretty decent english section, but it's inexplicably at least 9% star wars novelizations and extensions. this wouldn't be that big of a deal, except there are only about 300 books all together. i guess i'll just become an expert on kashyyk. or else i'll just settle down with their spanish copy of bill clinton's autobiography.
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