A week in the life....
Okay, I’m now officially bored and so I will update this blog. There has been 2 nice days since I returned to Bellingham and now it is soggy again.
I spent 8 weeks in Causeni and returned to Bellingham in early April to pay taxes and take care of loose ends.
The school day is getting to be a routine but because I do not speak Russian or Romanian (actually the practical language here is Russo-Romanian because it is a blend) I am really no use until the adults appear during their lunch hour. This is mainly middle management upgrading their English because the company is multinational and English is the lingua franca. We have a conversational 10 minutes in small groups with a suggested topic before Svetlana takes over with the grammar lessons. Then there could be a brief interlude when I read an English passage and then the students read the same material in rotation and I correct their pronunciation. The teenagers arrive after public school gets out at 13:30 and again I will read passages and the kids rotate through reading the same passage with me correcting them. Not as much emphasis on conversation as the exams are mainly academic or out of a book and the standard is Cambridge English. Therefore, Svetlana is slightly concerned that the kids will pick up and remember North American pronunciation or slang and the standard is Cambridge. For instance, it is a flat not an apartment, trousers not pants, etc. The kids get older in age as the afternoon progresses. At 17:30 there is a conversational or writing group that is just drop-in. This is some preparation for me.
Then it’s 18:30 and I am off to get myself fed. The double burner in the apartment is slightly scarey as it vents into an over head cupboard and I’m afraid of setting a fire. So I either go to the deli to see what is left or the food store chain, Linella’s, for cheese and bread or something I can heat in a microwave. And of course, there is the high end wine for $5.00 USD. Finally got the deli cook, Anastasia, to smile at me but the other clerks will not smile but get the 2 lines- between -their -eyebrows frown when they get involved in the conversation.
Saturday begins with the BNF (Building a New Future) group under a grant from the American Embassy. The students spent about 2 months on a closing 2 minute video for presentation to the embassy. I sat in on endless audio takes as the kids didn’t like the sound of their voices or their pronunciation as the video was in English. About 60% of these were sad as the kids talked about their parents leaving for other countries for work for months at a time or they talked about never having seen fathers and being raised by great- uncles. I suppose this is their reality. After the BNF kids leave, there is a 2 hour session of upper classmen from the surrounding villages here for a cram course in English as they will write English exams in 2 months. Saturday ends at 3 PM.
There is also Sunday classes along the same timeline and these end at 3 PM. Svetlana has been doing this schedule 7 days a week for 13 years .
I put in a SMART Board for the school. It is basically a large white board which mirrors the attached computer screen and any thing you can trace on the board shows up on the computer screen. It is a giant touch screen developed in Calgary, Canada. Huge difference in teaching methods as it seems to keep the student’s attention better because everything can be done more quickly and the students have direct interaction with the computer. Svetlana is a blur of hands as she pushes various buttons on the screen to change the font or the color. And we are still learning different actions of the buttons after 4 months of use.
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