Tuesday
A full day of classes began at 11AM after Svetlana had finished the first 3 hours of her day at the public school. Laramie spent the morning writing a paper for his long distance university course and I brushed up my very limited Romanian. I was a little more oriented this day.
The classes are matched by ages and skill level. These are well scrubbed, attentive and motivated kids with the odd ADD thrown in for variety. The kids come from both the town or one of the surrounding villages. There was the usual range from the shy to the outspoken but they were keen and gently corrected the mistakes of others. There were no visible collections of tattoos or studs, only one girl with red frosted hair, the writing on the t-shirts was generic rather than angry messages, and cell phones were used very discretely and generally for the dictionary apps. Granted, these kids have parents with enough interest and the resources to send them to extracurricular classes but Svetlana will take in any kid that requests entrance and charges no fee if the family cannot afford it. This is about 25% of the enrolled kids and I cannot tell them from the full-pay students. My participation was more involved as the day progressed until I was warned that they could not follow my colloquial expressions and so I backed down. I was told the English exams are academic or written to Cambridge English standards and the slang I was using might confuse the students for the exams.
As a way to introduce me, the more advanced students were allowed to ask me any question as long as it was in English. There was the usual “What is your favorite color” questions but most questions were about the reality of life in the USA. Some had difficulty understanding why I was not sitting on a warm beach and others thought that all Americans got out of bed just to sit by the swimming pool. I possibly shattered some illusions.
Laramie’s teaching style is B.I.G. He is large, aggressive and the kids love it. He fills the room with noise and he has the kid’s full attention.
Svetlana is a phenomenon I have only experienced once before. She was raised in Causeni and has been teaching for about 14 years. She has all the certificates, as well as endorsements from the American Embassy in Chisinau. She is a rapid fire multitasker, loaded with ideas for the future and she has no limits to her energy levels. Anyone considering a career in English teaching needs to do an apprenticeship with her. Additionally, Svetlana has a vision for the future of her country and believes that educating Moldovan children is the best way to achieve it. She would succeed anywhere in the world, and probably with less energy expenditure, but has chosen to stick it out on her home turf. She and her husband are quietly charitable with clothing, food and free tuition for those in need. This lady is the real deal.
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