Random Thoughts...part II

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

These are some thoughts and inner reflections on the first few months of Peace Corps service here in Thailand. Many of these come from Dale Yurovich, a fellow volunteer while others have been inspired by other volunteers and their own input. Hope you enjoy.

1) You can shower with many different creatures, including frogs, toads, large spiders, thousands of ants, geckos, and ..............

1A) You can get use to or adapt to many things but thus far I have yet to get use to a cold shower early in the morning.

2) Thai's eat more fried foods than any American I know and yet they still maintain that girlish figure. I have yet to discover how this is possible but if I were to eat like this in the States then I would have had my second heart attack last week. Please send all get well cards to my family.

2A) I have never had better fried chicken in all my life and mixing the fried bits with rice is a new favorite treat.

3) Their are more pick-up trucks in Thailand than at any county fair.

4) I can now cook using a wok.

4A) I've now learned two new ways to cook eggs. The incredible, edible, egg is freaking right!

5) All Thai's are deaf forcing them to play and listen to music at volumes which allows the next village over to hear. This holds true for television as well. My neighbor's daughter was watching an early morning children's program today at 6:45am. I know this because I heard it as if it was in side my skull...

6) A polite greeting for a Thai adult is known as a 'Wai'. Hands clasped together at chest level, bow the head, and say Saa-wa-dee-krap/ka. A polite greeting for Thai children is to smack each other on the side of the head as hard as you can. The shoulder is also acceptable although not as painful and thus not as respectable. A good swift kick is also acceptable.

7) I don't use toilet paper anymore and I kind of like it. Seriously think about what you do for a moment. You wipe your own ass with your hand protected only by the thinnest piece of paper you can find. I'm going to have problems shaking people's hands when I get back to the States.

8) If you ever have to wonder how long you should let water boil before it is safe to drink then you should just let it boil some more.

8A) Nope. Still not safe. Let it boil some more.

9) Pooping something solid is a cause for celebration.

10) There are people who have never seen snow.

11) There are people who will never see snow.

12) There are people who have never seen pictures of snow.

13) It is accepted that one should remove his/her shoes before entering any public building or private residence. This isn't really a problem since most people wear sandals.

13A) It's nice to be able to wear sandals to work on a daily basis. Especially when you have to leave them at the door and walk around for most of the day bare foot. I highly recommend it.

14) With regard to food, everything has bones in it. Eat slowly so as to better enable you to pick those bones out.

15) A lot of weird things make a lot of weird sounds at a lot of weird times.

That's all for now. I'm tired and am going to bed.

Week 1 - "I'm not dead yet!"

Thursday, May 22, 2008

So today concludes my first official week of school. I still have some things to work out in terms of scheduling and I didn't actually attend a full weeks worth of school but with how the Thai school system operates, I would actually call this more official than if I had been at school for all four days.

Let's start from the beginning. My original schedule was as follows. Mondays I would be teaching Pratom 4 (4th Grade) from 9:30 - 11:30 and Pratom 5 from 1:30 - 2:30. Tuesdays I would be teaching Pratom 4 from 10:30 - 11:30 and Pratom 5 from 12:30 - 2:30. These classes would be taking place at Ban Triam school with my co-teacher, Moosa. While I know you can all do math, I'll make it easy for you all and just mention that my sum total of teaching at Ban Triam school will be (at this point) 6 hours per week. On Wednesdays and Thursdays I was originally scheduled to teach Pratom 4 from 9:30 - 10:30 and Pratom 5 from 12:30 - 1:30 at Ban Bang Wa school with my co-teacher, Meena. This would give me a total of 10 hours teaching per week.

After running over the numbers again and again in my head, this just didn't seem right to me. Although I might have fought it throughout my life, my Dad and his peers did raise me with a certain work ethic that just didn't make a 10 hour work week seem worth while. I haven't been able to adjust my hours yet with Moosa but I was able to change my hours with Meena yesterday and as a result I am up from working 4 hours at Ban Bang Wa school to working 7 as this was the best that could be done with both of our schedules. I will now be teaching Pratom 6 from 10:30 - 11:30 on Wednesdays as well as two seperate hours of Pratom 3 on Thursdays from 10:30 - 11:30 and from 1:30 - 2:30 (same class). I hope to be able to add more classes at Ban Triam next week as well.

So according to the schedule above, my week should have begun on Monday... but it didn't. Monday was a holiday and school was closed. Wan Visakha Bucha. A Buddhist holiday which I forgot about and no one mentioned to me the week prior. So I was up early and at school on time all alone without any students to teach. In case you were wondering, Wan Visakha Bucha celebrates or remembers the birth, enlightenment, and death of the Buddha. Opps! Forgot. My bad. It's ok. I sent a card. (Was that last comment in bad taste? I think so too.) So actually my work week began on Tuesday at Ban Triam school. No worries. It's not like anything bad could happen by skipping Monday right?

So within the first 10 minutes of my first class this kid breaks his arm. Dumb-ass. I haven't found out yet if it's his arm or wrist but it's broke alright. Sorry if my dumb-ass comment might sound a bit cold hearted but he literally was acting like a dumb-ass. If he was acting like an apple when he broke his arm then I would have called him an apple but he wasn't. He was being a dumb-ass playing around on top of his desk, he fell, and he broke his arm. We sent him to the hospital and I haven't seen him sent. With any luck he is doing ok but I promise you he won't be doing that again.

An interesting thing about the Thai educational system and the methods of parenting. The above comment about how he won't be playing around on top of his desk again... that is how Thai's teach their children. Many Thai children have scars. I have a small scar on my knee from stitches and another on my lip from the same reason. But these scares are small and hardly noticeable now. Almost everyone in Thailand has very large and noticeable scars. I saw one boy today who had a very large scar on the inside of his leg just above his knee. About four inches long. I can't imagine what might have caused such a huge gash but I'm sure a lesson was learned from it. It the States, children are taught not to touch a pan that is sitting on the stove or to touch a stove that is on or something along those lines. If you touch it then you will get burned and it will hurt and it might even leave a scare. In Thailand, they just let the child touch it. The child screams, will cry, and it isn't until a few moments have passed that any attention is paid to the child. Children learn from experience in Thailand and as a result, children are much better able to take care of themselves and each other in many different situations. A major downside are all of the scars.

At Ban Bang Wa school I spent my days in much the same way that I spent my day at Ban Triam. I observed my co-teacher Meena in order to gain a better understanding of her teaching style as well as to evaluate the English level of the various students I would be teaching in the coming weeks, months, and years. I will admit that a few students have impressed me but they are rare among the majority who merely memorize the words which are presented to them and just repeat the sound without fully understanding their meanings.

So that was my week. I've already established an English Club at Ban Triam and I hope to do the same at Ban Bang Wa. I'll be taking pictures all next week and will be posting them ASAP. I'll just let the pictures speak for themselves with a few captions to go along with them. I think from the look of this entry and the rest that I'm starting to get a little word heavy. Maybe I should lighten up...? Probably.

love Chris

Skoole Daz

Sunday, May 18, 2008

You are reading my blog... hehe.......

So I promised to write about my first day of school during one of my previous blogs and as promised, this will be the topic of this blog. I shall not let you down. It was a very interesting day and I’m sorry to say that I did not have my camera on hand otherwise I would be posting pictures of that day along with this blog. I promise to bring my camera to school next week.

I arrived at Bang Wa School early around 8am and was met by my co-teacher Meena along with some of the other faculty. Meena is young, roughly my age, and has only been teaching for a year and a half. We had only met a few times prior to the first day of school but from these meetings I could tell that she was very excited to be working with a ‘farang’ English teacher though she still appears to be very shy. An example of this is the fact that her English is far better than what she lets on.

While the students ran around the school cleaning and preparing for school to begin that morning and for that year, I was in the office helping Meena and another teacher organize all of the books for the school that were to be passed out in just a little while. The school received new books this year and they were only now opening the boxes, which they had arrived in. Lucky for them that when they opened the boxes they were all new school books for a Thai elementary school and not motorcycle repair manuals written in Russian. This is Thailand after all… stranger things could and have happened.

Before we distributed the books to all of the students, all of the students were to line up on the basketball court in front of the flagpole for morning role call. Remember how when you were younger (at least some of you) you would have to stand up with the rest of your class and say the Pledge of Allegiance every morning? This is nearly the same thing but instead of doing this in the classrooms, the entire school comes out and organizes themselves by grade and prepares to do something similar. Some schools have their own band, which plays the Kings anthem while others just play a recording over the PA. After this and sometimes before this, the principle or a leading faculty member will often give a speech of some kind. Not really a “Win one for the Gipper” kind of speech but also not really just a regular morning announcements kind of speech either. It was after this speech that I walked up and introduced myself to the students. I told them my name and where I was from and asked if anyone spoke English. When everyone suddenly had a scared look on their face, I said it was ok because what I was saying is all the Thai that I know. I then told them that if they teach me Thai then I would help them learn English and they cheered. After my brief speech, I asked Meena if anything I said in Thai made sense or if the students were trained to cheer when a teacher is finished speaking. She said both.

Afterwards, Meena and I worked out a schedule of when I would actually be teaching at Bang Wa school. It was understood that I would be teaching on Wednesdays and Thursdays but the times were unknown at this point. After figuring out the schedule for the school, we figured out that it would be best for us to teach at 9:30 and then again at 12:30 for one hour each. This schedule was to begin that day but on both occasions I looked down at my watch to realize that it was 10 and 1 respectfully. We arrived a half-hour late to both classes but it was Meena who said, “Ok, I think it’s time to go now,” on both occasions. Peace Corps warned us that Thai teachers have a different dedication to their classrooms than American or even Western teachers do. If someone calls in the middle of a class, they will answer and go outside to talk on the phone. Sometimes they will leave class to go “mail” something at the post office or perhaps even go to the market to buy something leaving the class unattended during that time period. I have not witnessed much of this to any full degree but many other volunteers have and have expressed how frustrating it is.

I teach Pratom 4 (4th Grade) and Pratom 5 (5th Grade) at Bang Wa school which will be the same grades I will be teaching on Mondays and Tuesdays at my other school, Ban Triam. There are 10 5th graders and 15 4th graders at Bang Wa school, which will make some activities very easy to conduct and execute. During my first day I further introduced myself to the class and Meena and I attempted to review some of the material that they had learned the previous year in order to gain a barring on where to begin this year. To be honest, this was just filler which would be followed by a quick game. It has been proven time and time again that typically Thai students learn vocabulary words but never fully understand the meaning or how to use such words in a sentence nor do they ever fully understand the sentences which the learn in class. Rather they just memorize them, which is just enough to make their teachers happy.

So we reviewed what kind of animals they know and then played a short game using that knowledge having the boys of each class play the girls of each class. In case anyone was interested, The boys just barely beat the girls in Pratom 4 but the girls carried the day in Pratom 5. After finishing up class I met up with Meena and we attempted to lesson plan for the rest of the term. Just a general outline of the subjects that she would like to cover and what materials I can bring to the table. This meeting didn’t last as long as I had expected as Meena is planning on teaching straight from the book. I showed her an example of a sample lesson plan I had made using various Peace Corps materials and I think it intimidated her a little bit. I don’t think she has ever prepared something so extensive or thorough before. But at the same time I hope that she came away from the meeting feeling that I will be a big help to her and that we can learn a lot from each other.

So that was my first day at school or at least at Bang Wa school. Tomorrow I will be starting school at Ban Triam school with my other co-teacher Moosa. Tomorrow should be equally interesting and fulfilling.

That’s all for now.

Chris

Current Music: Jimmy Buffet – License to Chill
Current Weather – Partly Cloudy (Second day in a row of kinda sunny)
Current Thought – I have 30 minutes to prepare for a wedding and I’m hungry…

Random Thoughts...

Saturday, May 17, 2008

This won't be long. I just have a thought or two. You know what's awesome about living in a tropical climate? (And people who have lived in a tropical climate for any extended period of time will understand what I mean...) Mold and Mildew. I returned home from the teacher training in Phang Nga that I was working at over the past week or so only to find most of my house and cloths to be covered in mold and mildew. What a wonderful surprise mother nature has left for me.

I said thank you and proceeded to go out side to burn my trash. You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours. It's very simple. Right now I'm soaking my clothes in tubs of laundry detergent/vinegar in a hope that I can some how get rid of the mold. I'll let you know how that turns out. I'm really hoping that I can get my laundry done soon because it's actually sunny out today which means my cloths might actually get dry.

That's it really. I don't really have anything deep or insightful to say at the moment. Damn mold is pissing me off. If I start to turn green then I'll be sure to take a picture before scraping it off and taking a shower.

Teacher Training pt. 1

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Dear Blog People,

So this is an update which I wrote/ am writing from a teacher training in Phang Nga town (the province capital) [personal note: it is several days later and I am publishing this from one of my schools following my first day of teaching. I will be writing on that subject later on.] Right now I have some free time while the teachers learn about lesson planning and so I am taking this chance to write down a few thoughts. As I am hand writing this note right now, I will have to figure out a way to transfer these chicken scratches onto the internet (looks like I did!). I'm positive my thoughts will change between now and then though so will have to see if I make any changes to my original thoughts. (Doubt I will...will probably just type what I originally wrote so I can get home and take a shower and do some laundry. I'm kind of tired to be honest. Although, as you have seen above, some of the text is in blue as is this text. These are comments I am making in the present time after I wrote this original post.)

Today is Tuesday, May 13th and I have been part of this teacher training for the better part of two weeks. We began on May 5th and worked our way through grammar and syntax as well as pronunciation. My friend Christine, a fellow volunteer working with me here at this teacher training, just said that based on my description above, it might sound like I am on a desert island.

"I've been keeping track of the passing days by carving notches in the one lone coconut tree. I have tried to make contact with passing ships by shinning my mirror and reflecting the sun but all attempts have failed."

There are days when this is not far from the truth. We are both working with a format that aims to try to improve the English of close to 110 teachers in roughly a week. Impossible does not even come close to describing the situation, especially when some of the trainers are more focused on teaching correct pronunciation rather than conversational skills. A student might be able to say "Hello, my name is Somchi. What is your name?" in perfect English with no accent at all but that really means nothing if that is all the student can say compared to other students who are close to fluent but with thick accents. (For some reason, this always makes me think of the phrase "Pak ya ca in Havad yad." Don't ask me why.)

From May 5th through the 7th, it was very difficult to find my place or role in this atmosphere. For one thing, grammar is not and has never been my strongest subject, and to combine that with being thrown into a teacher training where the only preparation and advanced knowledge I was given about the subject matter was that it would focus on pronunciation and grammar... let's just say I welcomed the break with open arms.

After finishing on the 7th, I returned home and was able to gather together various materials and lessons which I hopped would prove useful now that I knew what the exact schedule and format of the training actually was. Once I returned on the 11th, I felt rejuvenated and far better prepared than I had been during the previous sessions. Now please don't misunderstand; both Christine and I had little to no knowledge as to what the exact course of action would be for any given day except for the general subject that was to be covered but we were both much better able to adapt to the needs of both the teachers we were training and the other trainers we were working with. We were also able to present numerous fun games and activities which the teachers could take with them back to their own classrooms and use to help teach English to their students. One of the problems Christine and I faced during the first few sessions was that the trainers expected us to have various games and activities to go with the lessons being taught. (They also expect us to come up with these games and activities at the flip of a coin. Christine would often compare us to robots or trained pets but I prefer the phrase "dancing English monkeys".) Neither of us knew of any games which related to prefixes or suffixes that could work with 100 teachers with no where to move and zero prep time so we taught them how to sing the Beatles "Hello, Goodbye." (This failed, by the way, and we only attempted it because it is one of many songs that is suggest by Peace Corps to sing during English camps and English teacher trainings. I believe next time I will try and teach them the Rolling Stones "Satisfaction" instead. I think it would work better and I can already imagine how it would sound in Engrish.) By the way, if anyone does know of any educational games and activities for grammar lessons, please send them my way. I'm always looking for more games.
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And that's where I ran out of time or was pulled away to help with another activity... never to complete what was to be my thoughts and reflections from the teacher training in Phang Nga town. I know that some of what I have said above might give the impression that the whole event left me with a bitter taste in my mouth but this is not the case. For one thing, I ate better while in Phang Nga than I have so far while being at site. The food was amazing, I was able to relax every single night with an ice cold beer while reflecting upon the successes of the day, and I had a really good pizza! Who could ask for more?? Oh yeah, and I trained some teachers on some English stuff. The problem was that much of the training, in my opinion, focused on concepts or goals that could not be attained in one week or on specific areas that do not need so much attention compared with other areas (attempting to explain to teachers how and why certain words change in pronunciation from single word form to phrase form when many of them would value more from new and creative ideas in teaching basic lessons they have taught before.)

And so I would search out and attempt to create small victories throughout the day. One example came during one of the last days of the training when the topic of the day was classroom expressions. The trainer who taught this section had the teachers write down the classroom expressions they use in the classroom and tried to help them by assigning each teacher to use three more expressions than they already use. When he asked if I had any thoughts, I stepped up and asked teachers if when they ask students to stand up or sit down, do they say it in English or in Thai? I then explained that from my experience in Singburi, a teacher will often use many classroom expressions in Thai and only a few in English. Those that she uses in English, she will quickly follow up with the Thai translations because often the students will just look at each other, not knowing what the teacher is saying. I challenged this teachers not to give the translation. The teachers had already gone over a few hand gestures which could be used to help the students understand the English classroom command or expression. I tried to explain that the more English the teachers use in the classroom, the better. If a student always has a teacher to translate something for them into Thai, then that student will never fully learn the word or phrase in English. If their is no one there to translate for them, then the student is forced to learn the English. And so I went on and on for about 15 minutes using myself and other personal experiences as examples and the teachers finally understood. A small personal victory but a good one.

This was basically what the teacher training was all about. I honestly forget how many days and I'm not about to do the math but let's just say X many days of small victories. The whole thing was a bust from the beginning but with those tiny little victories, it made it all worth while.

And now I am tired and in need of a shower.

Best wishes,

Chris

Cyclone Nargis

Friday, May 9, 2008

Well, as many of you know, I’ve been trying for the past few days/weeks to set up a video-blog on this site which I though might be a little bit more creative and fun than just a regular old blog. As it turns out, I’m having quite a bit of difficulty posting the videos I want to put up so as for now I will just try and post as often as possible while attempting to keep this blog as entertaining and informative as possible. If anyone has any questions, comments, or concerns please feel free to post something. I promise that it will be answered in some way or another.

As for an update as to my life here in here in Asia, things are going well. I suppose I should speak a little about Cyclone Nargis which recently hit Myanmar (Burma) just a short time ago. It is truly a tragic event which has happened but it has really opened my eyes to how news is covered around the world and how certain events receive greater news coverage than others depending upon their location. Cyclone Nargis is a perfect example of this. Cyclone Nargis hit the coast of Myanmar on May 2nd, 3rd, and 4th with the effects of the storm being felt as far south as Phuket here in Thailand. My village is slowly coming into the rainy season but during that time and shortly there after, we saw nothing but rain for nearly a week. During the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th my village was hit by violent thunderstorms and strong winds which were amazing to witness and nothing like I’ve ever seen before. I didn’t really think much of it since the rainy season was getting close and I am new to this climate. It wasn’t until a fellow volunteer up north asked if I was ok and if I had been through any of the storms from the cyclone that I started to look things up online. On May 4th I looked Nargis up online and all I could find were a few short articles on weather related websites. I found the path of the storm and from what I could tell the storm was over.

It wasn’t until I returned from a teacher training seminar in Phang Nga town (my province capital) that I received numerous e-mails and messages on Facebook from friends and loved ones concerned about my well-being following the cyclone. It was nice that they showed their concern but what I found interesting was that all of their e-mails and messages were dated from the 6th and 7th as were all of the articles I began to find online regarding the storm. A day ago the death toll was roughly 20,000 with another 40,000 missing. This morning that total has ballooned up to 100,000 according to the BBC and USA Today.

I know that their is a disclaimer at the top of this blog that what I post on here does not in any way reflect the opinions of Peace Corps or the United States government but I thought that might be worth repeating as what I am about to say won’t be the most up beat words one would expect a Peace Corps Volunteer to say regarding such a tragedy. The truth is that Myanmar is in a tough spot. The military government is currently dragging it’s feet with regard to international aid and relations with it’s closest neighbor, who has already been through a similar event, are hampered by a long history of distrust on both sides. The largest problem though is that the area that was hit is not a major tourist area for Myanmar and so once the world has something else to distract itself with, aid will most likely fall away. Many parts of Thailand were lucky following the tsunami in that many of the areas that were hit were very popular locations for western tourists and were quickly rebuilt. Smaller villages though which are off the beaten path had a much more difficult road to recovery and one can still see evidence of the tsunami in the daily lives of the people in this area. I’m sure it will be the same for those hit by this storm. I’m positive aid will come and help will arrive at some point, but I’m just concerned that the politics of the governments involved with make the rebuilding process that much more difficult. Combine that with the attention span of the world and I worry that this storm will be forgotten far too quickly.

If you are interested in helping those who have been devastated by Cyclone Nargis then may I suggest the World Vision Organization. I’m not trying to get people to donate so please don’t think that. I just noticed on a news website the list of organizations and aid groups that are operating in the area. World Vision is one such group and they are the same group which have continued to work in many of the rural villages of southern Thailand which did not receive the same sort of instant aid and assistance that major tourist areas did following the tsunami. To be honest, I know very little about the organization or the people who work for it. What I do know though is that the tsunami struck in December of 2004 and World Vision is still here helping people. So if you are at all interested in donating, may I suggest World Vision.

That’s all for now. I promise to put the soap box away next time.

 
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