This last week everyone
was back from winter break. Now usually
after a break it is assumed that it is back to work full force learning new
stuff. Here in Korea that isn’t the case. Basically it was a week where no learning
happened at all. On Monday I asked my
co-teacher if it was a regular week and she said it was with the same classes
as before going on winter break. I show
up to my first class and the students were looking at me like I shouldn’t have
been there. I talked with them for some
time and the students said this week there is no learning because every teacher
is done with the book (curriculum for the year) already. So the students knew that there would be no
learning and the week would go by slow.
So I simply walked around my classes talking to some of the students,
played some cards with some other students, and watched a movie in one class
that was playing when I showed up. If I
attempted to teach anything I knew I would have no motivation from the
students. I keep mentioning only week and not weeks because now no students are
around because it is spring break. So it
is come back from winter break for one week and do nothing productive and then
spring break happens right away.
The reasoning for even
being at school was for graduation which was to happen on Friday. Graduation isn’t as big as back in the
states. I am teaching at a smaller
school then the one I attended back in Arizona, but the whole atmosphere of a
graduation ceremony wasn’t the same. One
main difference is the students didn’t wear any sort of graduation
regalia. Some of the students were in
the school uniform while some were in casual business dress and then others
were in sweatpants and a sweatshirt.
Basically there was no uniformity from anyone. It did surprise me because overall Korea is a
society that likes conformity. Another
thing that was different was the speeches and music performance was from the
underclassmen and not from the graduating class itself. There was one speech by one of the graduating
students but besides that it was all the underclassmen. Graduation started at ten in the morning and
so at first there wasn’t that many family members present. By the end the seats had filled up and they
were ready to congratulate the students with bouquets, balloons, hugs, and
pictures.
Overall the graduation
didn’t have the same festive vibe as back in the states but I do have a theory
of why that is the case. In South Korea
people live at home and stay in the same residence until they are married. Sure some people go off to college but when
done with that they live at the same home until they are married. For school breaks and anytime off they aren’t
traveling they are back in the same home.
This is especially true for the Koreans who live outside of the big
cities. Back home in the states that
isn’t the case and having independence is usually the norm. Usually high school graduation is a good time
for that to happen and so it is a bigger deal than in Korea.
So currently at school
there are two other teachers and me.
School doesn’t start back up until March 3rd. So the next couple of weeks it will be slow
and not much work. I probably will take
some days and go hiking or do other things around here, but contractually I am
supposed to be at work. Yesterday as I
was walking home I heard some good sounds: birds out chirping and moving
around. I think that means spring isn’t
too far away. Even though yesterday it
was snowing as I was walking to the bus to head to school. It is still freezing temperatures during the
evening time and the low fourties during the day. I think it is colder here than in Sochi,
Russia but no snow around. Heading to
lunch soon and so I will write later.
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