Thursday, April 30, 2009
The 2 Week School Anniversary Celebration
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Nights in Antofagasta
So manage to go out about once every week (usually with the other volunteers here in Antofagasta). Some of these experiences have been pretty ordinary and others have been rather interesting.
My first time out was probably the most exciting because I got lost on my way back to my house. I didn't know the city or my neighborhood very well and since much of Antofagasta looks rather similar to my eyes (one story house with walls and little stores with signs of “hay pan”) when the bus started going up to the top of the hill Antofagasta rests and we hadn't gone to the top of the hill going into the downtown area, I assumed I missed my stop and got off. My plan was to walk down the hill to the coast, get my bearings and then walk back up the hill to my host family's house. I had spent sometime already walking along the beach and thought I could tell where I was when I got there. Unfortunately, when I reached the beach that didn't prove to be the case, but because I had to have passed my stop I started walking back towards downtown figuring I'd recognize a landmark soon enough. It turns out though that my assumptions were all wrong and that the bus actually hadn't passed my house; the buses don't take the exact same routes going north as they do going south. It all ended up working out though. After walking 30 minutes in the wrong direction, I ran into a young couple in an old beat up van parked on the beach eating Chinese food and asked them how to get to my house. After they told me it was a long ways away, I managed to convince them to give me a ride in exchange for some cash. It took them maybe 10 minutes to drive me home, with van motor revving loudly the whole time (particular when we went up the hill).
My next time out, another volunteer and I went to a schloperia, which is basically a dive bar that typically only men go to. They almost solely serve cheap beer (Cristal, Escudo, Brahmia are the big beer brands here … much of Antofagasta income is from mining so the town and the schloperias have a blue collar feel to them). While we were talking, a Chilean man came up to our table and told us he'd buy us a round if he could join our table and talk English with us. We said sure and conversed for awhile. He then bought us another round and we continued talking. On the back from the bathroom (they had a trough just like at UMD) a different man comes up to me and speaks to me in broken English and asks if our table needed more beer. I said no definitely not because we had already drunken too much (a beer here is basically a liter) but he either did not understand or didn't listen because soon enough another round appeared at our table. After mostly finishing that, our new friends asked us if we wanted to find some girls at a discotheque but both me and the other volunteer were tired so we headed home instead.
This past weekend, the volunteers and I went to a nice small discotheque on the third floor of the Antofagasta Mall. Because of the connections of one the schools' secretaries, we didn't have to pay the cover which would have been 15 dollars! The place was very nice and it had an excellent view of Antofagasta (because at 3 stories up it was one of the tallest buildings in town. The city really looked like a carpet of lights spread out along the hill. This time I managed to stay up until 6am which is the time when parties in Chile typically end. I don't know how people here do it … as is my style I took a nap before heading out, however my host mom regularly comes back to the house at 6 am without needing a nap beforehand.
This upcoming weekend I am supposed to attend a Chilean asado (bbq) with my host mom. Details next week.
Monday, April 27, 2009
dogs again
Saturday, April 25, 2009
rain
Also yesterday I bought an empanada that I thought would be sausage and cheese and unfortunately turned out to be a hotdog on one side cheese on the other wrapped in bread. They eat a lot of hotdogs down here, with of course maynoisse and avocado.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Monday, April 20, 2009
Happy Birthday School
press
Friday, April 17, 2009
Nissan-chan
Thursday, April 16, 2009
mal suerte
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Teaching
Teaching so far has been good but exhausting ... I seem to be able to maintain control of the classroom but barely for some classes. (the other day I ended up kicking a student out of my class but that was an exceptional circumstance where the kid was consistently disrupting the whole class --- I'm also fortunate because I think I can keep him from returning, it is good to know that the administration has my back.) For the most part the students are just very active and talkative. This, however, does not mean that I can ever get them to speak in English. I'm trying out different ideas to try to get the students to speak more in class … skits, rewarding speaking volunteers with class points, praising people who do speak, calling on people.
My teaching schedule is interesting: its convenient in that for the most part all of my classes are in the morning (8 to 1); inconvenient in that its very chopped up meaning that I'll have sections of some classes for more time then I will have other sections of the same class. This is compounded by the random holidays and canceled classes which makes planning class somewhat complicated. I find that despite my classes being solely in the morning, I end up staying much later at the school because I often end up taking advantage of the school's free wifi which I can access on my laptop.
I have managed to remain amused at the slight chaos that affects all school activities. For example, last Thursday I gave handouts to the copy person. On Monday, I went to pick up my copies but the copy office was closed for no apparent reason so I had to create a lesson plan from scratch. Today all the classes started and ended 15 minutes late for no apparent reason. This chaos has been most noticeable with selection of students for the English speaking competition. We keep meeting to select the student that will represent the school but one person who is critical to the selection process is perpetually absent from these meetings.
The most interesting thing so far at school has been the reaction of the younger students to me. While I don't teach the younger students, they often play right outside of my classroom. Often when they see me a bunch of them will come over and swarm me asking me questions saying hi etc. A similar thing occurred when I observed classes in seventh and eighth grade. Midway through class, a group of students flocked to where I was sitting and asked me all sorts of questions such as: what is my name?, where am I from? What kind of music do I like? ( radiohead, guns and roses, pink floyd, and my chemical romance are all popular here) Is my eye color real or do I have colored contact lenses (I wasn't sure why I'd have contact lenses and glasses) do I drink?, do I smoke?, what sports do I play?, why did I come to Chile?, do I like Antofagasta?, do I believe in God? Do I believe that the world will end in 2012 when the Mayan calendar stops (it took me a while to fully understand this question) do you like Chilean women?, do you think our teacher is hot? How old are you? Etc ….. In the seventh grade classes some students asked me for my autograph and in eighth grade some students wanted to take my picture with them (in both these cases I made the mistake of giving into the first request only to have 10 more people ask me). Fortunately, the high school students are less excited about me probably because they have had volunteers teach them in the past and because they are high school students and not as excitable. My favorite class so far is a ninth grade class that still isn't used to having a volunteer and thus causes no problems …. I'm betting that will change throughout the school year.