Wednesday, January 27, 2010

A quick update :)

Dear friends,

I hope all is well with you and that it’s warmer where you are than it is here – it’s absolutely freezing, and it’s supposed to snow again tomorrow! There was snow on the ground for almost a full month both before and after winter break, so I really see no reason why it should snow again.

The rest of my classes went well last Thursday and Friday – I’m much more like an actual teacher in some of them than I have been previously, so that’s a change. (A good change, for the most part!) A group of assistants went out to one of the two bars in Nevers on Saturday – I’m always really surprised when I end up having a really good time there – and it was a really good time. In other exciting news, I booked my flight back to the US on Saturday!! I’m now officially coming home, yippee! My contract ends on April 30, so I’m flying out of Paris on May 5. I’m flying into New York JFK and plan on spending about a week there visiting Hilary, and Lizzi decided she wanted to take advantage of knowing people (and having travel buddies), so she’s coming to New York – and the US – for the first time! We’re on the same flights (and have seats together), so I think it’ll be really fun. We’re flying with IcelandAir, which lets you add a stopover in Reykjavik for no extra cost (except for your hotel/food/etc., of course), so we’ll also be spending 3 days and nights in Reykjavik before continuing on to New York – how crazy is that?!? I’m really looking forward to it, though, because hopefully it’ll be nice weather by early May, and it should already be light until pretty late at night by then, too!

Next week is my last week of work before another 2-week vacation, which is most exciting. The kids are always a little crazy right before a break, so my plan is to make Valentine’s Day cards with as many of my classes as possible – I did it to kill some time with one of my classes on Tuesday, and they loved it! Given the excruciating attention to detail and perfection in French elementary school children (seriously), it should easily take up 45 minutes, AND they’ll have something cute to bring home! Win-win.

This weekend I’m off to La Charité sur Loire for birthday celebrations, then next Friday night I’ll be on a train to Rome!

Bisous from Nevers!

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

A new schedule

Hello Everyone!

As I mentioned in my last post, my teaching schedule changed on Monday. This means I had my last class with most of my classes last week (except for one of my favorite classes, with which I’ll be working all year). It made me think I should leave all the time – I got tons of hugs and adorable drawings from my CE1 class (my youngest class, approximately the equivalent of 1st grade), and 3 of the students in my oldest class wrote an entire skit in English and put it on in front of the whole class - I was so proud of them!

I started at my new school on Monday, and unfortunately it was kind of a rough day – I showed up for my morning class only to find that the teacher hadn’t prepared for me to be there, so all I did was introduce myself to the class (which took all of 5 minutes), then turned around and went home. This is an hour-long round trip on foot! So, I was already kind of frustrated when I made the trek back out there after lunch for my afternoon class. Unfortunately again, there had been some miscommunication as to when I was coming/when I was supposed to be there. The older classes are in the middle of national testing, so they were sitting down to a mandatory exam when I arrived to do English – and the teacher told me they’d already done English! Needless to say, I was pretty furious that I’d ended up wasting 2 hours of my day fruitlessly walking back and forth between my apartment and this school, so I told them I was going back home and that if my afternoon class asked for me, I wasn’t going to be there. I was scheduled to have another class later that afternoon, but as there was no teacher’s name on my schedule and no one seemed to be able to give me a hint as to which teacher it might be with, I decided I’d had enough of the disorganization and just wrote the day off!

Luckily, yesterday was much more successful, and I actually got to go to all my scheduled classes! Ecole Brossolette, my new school, is literally right across the street from one of my old schools (Ecole de Mouesse), but it’s VERY different. It seems to have a different demographic of students, and most of the teachers strike me as pretty different as well. I guess it’s too early to make observations like that, but that’s how it seems at first glance.

Today was my day off, so Lizzi (my friend with whom I’m traveling during our February break) and I took care of some of the preparations for our grand adventure. We went to the train station to make some reservations, and it seems so much closer now that we have some tickets in hand! In case I haven’t written about it before, I’m going on a big trip with Lizzi during our 2-week break in February, and I’m REALLY excited about it. We’re starting by taking a night train to Rome, then going to Florence, Venice, Vienna, Salzburg, and Munich before returning to Nevers.

Before that, though, there’s another exciting weekend coming up next week. One of our other assistants, Eva, has a mother who actually grew up in Nevers, and her family still has a house in La Charité sur Loire, a small town nearby. Lizzi and Eva, who live together, have the same birthday (oddly enough), so we’re going to the house in La Charité for the weekend at the end of January. I think it’ll be a nice way to celebrate a few birthdays and to see yet another small town in the environs of Nevers, so I’m really looking forward to it.

I hope you all are doing well, à bientôt!

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Limoges

Bonjour mes amis!

I hope all is well with all of you and that you haven’t been too cold – I hear it’s absolutely freezing in many parts of the US! As I may have posted earlier, it’s been miserably cold here for about the past month – I think that’s how long there’s been snow on the ground, too! It finally got above freezing today (I think the high was in the upper 30s) and it felt SO warm! Other than the cold, I’ve been doing well since my last post, and of course I’ve had more adventures since then!

Hilary and I went to Limoges this weekend, which was snowy and cold, but really fun! For those of you who are thinking, “Hmmm… Limoges… That name sounds familiar, where have I heard that before?,” Limoges is world-famous for its china and its porcelain. We arrived on Saturday around lunchtime and then spent the afternoon exploring the city and doing some shopping. The French only have sales twice a year – in January and in July – so we had to seize the moment! It would have been irresponsible not to, right?!? We visited several churches, all of which were (to our surprise and delight) heated and had lovely stained glass windows. Most of them also still had their Christmas decorations and Nativity scenes up, so that was nice to see as well. We did have a sad moment when we tried to go to one of the city’s museums to see their collection of porcelain and art and couldn’t find a way to get into the building. They were doing work on the building, so there were big work sites up all around it – we walked all the way around the entire building and never once saw a door through which you could enter! We never found a sign explaining if/why it was closed, either, but then, I guess we ARE in France! We walked through the older section of Limoges after that, and found a cute little half-timbered street called rue de la Boucherie (literally, the butcher’s street) with a tiny chapel dedicated to St. Aurelien, the patron saint of Limoges’ guild of butchers – very different, but pretty cool!

On Sunday we visited the Musée National André Dubouché, a great collection of porcelain in a beautiful building. It was completely dedicated to porcelain, but it had a video about the production of porcelain that was actually legitimately very interesting, and it had a lot of cool stuff! For example, I saw a plate that was made in 1345 in China and is now one of the most valuable pieces of porcelain in the world. They’d also made reproductions of [past and present] heads of state from countries around the world, so I got to see what Abraham Lincoln’s plates looked like! (The have a bald eagle in the middle, then a ring of purple around the edge of the plate, in case you were curious.) Our trains back to Nevers from Limoges were slightly delayed on Sunday night because of bad winter weather, so I was glad to get back to my warm, dry apartment after so much time spent outside!

My teaching schedule changes on Monday, so this is my last week with my current classes. While I’m certainly glad to be done with a few of my classes, I’m pretty sad I won’t have some of them anymore – they’d grown on me! I’m sure my new schools, classes, and teachers will be fine, but I definitely don’t relish the idea of starting all over again and of having no idea how things are run! I hope all is well with all of you, gros bisous de Nevers!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Paris, Bruges, Moulins

Dear friends,

Bonne Année! Happy 2010! The rest of my Christmas break in England was very enjoyable, and I got to see lots of family and do quite a few fun things. As I said briefly in my last post, I went into London with 3 of my cousins on the Monday before Christmas. It was absolutely freezing, and while we were in Camden Lock it started snowing SO hard – it was really pretty though! That night we went to see Avenue Q, a really funny musical with puppets – it’s kind of like a rude, inappropriate version of Sesame Street. We ended up spending the night in a hostel in London (not the nicest place I’ve ever stayed, but I guess you can’t expect too much for £7 per night…), so we also spent Tuesday in the city, shopping on Oxford Street, walking through Hyde Park, and checking out the Christmas displays at Harrod’s.

On the Wednesday before Christmas I went to Harpenden, another city near where my aunt lives, to see another one of my cousins and her darling 3-year old son, Ben. The last time I saw him he was very young (it was almost 3 years ago), and he’s gotten so big and adorable! We went to St. Albans (one town over from Harpenden) to walk around and have a coffee – it was so pretty in the snow, even if it was super cold.

On the day before I left England, Kathryn and I went to Bletchley (a town about 40 minutes from Bedford, where I was staying) to visit Bletchley Park, where British intelligence was able to crack the Germans’ Enigma code during WWII. My dad is a big history buff and told me I had to go visit it – even though I still don’t really understand how the actual code-breaking machine worked (it seemed really technical and confusing), it was actually a really interesting visit. Bletchley Park is a mansion with big, pretty grounds, and they had a good permanent exhibition about life during the war and, of course, the codebreakers. The work done at Bletchley Park during the war was kept a secret until the 1970s, so it was pretty cool to see something that was so top secret for so many years!

I flew back to Paris from London VERY early on the morning of New Year’s Eve and conveniently met Hilary at the airport (our flights landed shortly after each other). Of course it was very cold and grey in Paris, but we managed to walk from our hotel near the Centre Pompidou to the Louvre, so we visited the Louvre before it was time to get ready for dinner and New Year’s Eve festivities. Our original plan had been to watch the Eiffel Tower (which sparkles for about 10 minutes starting at midnight) and fireworks from Montmartre, the big hill in Paris where Sacré Coeur is situated, but it was too foggy and cloudy to be able to see anything from up there, so we had to change our plan of attack. We ended up just eating dinner at Montmartre and then walking to the Champs Elysées with a couple bottles of champagne to ring in 2010 (France doesn’t have open container laws, so no worries there!). We found a side street with a good view of the Eiffel Tower, and it was so pretty when it started sparkling! Overall, it was a great (and pretty laid-back) way to spend New Year’s!

On Sunday we headed off to Bruges, Belgium, which is definitely now high on my list of favorite places – it was ADORABLE! We got there in the afternoon and spent a few hours just wandering around – it kept getting cuter and cuter, and I didn’t see even one thing that wasn’t completely charming. It has lots of canals and bridges, and the architecture is gorgeous as well. On Saturday we got up and went on a great tour of De Halve Maan Brewery – we had a hilarious tour guide, we got to climb up on the roof for a great view of Bruges, and it ended with a beer in the brewery’s café – not too shabby! We then visited Bruges’ Church of Our Lady, which was a Madonna and Child sculpture by Michelangelo, which obviously was pretty cool. I also really enjoyed the Gruuthuse Museum, which is essentially a collection of mostly-secular objects from daily life in Bruges in centuries past. It’s in an old private residence of someone who was very rich, so it was great to get to go into one of those beautiful homes that are so common in Europe! I REALLY enjoyed Bruges, and I also found all the Belgians I encountered to be very friendly, so I highly recommend it!

Hilary and I got back to Nevers on Sunday night, and I had classes Monday and yesterday. They’ve gone pretty well, although it’s definitely hard to get back into the routine of work after so much time off! Luckily my next vacation starts on February 5, so I have something to get me through all this tough work… I don’t work on Wednesdays, so today Hilary, my friend/fellow assistant Mari, and I went on a day trip to Moulins sur Allier, a pretty little town about a 30-minute train ride away. We saw 2 lovely cathedrals and got a private presentation on a beautifully-painted triptych at the Cathédrale Notre Dame. Moulins also has a pretty cool museum dedicated solely to stage costumes from theatrical productions, so we saw an exposition on costumes from early 20th century Russian operas. Kind of random, but still very cool – we spent quite a bit of time playing in the “children’s museum” portion of it – they had lots of fun things to try on, like furry Russian hats! We also had a much-needed coffee at Moulins’ Grand Café, a beautiful Belle Epoque café that hasn’t changed its interior décor since 1899 – it was beautiful!

Sorry for the monstrously long post, I hope all is well with you all – Happy New Year!