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!

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