Yesterday (wednesday) I went to Toulouse all day for the teaching assistants orientation. All the language assistants for the whole Academie de Toulouse (the Midi-Pyrenees region) had the same orientation, so I took the train at 6:17 am with 2 other english assistants, (one american and one jamaican) the spanish assistant from panama, and the german assistant. The morning was spent with the school administration personnel introducing themselves for about 3 hours. We had lunch, then in the afternoon we were given a presentation about the French education system, then finally, FINALLY split up into groups by language to learn some teaching methods. Of a day-long teaching orientation, 2 hours were spent learning how to teach. They really can't expect that much of us. We were let out an hour early, so I spent an hour and a half wandering around Toulouse with Molly, Hadley, and Nandini, 3 other english assistants, and then Molly Hadley and I got back on the train to head back to Tarbes.
This morning, I had another great experience with the incredibly organized high school I work in (not). I showed up in the proper classroom for my 9:00 english class, where the teacher decided to split the class up into 2 groups, and I was supposed to take my group to another classroom. This will eventually be happening in all my classes, where I alternate groups each week because the classes are too large (30-35 students) for me to take them all on my own. Well, I didn't know where I was supposed to take them, given that last time I asked the building coordinator she had said there weren't enough classrooms in this school. I went to see her again, and she told me room 106 was open, so I led me students up there. Well actually they led me, since I couldn't find it. It turns out that rooms 106 and 107 are one room, with a divider in between that the teacher in 107 told me I couldn't close so basically room 106 was already occupied. In short, we ended up spending the next 20 minutes wandering around the building, with various people sending us to various places that were also unavailable. Finally, we had to kick 2 girls out of the study lounge and use that room. And this will probably happen every time I have class, so 12 times a week. Awesome.
In spite of all the administrative problems, I do actually really like my classes so far. It's a bit difficult to get the students to talk, since they're not used to having to speak out loud in class, but I think I will manage to get some oral work out of them and I have some ideas of fun lessons I can do with them. The other plus is that I only take half of each class at a time, so any ideas I do think of will last me 2 weeks, as I obviously plan on using the same lessons for every class. If anyone has any ideas of fun discussions we can have about american culture, don't hesitate to comment!
Also, in case you haven't heard, the french are AWESOME at burocracy. Yesterday they were telling us about all of the things we need to do and papers we need to fill out in order to be allowed to live here, get a bank account, get paid, get social security, etc etc, and it reminded me of this:
I'm laughing my head off! BTW, it said I couldn't watch the video in our country because of some copyright law. Hmmm...
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