Monday, May 27, 2013

My new job

As I've now been working at my new job for a little over 2 months, I think it's high time I write a little update to let people know how it's going.

ECC is one of the largest English teaching companies in Japan.  In a previous blog I wrote about two week training in Tokyo (with a super fun group of fellow trainees!).  At the end of March I began observing classes at our Fukushima school, and I began teaching my first classes in April.

In a typical week I have 16 kids classes, 3 adult classes, and a handful of one-on-one adult lessons.  I teach all ages:  my students range from 2 years old to 72 years old.  While I taught several adult classes at Izumi Lutheran Church last year, this is my first real experience with kids classes.  The classrooms are small (when compared to a typical American classroom) and carpeted.  In the kids classes everything happens on the floor; there are no tables or chairs.  Depending on the age of the kids, we're running around, jumping up and down, crawling on all fours, playing games, and kneeling or sitting on tiny cushions for the entire lesson.  It's a lot of work for this 30+ year old man!  I was completely exhausted after my first couple weeks of teaching.


ECC "Kid's English World" - notice the lack of tables and chairs in these pictures
 
At ECC the kids classes are a complete English immersion experience.  That means that for the 60 minute class there's no Japanese allowed at all, not even to explain a specific instruction or a game.  I've definitely run into a few challenges because of this, particularly with my little 5 year-olds.  Trying to teach a game to kindergarteners is complicated enough when you're speaking the same language!  Add to that the fact that this is the first time they've taken an English class without their parents present.  What new adventure will each day of teaching bring!?  During the first two weeks of classes at least one of my littlest students would cry at the scary, bearded giant that greeted them with a big smile and a strange foreign language at the door of the classroom. . . It's gotten much better (thankfully!) but still these 5 year-old classes will be my biggest challenge this year, I think.  It's a good thing they're so darn cute!

Another challenge has been learning students' names.  I have over 90 children's names and faces to learn.  Remembering names is not my forte to begin with, and Japanese names are still a little tricky for me.  Sometimes when I'm lying in bed at night I'll mentally run through the list of kids in my classes that I had that day.  Is her name Ayako, Ayaka, Aiko, or Akiyo?  Is his name Haru, Haruki, Haruto, or Hayato?  Yikes!

My fellow co-workers at ECC in Fukushima are great!  There are two other native English-speaking teachers (my brother-in-law, Joel, and another man from England) and three very kind Japanese staff that do a TON of work to keep things at the school running smoothly.  There are also a few other Japanese teachers who teach English at our school.  It makes all the difference having such great people to work with - I definitely don't take it for granted.  One of the staff at ECC headquarters in Tokyo mentioned that the Fukushima school is one of the happiest schools in the company.  I believe it.  There's a lot of fun and smiles every day at work!

Another perk:  my commute to work.  Do you remember my "Thursday Commute" blog last year?  Well, my daily commute to work this year is about 10 minutes on foot. . . . 7 minutes if I really 'hoof it' !

The extra income is also a blessing for Haidee and me.  However, working at ECC also means extra expenses. . . . like clothing, for instance.  After only 6 weeks of teaching kids classes (kneeling and crawling around on the carpeted floor) I found a hole in the knee of one of my brand new pairs of slacks!  Haidee (being the very talented seamstress that she is) sewed a patch on in order to salvage the pants. . . but I won't be able to wear them to work again.  What was I going to do!?  I'd heard horror stories from other tall, foreign English teachers about trying to buy dress clothes in Japan.  The styles and cuts are different that what I'm used to, and to find a pair that actually fits, I was told, could turn out to be pretty pricey.

Imagine my surprise (and great relief!) when Haidee and I, at only the second store we stopped at, found not one, not two, but THREE pairs of pants that fit great and were all on sale for a grand total of less than $100.  I'm usually not even that lucky shopping in the States!  It looks like teaching kids classes won't burn a hole in my pocket, although it may burn a few more holes through the knees of my slacks. . .

A hole in my pants after only 6 weeks!  What am I going to do?


sporting the new clothes!

Monday, May 6, 2013

Golden Week Vacation

Everyone in Japan looks forward to Golden Week.  It always falls on the first week of May, and is connected with several Japanese national holidays (to find a list of the specific holidays, click here), so many people get the whole week off.  The English school at church and ECC (where I'm currently working) both take Golden Week vacation, so Haidee and I enjoyed a week of free time!  It's like a late Spring Break for us.

The first part of the week we took life at a leisurely pace:  we slept in, skyped with family, tried new restaurants, when shopping for some home improvement projects, and watched some movies.  It was SO nice!  We finished the week by traveling to Tokyo for a friend's wedding, and participating in another Kids Camp.  I'm not a man of many words, so I'll let the pictures tell the story:


We've been trying to optimize our kitchen space for a long time, so I was pretty excited about these 'home improvements'.  Notice the complete lack of counter space in our kitchen. . .


Home improvements part 2:  more shelves in the kitchen and pantry/clothing room.

The Hobbit just came out on DVD in Japan!  So we watched it a second time.


And a random picture of some chocolate, which we ate in plenty this week.

Movie number 2:  Tangled (actually titled "Rapunzel" in the Japanese version)


Bowling at Round One with Pamela and Joel.
Here's a picture of Pamela's bowling ball!  (Actually, Pamela also bowled, with Nathan in tow.  It was pretty impressive.)
Don't ask.  It's Japan.
Our friends Natsuko and Jaguup came over for dinner.  It was our first time to meet their new baby girl, Riina.
Haidee with baby Riina.
Haidee, Cindy, and I visited a friend in Yokohama, the port town just south of Tokyo.
Haidee in front of the bay.
Haidee and I found a fun amusement park, so we rode the Ferris Wheel.
Our friend, Efrain, and his wife, Seiko.  It was a beautiful wedding!
Kids Camp in Inawashiro.  The kids were a lot of fun!
One final movie, a classic!
Now it's back to our regular schedules.  The next vacation to look forward to is summer break in August!