Saturday, December 20, 2008

Christmas time is here!

This has been a very busy past couple of weeks. Since the beginning of November, we have been practicing Christmas plays with our preschool and kindergarten students. All plays are teacher written and directed. Matt wrote a version of the Christmas Carol, and I (Eileen) rewrote "Twas the Night Before Christmas" to be about Santa coming to our school. We have rushed academic subjects to get in play practice time everyday for 2 months. This past week we had a Christmas festival where parents came for 3 different days to watch their children preform their Christmas plays and songs/dances taught by the Korean teachers. Blaise teacher's (Matt's) class preformed on Wednesday. They did a great job and pulled off a challenging play. They also preformed handbells (which will probably be posted soon). On Friday, my class preformed, and it was...well...if you met my class it was Pluto class showing off their true colors. Since many of these kids are so advanced, most plays are really spectacular for kindergarteners and preschoolers. However, mine was what you would label a typical preschool play. I was blessed to have a group of students who have great difficulty focusing and are not always with the program. They did a really great job on their play, but it was pretty funny (unintentionally). One student hit his head on the standing mic and was so embarrassed he just stood there frozen for a minute or so. When students hesitated to stand up to talk, other students would yell their name or start to recite their line for them. Many students, frozen by the parents in the crowd, forgot to stand up or sit down at appropriate times. They really were cute though. We were also the only class, as told to me by my supervisor (who was in tears laughing), to heckle Santa. She said there were no other words to describe it. Most classes sat quietly while they got to go up and see Santa and get gifts while their parents watched. They had to stop to get my class to be quiet. Many students where yelling, "Where are your reindeer??" "Why can't we see them?" One girl got up, and on the microphone (see picture) while talking to Santa, told him that Santa is only Korean (a white American was playing Santa). People were cracking up, which is a great thing because many times Korean parents are stone faced and won't crack a smile at some of these school events.
After all the Christmas fun was over, we had a school end of the year party on Friday. They took us on buses to this really nice cafe. We got a steak dinner (of course still served with a side of kimchi) and then exchanged secret Santa gifts. We then had a school wide Norea-bong competition (karaoke) with both Koreans and foreigners. It was really funny watching some of the Korean staff, because it is a whole side that we felt like we had never seen. The directors both got up and sang solos and the president of our school (like the CEO, in the pic above) got up and sang. Here the cleaning and cooking ajimas (what you call a woman who is older than you or of this age) sang a song together.Everything was hysterical. I won first or second prize (I can't remember now) for group singing while preforming Hurts so Good with a bunch of the girls. It was a fun time.
We are very excited and looking forward to our winter break that starts on Wed! We have gotten in the holiday spirit and I even baked "gingerbread" cookies this past weekend. Due to the absence of molasses in Korea (even in foreign food marts), I made an alternative recipe using corn syrup and dark brown sugar. They turned out pretty well and tasted like "light" gingerbread. We miss everyone at home and hope that everyone is having a great holiday season!
Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night!

Saturday, December 13, 2008

All I Want For Christmas is You

This is a video of Eileen's preschoolers dancing to Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas is You". They did it for me during class, but it will be preformed in front of their parents next week at the Christmas Festival. Keep your eye on the girl near the middle in the black dress. She gets into it the most and you can sometimes hear her singing over the CD. The boys are pretty hysterical and the girl in white close to the end can really shake it. Enjoy! The more you watch it, the funnier it gets.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Winter has begun


So we haven't posted in a while. Life has been moving very fast. In November we were able to go to the DMZ, or demilitarized zone. This is the strip of land between North and South Korea where no military forces are allowed to build up. I don't think we realized how tense things still are. There was no real treaty, just a cease-fire. It was an interesting experience. We got to set foot inside North Korea while inside a room with guard Republic of Korea, South Korea soldiers. We got to go to different points along the DMZ where they have stations to look out into North Korea. The other side seemed pretty, there were lots of nice mountains. However, they pointed out things like jamming towers that jam all signals from any part of the world into North Korea. They also have a town known as Propaganda village. It is a ghost town and is maintained to show how "well" North Korea is doing. It also has an enormous flag pole with a flag that was just as big as some of the four story houses. When we were in a joint area run by the UN, we got to see North Korean buildings and soldiers. In some of our pictures we can see how some windows are open and they had cameras taking pictures of us. We were not allowed to point or make gestures as that could be used as North Korean propaganda. We also got to see a tunnel that North Korea made in the 70's in an attempt to reach Seoul. When discovered, they painted the granite ceiling black and said it was a tunnel for coal mining.

On a very different note, we got to host a Thanksgiving dinner for all of our co-workers. We searched the foreign food stores in Seoul and found a turkey to cook in our little oven. We are the only people who have an oven out of the 24 or so employees that have apartments. We were really nervous cooking it in an oven whose temperature we didn't exactly know and not having any kind of meat thermometer. It turned out great and Matt carved his first turkey. We also made stuffing and green bean casserole (yum!!) with the help of some food from care packages. People brought lots of yummy food and we fit 15 people into our studio apartment. Everyone was so happy to be full with good western food. There was no kimchi at this dinner.


The next day we ate leftover turkey sandwiches. Honestly, turkey sandwiches have never ever tasted so good. Didn't think we would miss turkey that much. We put up the few Christmas decorations that were left by past occupants of our apartment and made stove top leftover casserole. It was an absolutely wonderful day.

School is going well for us. We have fallen more into a routine and are excited that we are not leaving before 8:00 almost every night and not taking work home with us. Things are very busy this month with lots of Christmas activities. We are preparing our preschool and kindergarteners for their Christmas plays. In about a week and a half they will preform plays for their parents and those of several other classes. Matt's class is preforming a Christmas Carol and Eileen's class is preforming a new rendition of Twas' the Night Before Christmas with words changed to be about our school. Both of the scripts were written by us. They are also learning a song, dance, and instrument playing from their Korean teacher. Many classes are preforming dances to "All I Want for Christmas is You" by Mariah Carey. It's pretty hysterical. We will try and tape these performances to share.

A funny note to end on...
Even English schools aren't free from mistakes...

Ha-Ha!! Merry Christmas!!!