Showing posts with label work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work. Show all posts

May 6, 2012

Working at ChildU

My new job is a kindergarten teacher at ChildU. This is a private academy chain focusing on elementary students. My location recently started a kindergarten in the building, and I was hired to be the primary, full-time English kindergarten teacher. It is nice to be back at a school where I can get to know the students. I am lucky enough to have great co-workers, lots of resources, and support whenever I need it. Today marks 2 full months of employment here, and 20 months living in Korea. I am happy with the change. 

Here are some shots from my first few weeks...

Art class








 Sculpting with clay


Painting with an afternoon kindergarten class


Science lab with afternoon kindergarten


Cooking field trip





Going to see Hansel and Gretel, a play



This is all of the morning kindgarteners. The program is still growing, we have had two more kids join the morning since this shot was taken, and have interviews for 6 more! It is nice to work at a school that is expanding and improving. 

You can read my posts regarding afterschool programs vs. hagwons here:

January 17, 2012

Christmas at School

Christmas came and went rather quickly this year. I was in Daegu and spent it with friends. I thought I would post a handful of pictures from the week beforehand, though. My students made Christmas cards to their parents and friends. They got pretty creative with them! I think its an interesting peak into life as a teacher in Korea.



Ace and Kevin are two of my students. They're always together!



Noa, one of my co teachers.







A lot of the kids brought in their huge sticker collections for the occasion!

I feel like many of my students do not get many opportunities to be creative and work independently. One of my personal goals is to give them the chance to do that. Either way, it was a nice break from book learning, and the kids seemed to enjoy it.

November 6, 2011

After School Program


I have been so busy I completely forgot to post about my new job. This is my "but, what do you DO there?" post, and can be read in contrast to my previous post on my hagwon job.

Now I am working for an after school program. This is similar to a hagwon, in that I do not work for the Korean public school system. It is different than most hagwons though in a few key ways. My employer is an agency that has contracts with many different public schools in Daegu, and they hire Korean and native English teachers to work at these programs. In general, each school has a native teacher one day a week and a Korean teacher for the rest. That said, their employees can end up going all over Daegu to work - sometimes five different schools a week! The biggest downfall is the commute. Some schools may be close and easy to get to, while others are a pain.

Personally, I live downtown, but my schools are far away. I commute for up to three hours four days a week, and thirty minutes each way for the fifth day. I work at one school four days a week - two days in each Korean teachers' class, and the fifth day at a different school on the other side of town. Each teacher has their own style of teaching and idea of what I am supposed to do - some only want me to review or play games, others want me to introduce new material and do more teaching. I try to do the best I can within their expectations.

I work at elementary schools, so my students are older than last year. They are also a lot lower levels, since they didn't go to an English kindy program. The classes are bigger - at most they can have twenty students, as opposed to the max of 10 at my old school. It is a mixed bag, and it is difficult to say which is "better," but I felt like my old job was a lot closer to a teacher's role in the US.

For those considering working for an after school program - brace yourself for the commute. You might luck out, but it isn't reliable. You can be moved to a new school at any semester break. They generally do not hire out of country - you have to already have been working in Korea AND be here for an in person interview. They pay well, better than most places - but you have to pay for the commute costs. Don't expect classroom resources, you probably won't have a copier, printer, paper, anything really. I am lucky if I have computer access and board markers. In general, the parents are less invested in their kids schooling, since they are paying so much less than hagwon parents. This is a blessing and a curse.




This is Shunnie, one of my co-teachers.




This is Noa, one of my co-teachers.



Noa had asked me to have a Halloween party, since it fell on my turn to teach her class this year. It was lots of fun, we played games and such. Here are a few shots from that day..







July 25, 2011

The last days of work at St. Louis

I am officially finished working at St. Louis, my employer for the last year. Now I am in Michigan visiting everyone and I wanted to post pictures from the last week or so of my students and coworkers.


Getting a drink with my foreign coworkers - Pete wouldn't be in the shot, he took the picture ha.


The entire St. Louis staff at my going away dinner.


Kelly and Olivia, two girls I taught until this past March. Now they are in elementary school and seem so grown up.


The girls and Julia from EB. Julia is the sweetest student in the entire planet.


EB, one of my all time favorite classes.


KR


KE


KX


KB


KO


KA playing in the gym


Jinny is great at jumping




Joseph dancing


In the elevator, going to OZ gym



AA, Hair Braiding 101


Martin and Mina


KE making bouncy balls in Science Lab



KA growing coral for Science Lab



EA learning to live without opposable thumbs for our adaptations lab




KO's bouncy ball lab



EN1 working on phonics


KR made monkey masks


KE working on science workbooks


More monkey masks with KR


Jinny being silly


Joseph and KA made little fingerprint ants


It has been a great year. I know I will miss my students immensely. Its been an amazing experience - watching them grow up while improving and developing their English skills. My students truly are brilliant, and have taught me so much. Luckily, I will be back in August and will be able to visit the school.