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Westside Wednesdays September 22, 2010

Posted by Earthdragonette in Cultural Exchange, Dance Troupe, Just Bizarre.
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Arguably, the most important event of Wednesday was my previous post about The Mighty Power of FC Bayern Munich. Still, that topic is more “Fan Girl” than “Japan Girl” in content, and so it’s probably in my best interests to reexamine the day’s events with the idea that I’m supposed to be using this blog to savor my dwindling time in The Land of the Rising Sun.

I think that the best part of the day happened near the end, during dance practice. We only have one more practice until our October 2nd performance and, unfortunately, we still have a bit of work ahead of ourselves. I’m feeling more confident with my part in the dance, but I’m still worried about the prospect of dancing and singing. It’s a little difficult for me right now because I don’t have the chance to work on both skills at the same time. I sing during dance practices, but it’s with a CD and using a regular version of the song so it’s easy for me to cheat and let Avril take care of the vocals. On the other side of the situation, I can practice singing during band practices but there isn’t a lot of room for me to dance.

I suppose what I’m saying here is that this whole performance is a juggling act of mass proportions. I also feel a tremendous responsibility to execute both singing and dancing as well as I can, since I feel that both the Dance Troup and The Band are putting their reputations on the line so that I can play Pop Idol. Never mind that putting me front and center wasn’t my idea in the first place; the responsibility remains.

Still, in spite of these difficulties, I enjoyed last night’s practice. We had almost all of the members in attendance – even some that have been MIA because of a new baby. We worked on the dance, joked about some of the more unusual moves, fussed over said new baby, and complained about the weather (so. hot.). There was even one moment when we compared a particular dance move to sequences in Cool from Westside Story (more or less the section starting at 2:11). In a moment of what can only be termed as “pure sillyness,” we halfheartedly acted out the first part of this video, relying on their memories of the movies and my memories of the lyrics.

Never assume that the countryside of a given nation is not cultured or without the ability to mock itself using international movies.

Boy, boy, crazy boy
Get cool, boy
Got a rocket in your pocket
Keep cooly cool, boy

Let’s go back to Thursday… May 24, 2010

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So, about me having joined a rock band.

I met this band last year via the Dance Troupe. The guys in the band are often in charge of the sound system setups at the smaller festivals that we go to and they often play the music that we dance to. We all bonded a lot during the end of the year party last December.

Awhile back, DJ Ozma approached me and asked if I would be interested in singing some sets with the band. Specifically, they want me to sing Girlfriend by Avril Lavigne (although we’re talking about some other possibilities as well). I agreed, we all shook hands, and I went to my first practice two Thursdays ago.

Last week saw me at my second practice. Although I’ve enjoyed both of the practices that I’ve gone to, last Thursday’s was definitely more relaxed and productive. I’m beginning to feel comfortable with the role of “guest lead singer” and I’m learning what to listen for. At the very least, I think that my performance is improving. In addition, the guys are getting used to having me around and they’re feeling less shy about asking me personal questions. We had a lot of random Q and A sessions last week where they inquired about everything from American football to whether or not some Americans actually wear shoes to bed (as they’ve seen in movies).

I was charmed to find out that one of the members (the bass player) loves American football and is a huge Colts fan. Unfortunately, he is SO well acquainted with the sport that even he’d heard of the latest Pittsburgh Steelers scandal. Who knew that I’d joined a band only to have somebody make fun of my favorite football team? Anyway, another pleasant surprise is that the guy on lead guitar tends to be aware of most of the cultural references that I make. In addition, I caused uniform and substantial shock and awe when I told them that my favorite music is power metal. This prompted a comment from DJ Ozma, who told the band that you can always tell when I’m arriving somewhere because there is often thunderous, blazing music radiating from my car.

That is an observation that pleases me more than you can imagine.*

My favorite moment from Thursday’s practice happened rather spontaneously. I’ve never been in a rock band before, so the notion of “jamming” is kind of foreign to me. I’ve always been in orchestras or marching bands; there is very little room for improvisation here (at least at the level that I played at). Also, my musical knowledge is far less than the other guys’ and they’ve been playing together for 10 years. Thus, I don’t feel as though it’s my place to jump in and get super creative with the music. If I can make it through the song without breaking it, then I’ve pretty much done all I need to do to feel like an accomplished musician.

Still, we were in the middle of a break and I was working on part of the song that was (and still is) difficult for me to sing. I worked on the section (it’s at the end of the song) for a bit and then jumped up to the beginning and started from there. As I was singing (not loudly and not with the intention of having the guys pay attention to it), the other band members slowly started to join in. It kind of made me nervous, since I wasn’t exactly expecting that kind of attention. But, join they did, and slowly the song came together on its own. It was interesting to hear the different points at which each member chose to start playing. Also, because we were all feeling more laid back and comfortable with the music, everyone was trying something different. The guitar players did different chords or rhythms, and the backup singer and I did some different harmonies. It wasn’t the most sophisticated jam session in the history of music, but I think we did well for ourselves.

I guess it was the first time I felt as though I had a proper and useful place in the band. It was after we finished that set that the band leader turned to DJ Ozma and said, “It’s no problem. We can totally debut in the beginning of July.”
Who knew that this place (in a small shack in the middle of the Japanese countryside at eleven o’clock on a Thursday night) is where I intended to be?

Comin’ down the world turned over
And angels fall without you there

*Although my mother has threatened me with dire consequences if this is in fact true.

Hey Hey You You April 19, 2010

Posted by Earthdragonette in Culinary Pursuits, Cultural Exchange, Dance Troupe, Student Moments.
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Welcome to Monday! I hope that you all had lovely weekends.

Life here has been busy, as usual. The weekend was packed with social calls/culinary shenanigans/dance troupe activities, and so tonight is going to be focused on much-neglected lesson preparations.

So that I may attend to all of this work before it gets really late, here’s a (very) quick rundown of the past few days:

Friday: Classes!
This was my first day back at Friday’s elementary school, and things were a little chaotic. A few weeks of separation gave the children a great deal of time to write letters to me and recess was packed with conversation. I was really happy to see their enthusiasm, though, and even welcomed a few new faces to my Question Corner. The school has been so friendly and communicative with me this year; I feel very positive about this beginning.

Saturday: Cake!
On Saturday, I went to The Japanese Best Friend’s house so that we could make pizza, catch up, watch a movie, and (of course) have cake. The cake is always one of the most important parts. I’m not sure if I mentioned this or not, but she and I are going up to Tokyo at the beginning of May for a small vacation. A nice hotel, Chinatown, and unholy amount of shopping await.

And the best part of the whole day? Watching Mama Mia and occasionally breaking into intense and hilarious (often unrelated) conversation. That is the sign of true friendship – when conversation interrupts the movie and neither one of you care.

And there is cake.

Sunday: Culture …
in the form of a festival in Wakayama Prefecture. It took the dance troupe about three hours to get there by car, so it made for an exceptionally long day. It also didn’t help that I got up at three in the morning so that I could bake bread and prepare this soup. (Do try the soup if you get the opportunity – it’s great!)

The festival itself was nice, although it was actually more like a dance exhibition instead of a typical “festival” (with food stalls and games and such). Not many of the members were able to go, and so I had a chance to bond a lot with the members that did attend. Perhaps the most significant event of the day though, was that Heartland (the band that we always travel with) wants me to start singing some sets with them this summer. They want me to translate a song from Japanese into English so that I can do an English version of it, and then they also want me to sing Girlfriend by Avril Lavigne. I’m not so sure that this is the greatest of ideas (singing is not my forte), but I’m looking forward to the challenge. At the very least, I get to wear a spiffy jumpsuit with the band’s name on it when I sing!

Monday: Everyone is still adjusting
Today, I think that my first years were feeling a bit cranky and discontent with their new middle school lives. The amount of work and homework in elementary school is nothing in comparison to what they have in middle school and they’re not exactly enjoying that element. Class was not quite as bright and cheery as it was before, and I had to deal with a few attitudes (nothing major, but definitely not something that we had last week). I feel a little bad for the kids, because they’re used to very conversation-focused English lessons and all they’ve been doing this year is practicing the alphabet over and over and over and over and over again. I think (and hope) that once we get into more interesting material that their spirits will pick up.

In the midst of all of the grumbling, though, many of them came up to chat with me and I received three letters today (with a great deal of actual English in them). Silver lining, my friends. Silver. Lining.

And that’s about it for now. I have lesson plans aplenty to turn my attentions to and a sink full of dirty dishes. -_-

I hope your Monday finds you free from both!

I can see the way
I see the way you look at me
And even when you look away
I know you think of me

.

So, perhaps I now respect celebrities. April 5, 2010

Posted by Earthdragonette in Dance Troupe, Just Bizarre, Taking Initiative.
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And the reason for this change of heart?

If a given celebrity can somehow go through his/her life giving interviews, signing autographs, and enduring constant harassment from workaholic paparazzi, and only occasionally total a car/get caught doing lines of cocaine/indulge in the lure of extracurricular marriage activities, then this celebrity is a stronger person than I am.

I’ve been debating to what degree I should discuss the events of last Saturday. On one hand, the absurdity that I was subjected to is perfect fodder for scathing social commentary and witty observations about my current living situation. On the other hand, I do try to keep the snark in this blog reined in to some degree.

So, I’ll just summarize the day thusly:

1) I went to an international potluck in a nearby town. We brought and/or cooked food underneath cherry blossom trees and socialized.
2) If “enjoying” an event means that one experiences feelings of pleasure during it and that one would willingly do it again, then I did not “enjoy” the potluck.
3) The most significant reason for this lack of enjoyment was that there were both T.V. cameras and newspaper reporters present. They followed me around the entire day. Anything I did was videotaped, and just about anything I said was written down.

To say that I do not like cameras or being interviewed is putting it mildly. The sight of somebody taking an (un)authorized photograph of me is enough to send me into the mother of all rages. After five hours of Reality TV-esque scrutiny, I was ready to flip my Honda, find a shady character in a nearby park, and get married for the sole purpose of forsaking my vows in an explosive downward spiral. If I had to suffer this every day, goodness knows how I would handle my frustrations.

I wish I could say that the events of Saturday night and Sunday have fully restored my calm. To some degree, they have, and I feel more composed and less likely to join the church of Scientology.** Unfortunately, I was pretty freaked out by the time that I got back to my house on Saturday. I’m trying very hard not to think about how, at this very moment, news programs are casting my visage into an untold number of living rooms. I try even harder not to think about how this will probably keep happening for the next two weeks at least.

So, that was definitely a memory from Saturday, although it’s one that I really wish to leave behind me as quickly as possible. I joke about the “celebrity” status, and to some degree I don’t mind indulging in it. Saturday was a whole new level, though, and I am definitely not fit for that kind of exposure. Not in any way, shape, or form.

Moving on, other, nicer things that have happened!

Good, Happy Memory from Saturday
Thank god for Aunt Mia. She and her sister (another former student of mine) came over to my apartment last Saturday night and we had dinner together. Two hours of gossiping about mutual acquaintances, discussing my cooking, and making chocolate chip cookies together did my heart a world of good. They were both super chatty and friendly, and they invited me to their house near the end of the month so that I could meet the rest of their family.

I predict a year of dinners at each other’s houses, and eventual conversations along the lines of: “No, really, how can we visit you in the United States?” This is a role that I am more than happy to fulfill. My dream is to have a room set aside in my house in the States for all of my Japanese associates to use when they finally make the trek to visit me and See the World.

Happy Memory from Sunday
Sunday was the first festival of the year with the Dance Troupe. It was a small affair – just something to get us back into the swing of things. We were all a little rusty, but we have time to hone our moves over the next month or so. I guess once early summer hits, we’re going to be busy on most weekends. I’m looking forward to doing all of these festivals. It’s a fantastic way to shake up my schedule and it gives me something new to do during this last year.

One moment during the festival that was particularly nice for me, was when I decided to curl up and take a nap before our final dance set. When I woke up from my 20-minute respite, I found that all of the troupe members had covered me with their sweatshirts and jackets. It was a very sweet gesture on their part, and showed me more than anything else that they’ve come to accept me. I am profoundly grateful that this acceptance is founded on what I can bring to the group (my work ethic, my dancing, my personality) and not my country of origin.

Happy Memory from Monday
I’ve expressed before that I’m feeling a little anxious about all of the new staff changes at the middle school. This anxiety also extends to the elementary schools, where I have no idea how the new teachers will react to me. Also, because this is such a busy time of year, it’s difficult for me to instigate dialogues with the elementary schools. Monday was a little taxing for me, because I had to make a lot of phone calls to various schools and supervisors, and even now I’m still a little unclear as to what will be happening this year.

Still, I took the initiative and made these phone calls. Even though I was frazzled, nervous, and conscious of all my coworkers working nearby and listening to the conversations. After the events of last Saturday, this took a significant amount of courage for me to do. So, Monday is remarkable for that effort on my part.

Regarding the elementary school situation, my impression, at least as of now, is that a lot of the meetings from last February (you know, the ones that sent me into intense mental anguish?) are going to have no effects whatsoever. When I spoke with Friday’s elementary school yesterday, they told me that they still want me to teach all of the grades. I’m scheduled to touch base with Thursday’s school today, and we’ll see how they want to handle my schedule. The worst case scenario is that they want me to stop some of my lessons; this creates two very separate and different systems at my elementary schools and means hours of extra preparations. I have to do my lessons this year in such a way that the next ALT will be able to follow them, and that’s going to be a job and a half.

Still, despite all of the angst and anxiety that riddles this post, things are looking up. Tuesday is the New Student Entrance Ceremony at the middle school, and I’m really looking forward to seeing the new first years. Classes will start on Thursday, and I’m ready to get back to lessons. Granted, a small ocean of lesson planning still stands between me and the execution of all of these lessons, but nonetheless I’m anticipating them.

It’s time, after all. Time to get back to business and really move forward with the new year.

**No offense meant to Scientologists. It’s just another blanket-statement I can use to keep this “celebrity” theme alive.

You gave me the chance
Time and again

Two Words: ICE CREAM! February 1, 2010

Posted by Earthdragonette in Dance Troupe, ice cream, Student Moments.
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Where ICE CREAM = I Cant Exactly Choose (Raccoon!!) Enjoy All Moments!

Yes, just to show that there is always time for ICE CREAM (and thus, time for a post), I present to you in short, spastic bits, the contents of my weekend and Monday. It’s crude and inartistic at best, but in the interests of not progressing to a “Saturday-Sunday-Monday-Tuesday!!! Update!!!!”, it is quite necessary. I should be able to get back on a regular posting schedule as of Tuesday evening.

(Fun English Fact: It’s not “unartistic,” it’s “inartistic.” Fancy that.)

Onward!

~ Saturday, I cleaned. Cleaned and cleaned and cleaned and cleaned. I also righted the balance of the universe with an epic conversation with Jyona33. I suppose I should be concerned with the degree to which this man has an influence over my daily affairs, but we all need a few people like this in our lives. Otherwise, who would tell me where I should go on vacation in Japan? Or how to subtly convey to my coworkers that I would rather they not ask me about how I lose weight? Or instruct me on how to improve in the centipede race?? These are heavy topics that require the most delicate and thoughtful of consultations.

~ Saturday, I also danced. Danced and danced and danced and danced. I danced in preparation for:

~ Sunday’s Culture Festival!

Actually, let’s take a break from our ICE CREAM and go into a little more of a prose style here, because the events of Sunday are worth slowing down for.

In short, it was chaotic. I don’t think I’ve ever been so busy at a culture festival, and this includes the years when I was co-running the music club at the middle school. Those years required a lot of preparation ahead of time, but after our performance at 9:30 in the morning I was free for the rest of the day. That was most definitely not the case last Sunday.

The morning started out responsibility-free. I showed up to work, and then went to the gym to entertain the third year students until the rest of the classes and their parents arrived. We then watched presentations from all the classes, most of which were musical ensembles of some sort. I have to say that the first and sixth grade classes stole the show.

Many of you are already aware of the deep affection I feel for The First Years. To say that they are my favorite class does not properly express the emotion I feel for them; it’s more substantial than that. They are, honestly, the most amazing group of children I think I’ve ever encountered. They’re sweet. They’re enthusiastic. They can dance. And most importantly, they are so fantastically innocent and earnest in their beliefs that they do the most ridiculous things.

Here’s an example: during the first month of school, The Mentor caught them running down the hallway. He’s the sixth grade teacher and so already quite an imposing figure to their first year minds. The Mentor can also be very intimidating, so 99.9% of the time his commands are followed. (And I have it on good authority that the one student sometime, somewhere, who didn’t do what The Mentor asked was never heard from again.)

Anyway, so The Mentor caught them running in the hallway and told them to stop. He explained that students are not supposed to run in the hallways at school and that it’s dangerous. The First Years were so taken with this notion and so altered by this encounter, however, that they took him to mean that they’re not allowed to run at school EVER. Their home room teacher was eventually able to convince them (after about a week) that they are allowed to run outside.  Yet, to this day, if they ever see The Mentor watching them when they’re on the playground, they always slow down to a walk.

Now, how can you possibly not be enamored with these children??

So, given these emotional lenses that I had on while watching their performance (a recitation about their class and how much fun school is), it’s no surprise that it was my favorite. To be fair, the sixth grade play about traveling through time and bringing back noteworthy inventions from various historic eras was pretty sweet, too. I was impressed with how clear and loud their voices were; their public speaking has improved a lot over the last couple of years.

Okay, so the presentations ended at around eleven and then I lent a hand cleaning up the gym. This took awhile, though, and it only left me with about ten minutes for lunch, after which I went back to the gym to do my dance. I’d debated whether or not to leave my handsprings in the routine, but it was good that I did since I think that move was the crowd favorite. My dance was followed by the sixth grader’s final concert (they like to get dressed up, form bands, and sing to the school) and the afternoon activity corners.

As you will probably recall, my dance troupe lead one of the afternoon sessions, and that was also entertaining (if a bit busy). The kids did a really great job with memorizing the dance and I liked helping them out. The  various five to ten minute breaks were also enjoyable as the children sought fit to drag me into a variety of games (most of them requiring me to chase the children around the gym). Some of my middle school students also stopped by, and so it was fun to chat with them when I had the time.

Okay, moving slightly back into ICE CREAM form now, let’s recap the specific memories we’re tagging here:

Saturday: Jyona33 provides timeless wisdom to aid me on my life’s journey
Sunday: I am a dancing fool and The First Years’ performance left me in such a state of beatitude that I hereby pledge my life (for the next year and three months) to giving them the best English lessons I can.
That leaves us with Monday!

Monday was quiet, and perhaps marked by numerous interactions with Hannah Montana and Aphrodite. The Savant and Mary Sunshine were at a high school orientation, and so my usual suspects weren’t around. This time of year is always interesting, because although the third year students haven’t graduated yet, they’re not around as much and I don’t do many things with them in class. It’s the time of year when I start to shift my attentions more to the first and second years, and I try to prepare to say goodbye. We only have about a month and a half left of the term, and it’s going to go by quickly.

Hold on to your hats, ladies and gentlemen. A lot of interesting things are coming our way.

Teaching New Tricks January 28, 2010

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Okay, very, very quickly today because I really have to finish some preparations for Friday’s classes.

Thursday was noteworthy because of two separate situations that I found myself in.

~ I was at the Thursday elementary school today and during sixth period the students were busy setting up a variety of things for Sunday’s culture festival. I had a Mountain of Letters and so couldn’t join them. Normally this would have left me feeling somewhat bereft and left out, but it provided the ideal circumstances for some hilarity.

I was sitting in the teachers’ room and working on my letters, and along with me were the school’s secretary and the principal. The kids kept coming into the teachers’ room for different supplies (colored paper, colored pens, glue, etc.) and the principal got the brilliant idea to make the kids ask for what they wanted in English. It started out as kind of frivolous but then became this veritable mine of entertainment for almost an entire hour (especially when my vernacular for a particular object was different from what was written in his English/Japanese dictionary).

Good times there, good times.

~ The second memory from Thursday was good, but bizarre. On Sunday in the afternoon, all of the students are going to go to activity corners. Some will make wooden crafts, some will play with traditional Japanese toys, and (among others) there’s also a corner where my dance troupe will be teaching one of our recent DJ Ozma dances (Macchibo).  This means that I’ll be dancing on two separate occasions on Sunday.

Anyway, as it turns out, The Mentor is the teacher responsible for overseeing this particular corner. To aid him in this task, he thought it would be best to learn the dance ahead of time, so he came to our practice last night. (Yes, normally we have practices on Wednesdays, but we had to move it to Thursday this week). To make a long story short, I somehow  found myself teaching him the dance. Since he’s usually the one mentoring me, it was a very strange role reversal. He did a really good job – the dance isn’t easy, and he only had about an hour and a half to work on it. Looking back, I think I can say that the process was fun. It was just … kind of weird, too.

We’ll see how this all works out on Saturday.

It’s the same old song
But with a different feeling since you’ve been gone

Answers, Explanations, and Then Some! January 22, 2010

Posted by Earthdragonette in Dance Troupe, Just Bizarre, Lessons Learned, Student Moments.
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So, the weekend has finally arrived, and just in time. It took me the better part of the week to get caught up on my elementary school responsibilities, and this was even with pulling back from a few of my ventures (say… letter writing?). I think that by the end of next week, all accounts should be settled.

In theory, at any rate.

So, let’s return to my last post and go through these questions, shall we? It seems as good a format to use as any.

1) What did I give The Savant for his birthday?

Answer:
I went with the rattlesnake eggs afterall. If you’re not familiar with this toy, it’s a set of two small magnets. The idea is that you throw them up into the air (separately), and the variety of forces playing upon them as they drop causes them to hit each other and break away again (thus the “rattling”).

The way that I figure it, they’re on par with Galileo in entertainment value, and they probably cost about as much. The Savant was fascinated and grateful for them, to the point of driving the bus driver crazy on the way home from school. Luckily, I have not gotten into trouble for this. (Yet?)

2) How well did the first years do on their Jabberwocky speaking checks?

Answer
: Surprisingly well, actually! I wasn’t strict with my grading, and I did little things to help prompt memories along the way. Still, even without this help from me, I was very happy with how well they did. One student  surprised me and memorized the first three stanzas (instead of just the first four lines) and then also acted out the part where the main character killed the Jabberwock.

What particularly pleased me, though, was the change in attitude that I saw in some of my students. When we had the speaking check for Michael Jackson’s Thriller, there were about five boys that gave me some snark about the assignment. They didn’t do well on the speaking check, and they did everything in their power to convey to me that they found the task beneath them and profoundly useless.

~ But~

This time, they seemed into it. I’m not exactly sure what changed. Maybe they had more time to memorize the poem so it didn’t seem so overwhelming, or maybe they preferred the content of The Jabberwocky. It could even be  an increased interest/confidence in English. Whatever the cause, they came to me with a lot more spunk and enthusiasm, and it did my heart a world of good.

I think that one of the reasons that I like these kinds of activities is that I can see how the students are progressing. Not necessarily with English comprehension, but rather with their willingness to commit the time to accomplishing a task that happens to be in English. Some students were only mildly interested in Thriller, but they really pulled out all the stops for The Jabberwocky (and vise versa). I like seeing the students’ responses to these different tasks, and I hope these exercises will inspire them to try their best with the grammar and vocabulary as well (you know, the potentially boring stuff).

3) Why was I happy that I went to dance practice on Wednesday?

Answer
: Because it was fun! We’re getting ready for January 31st, which is the day of my Thursday elementary school’s culture festival. We’re going to be doing  a dancing workshop there, and so we’re trying to get a routine ready for the kids. It being the the fist practice of the new year, most of the members were there and we had a really great time catching up and getting back to business. I also had a running joke with DJ Ozma Jr., where I kept “mistaking” him for Michael Jackson and chasing him around the gym.

4) In what three ways did The Mentor completely surprise me on Thursday, thereby showing that he actually just might value me as another human being with a consciousness on par with his own? (Maybe.)

Answer
: I can’t remember if I wrote about this or not, but back in November, I asked Thursday’s elementary school if I could dance for the kids during their culture festival. The Mentor was kind of skeptical about it, and told me that he didn’t think it would be possible. In the end, it wasn’t much of an issue because the festival got postponed until  January 31st on account of Rampant Influenza.

So, fast foward to last Thursday, where he tells me out of the blue that I’m allowed to go ahead with my dance. It seems that he’s been working on my behalf, and that since the teachers extended the afternoon recess, there’s now time for me to go ahead and Shake What My Mama Gave Me. I think that the kids will get a kick out of my performance, so that was great news to hear.

Secondly, he also showed me a videotape of his 6th graders doing this very intense jump rope exercise. It’s kind of hard to describe, but he’s done it with every class he’s ever taught. The idea is that, collectively, the class has to make as many jumps as possible in three minutes. His previous class managed about 324 I think, and his current class hit 349. He showed me the video he made of them breaking the record, and it was pretty spectacular.

I value The Mentor and his teaching style, so I’m glad for any opportunity to see more into his teaching world. It gives me the chance to ask questions, get feedback, and learn more about what kinds of qualities he tries to bring out in the students (and how he makes it all work). It’s also nice to know that he respects me (and my relationships with the students) enough to take the time to involve me in their lives.

So, hooray for The Mentor!

5) And, finally, what movie have I watched four times in the last week because it’s great for background noise and (I firmly believe) makes me smarter for having listened to it?

Answer
: The 2007 version of Persuasion. It doesn’t have the smoothest ending, but I am extremely fond of the acting, the settings, and the story itself. I may have mentioned this before, but when I was younger, Pride and Prejudice was my favorite book by Jane Austen; now I think that Persuasion is starting to eclipse it. It’s strange how we change as the years pass.

So, there we have the answers to our questions. It wasn’t exactly the 1 day, 1 memory process that I try to adhere to, but I think it will suffice. This weekend is going to be busy and I need to get my act together. The Japanese Best Friend and I have Oyster and Wine night planned for Saturday evening, and then Sunday will be dedicated to visiting Tetsuya in Nagoya.

Ah, Japan. I think I’ve finally returned.

Fall Term Top 10 December 19, 2009

Posted by Earthdragonette in Dance Troupe, Enkai Aftermath, Julie Gets Philosophical, Lessons Learned, Student Moments, Taking Initiative, Time to Party, Top Ten.
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At the moment (which would be Sunday morning in Japan), I have one day left of honest to goodness work ahead of me. Today’s plan is to make cookies for my coworkers at the elementary schools and to write replies to all of the letters that I got last week from my students. Once that’s done, then this week is all about preparing for my trip on Wednesday.

(And also making Christmas cookies for my middle school students on Tuesday, but that’s more fun and less work.)

I thought about writing memories from Thursday through Saturday as I usually would, but I think that this is a good time for me to take a step back and do a Fall Term Top 10 Memory Countdown. The week is going to be a little hectic and I’m not sure what my posting schedule will be like.

So, let’s get to it!

10) Jiman (自慢)
Last Friday, I went to a Bon Enkai, or an “End of the Year Party” with my coworkers from the middle school. I really enjoy these parties because it’s a chance for us all to relax and talk about the variety of things that have happened during the year. We also play games. One game that we played this year involved choosing a card out of a deck that one of the teachers had made, and then talking about whatever was written on that card. My card had jiman (自慢) written on it. It means “pride,” and so my task was to talk about something that I was proud of.

It took me a few minutes to decide what to talk about – I had a lot of memories to go through. Ultimately, I chose to talk about the feelings that I always have right before our school does the cultural festival. Everyone always works so hard and does their best to get everything ready for the students and parents. I remember my first culture festival three years ago, and how inspired I was by what the teachers were doing. I was proud to be considered even a partial member of the faculty, and I wanted to do my best to become an active member of the team.

Every year when the culture festival comes around, I remember this feeling and renew my resolution. I’m proud to be considered a teacher at my middle school, and I’m proud of the relationships and associations that I have with the other faculty members.

Incidentally, this party was also fun because they surprised me with a birthday cake. There are definitely some perks to being born near the holiday season. ^___^

9) Inspired By Halloween
Looking back at the different lessons that I’ve done over the course of the term, I think that my best ones were around the end of October. Some noteworthy activities included: assigning my JHS students to memorize parts of Thriller, and dressing up like a witch and turning my elementary students into animals. I had a lot of fun with my students and I think that they learned a lot. Trying to find a balance between those two elements is perhaps the perpetual tightrope walk that defines my job.

8) The Japanese Best Friend and I Help The Japanese Economy
The time between September and Now was a busy time of me as far as shopping was concerned. I made several trips to Nagoya and then The Japanese Best Friend and I certainly paid our dues in Yokkaichi and Suzuka.

To some degree, I have always enjoyed shopping. I like interacting with store clerks, talking about merchandise, and considering deals and bargains. I also like buying things for other people; some of my best memories in Japan are from sitting in department store coffee shops while going over gift lists. In this vein, I suspect that my interest in shopping has increased over the last few years; it’s pretty difficult to live in Japan for an extended period of time and not become fond of shopping. Quite simply, it’s a national pastime. Every Sunday, in lieu of the religious festivities that tend to characterize the American Sunday atmosphere, Japan embarks on Commercial Celebrations of all sorts. It’s the one day of the week that most people are guaranteed a day off (unless they work in retail), and so most families go out in force.

I particularly like shopping with The Japanese Best Friend because we are very good about helping each other Not Feel Guilty for any of the following: expensive purchases, embarrassingly good bargains, afternoon tea, extravagant meals, or clothing that is on the adventurous side. Afternoons with her also inevitably involve great conversation and more than a little social commentary that puts my life into perspective.

7) Connecting With the Elusive and Mysterious 6th Graders
I think that of all the classes that I teach, the 6th grade elementary school students are the most difficult. Personality-wise, they’re at an awkward age where they don’t quite connect with the younger kids at their school, but they’re not ready to become a part of the middle school culture. Each year, this class always turns into some kind of secret society. They don’t go out on to the playground as much, and they are more likely to stay in their classroom during recess, enjoying each other’s company and reveling the various inside jokes crafted over the last six years.

Creating lessons that are both interesting and helpful to these kinds of students is always a challenge. This year has been more challenging than others because the 6th grade home room teachers have also taken on the mantle of English Education and so they’ve been preparing their own classes. So far, we’ve been able to work together, but it’s hard to tell what the students think of all these changes. I’m concerned on their behalf because I want them to feel confident and prepared for English lessons at the middle school. I also want them to look forward to these lessons, and to another year of studying with me.

As such, I’m really happy that over the last term, I’ve had the opportunity to connect with more of my 6th year students.  I’ve found a stable and reliable partner in Yoshi, and there are other people who are also coming out of the woodwork. I know that we’ll become even closer when they make the move to the middle school (and I see them three times a week), but I’m happy to see what we’ve already been able to accomplish.

6) New Hobbies and Friends
This fall also saw the introduction of DJ Ozma, his family, and the Dance Troupe. It’s good that I took the initiative to get involved in this group; it’s only been a few months, but they’ve already shared a lot with each other. I know that the winter months will be a little quiet as far as festivals are concerned, but I expect that the pace will pick back up once spring starts. I’m looking forward to having a full summer with them, and to all of the events that we’ll go to together.

5) How To Be a Better Teacher in Ten Easy Steps
Thanks in part to The Mentor and The JTE’s interventions, I’ve had the chance to go to a variety of seminars and open lessons this fall. I didn’t really go to these kinds of training meetings before this year, and so it’s another way that my schedule has changed with the fourth year.

I’m really grateful for this change, though, because I’ve learned a lot from it. Even though the seminars aren’t always focused on English, they have given me some insight into how the Japanese view education: what they think is important, what methods work best, and what the goals are. This helps me to tailor my lessons more to the students and the kinds of lessons that they’re used to, and it also assists me in discussing lesson plans with my coworkers. Even though my teaching style and methods appear to be successful, I think it’s important for me to remember that there are always new things to try and new philosophies to consider. There are still a lot of things that I don’t know.

4) And The Savant’s Ego Shall Have No Dominion*
Ah, The Savant. This fall term was a busy one for him – he’s been quite feisty and active since day one, beginning with a whopper of a lie about how he broke his leg and lasting up to last Wednesday when he and Macho Man wrote each other Christmas Love Notes.

I’ve mentioned this several times, but our interactions this fall honestly have been somewhat novel – he really did ignore me for the first two years of his middle school career. I’m happy about the change, though, because I enjoy our banter. I don’t have many opportunities to be perverse and contrary (as he puts it), because most of my students don’t have the ability to understand that kind of English. I can be silly and playful in Japanese, but I can’t be sarcastic – that’s an English device.

The Savant, though. He gets sarcasm, which means that he is able to understand me more fully than most of the other people that I interact with. I’m going to miss him when he graduates next March – a part of my voice is going to be silenced, at least for a little while.

 *Incidentally, since this is now the second time I’ve made a reference to this particular Dylan Thomas poem, you should go check it out if you’re not familiar with it.

3) Lunchtime Dance Sessions
Ah, Mary Sunshine. She’s someone else that I’m going to miss terribly when March 9th (and graduation) comes around. Things were really busy during the first part of the term, and so our regular recess English study sessions were put on hold so that we could attend to other duties. Since November, though, we’ve been able to reconnect through our dance practices.

I’m grateful for these practices for a number of reasons. One reason being that it’s fun to dance with her. She’s got rhythm, and combined with a great attitude it means that she learns quickly and (if I may say so) we look really cool together. It’s also fun to show somebody this part of my culture, and this part of my past. A lot of the dance moves are things that I did when I was in marching band in high school, and it’s rewarding to share them with (and pass them on to) her. In the way that The Savant understands me more fully because he gets my snark, Mary Sunshine understands me more because she gets how I groove. 

2) Christmas Cards
So, I mentioned earlier that I’m going to be giving my elementary school coworkers Christmas cookies. What I’ve also arranged this year, is to give each of the home room teachers a Christmas card from their students and me. This was a little tricky to arrange, as I needed to find a contact from each grade and send them out into the world with the Christmas card for a week in the hopes that they would get their classmates to sign it. The icing on the cake of this endeavor was that they were to do it without their home room teacher seeing it.

Many things could have kept this plan from working, including neglect, a general misunderstanding of what exactly it was that we were doing, or just plain forgetfulness. The 1st year classes at both schools had some problems. One class signed it and gave it to their teacher on the very first day (instead of returning it to me a week later so that I could give the teachers their cards and cookies together), and the other class didn’t understand what I wanted and so just copied a number of random English words that they found around the school. We also had some problems with the 5th years at Thursday’s elementary school, because they made the teacher sign his own card and then they gave it to him. I’m not exactly sure what went wrong there.

The rest of the cards, however, didn’t have any problems. The kids were excited about the subterfuge involved in getting the cards signed without their home room teacher’s knowledge, and they were extremely melodramatic enthusiastic about the process. My Little Monkey was my contact for the 2nd years at Thursday’s elementary school, and I think he walked around for the entire week with the card stuffed inside of his shirt.

Still, I now have eight signed cards ready and waiting to be delivered on Monday afternoon. I hope that the teachers enjoy receiving them. I really liked putting this whole project together; I feel that it shows something special about the way that the students and I can interact with each other.

1) Fievel VS My Little Monkey
By far, my favorite memories from this fall semester have revolved around the growing Fievel and My Little Monkey saga. On one hand, you have Fievel. Formerly small, quiet, shy, and introverted, he has blossomed into a very quick, brazen, and vocal young man (at least around me). I think that he wants to become a different person than the person that he was when we first met. When I was arranging for the aforementioned Christmas Card project, I asked him if he’d be willing to help me out with his class. I could tell that he wanted to help me, but he just felt too shy. When I gave it to one of his classmates instead, he turned to me and said: “Next year. Next year I can do it. Next year, I’ll be ready to do it.” If what he says is true, and talking with me is giving him the confidence to talk and interact more directly with the members of his own class, then that’s one of the most fantastic gifts that I could be given.

On the other hand, poised against this rising star, you have My Little Monkey. It’s been funny to see them interact, because although Fievel is older than the Monkey, the Monkey is, well… the Monkey. He is loud, hilarious, incorrigible, and never, ever knows when to back down. If you could call their interactions “encounters” or “battles,” then I would say that Fievel tends to be the victor because he stays long after the Monkey has lost interest and has gone to conquer other parts of the school. Still, the Monkey always comes back, and is kind of oblivious to Fievel‘s designs for Total Julie Dominion.

It’s quite funny.

I like having them both in my elementary school life because it gives me the opportunity to cater to two very different kinds of students. Typically, I work best with the loud students because they give me more material to work with. The quiet ones are more difficult for me to reach because I have to go after the content and pull the material out of them. That can be time-consuming and very tricky; I’m still not very good at it. Working with Fievel, though, I think I’ve learned more about how the process works, and I understand the Quiet Student Mentality a lot more than I used to. With the Monkey, well, he keeps my skills honed and my wit sharp – I need it to counter his brain and all of the havoc that it wreaks.

Looking back at the many events have transpired in the fall term, it appears that somehow, someway, I am managing to stay at the top of my game (whatever that may be). These top ten memories are perhaps the most vivid and expressive ways I can think to sum up the one particularly important thought I have about this fall semester: I survived.

And soon, it will be time for a well-deserved break in the Homeland.

Listen to the bells as they ring
Listen to the message they bring
Listen to the sound
As they sing as one voice in the night

TEN STICKERS PLEASE. December 13, 2009

Posted by Earthdragonette in Dance Troupe, Enkai Aftermath, Student Moments, Weekend Recap.
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1 comment so far

Let me make this clear if, for some reason, I have yet to do so.

My students love stickers.

Every single one of them. From the first year elementary students all the way up to the third year middle school students. Both boys and girls. The sparklier the better. Stickers are even more appreciated if they light up, have a special smell, or are actually small pictures of me that have been made into stickers (known as purikura). Since I brought them into my teaching regimen about three years ago, I have had more successful classes, and honestly, a more successful life.

The stickers are, of course, a reward for making efforts to learn and practice English, but they’re also a way to make talking to me a not-so-scary experience. When I first came here and the students didn’t know me very well, I think that they were overwhelmed by the idea of striking up a conversation with me. They didn’t know what they should talk about, and they were really nervous about using their English. With the sticker as a kind of goal, though, they could approach me without worrying that they were bothering me. They wanted a sticker, I knew they wanted a sticker, and all they had to do was ask me a question to get this sticker.

It’s quite simple really.

Also, with the introduction of the Sticker *Card*, the students have bigger prizes that they can try to get. They also compete with each other to see who can get to a certain card the quickest (I have one student who’s working on her 17th card). Receiving stickers isn’t just limited to conversation, however. Students can get them from answering questions in class or completing worksheets and puzzles.

Anyway, I’m prefacing Friday’s memory with this just so that you can understand some of the reasons behind why my elementary school visits can be so draining. Quite frankly, last Friday was insane. That’s my memory: total insanity and exhaustion. I came home and went to bed at 7.

Here’s how things broke down:

7:45: Arrived at school in the pouring rain, had eight bags with me that I dragged into the school. Got into the staff room and, after getting settled, started to make copies of worksheets that I wanted to use for the day. Was in the middle of making these copies when the staff room was invaded by four fourth year students who wanted to talk to me/ get my responses to their letters from last week/ try on my Santa hat. I eventually chased them out with promises of future rewards, praise, and love.

8:10: Had morning staff meeting

8:15-8:35: Ran around getting my classroom set up and decorated for my lessons. This involved moving three large tables and setting them up to make paper decorations for the school’s Christmas tree, and putting up lights and garland. I just barely finished everything in time for my first lesson.

1st period: Taught the fourth year students. The home room teacher had to take the morning off, so the vice principal started off teaching with me. After he saw that I had things under control, he went back to the staff room. This display of trust made my day.

Break between 1st and 2nd period: Was mobbed by students wanting to get stickers for completed puzzles and students who wanted to ask me questions for stickers.

2nd period: Taught the 5th years. This is my genius class and I can pretty much do everything in English. They don’t always understand the specifics, but they get the general idea and they prefer it that way. This is the class where almost every student (on a weekly basis) will do puzzles, ask two questions, and recite the alphabet (forward and backward) for stickers.

Break between 2nd and 3rd period: This is a longer break (about 20 minutes), and so this is when most of the school will try to come and talk to me/get puzzles and worksheets checked. The line is usually long, though, and students will often wait up to ten minutes to talk to me. Friday, some of my fifth year students were feeling frisky and they went to the staff room and dragged out some of the home room teachers and the Vice Principal so that they could go through the line, too. So, even the Vice Principal got a sticker for talking to me.

3rd period: Taught the third years. This is a very small, very sweet class, and they’re all really smart, too. I think that they made the best ornaments out of all my classes.

Break between 3rd and 4th period: More sticker/puzzle/talking time.

4th period: Furiously worked on answering letters.

Lunch: Ate with the 6th years. They’re a very loud and funny class.

Recess: 30 minutes of stickers/talking/puzzles.

5th period and 6th period: Worked on letters. Just barely finished in time so that last of the students got them before they left for the day.

Usually, I try to finish writing my letter responses before I go to school on Friday, but I had 32 letters to answer last week, and it was just too much to do given my schedule. Each response can take anywhere from five to forty-five minutes to write, depending on how complex the original letter was.

It’s my life, what can I say? The kids enjoy them so much, that abandoning this program is simply not an option – no matter how much time it takes.

So that was more or less my Friday. It was a blur of conversation, puzzles, worksheets, and, of course, the distribution of rewards. It’s kind of taxing and insane, but I like seeing the kids so excited, and my classes run smoothly thanks to all of this enthusiasm.

Saturday’s memory comes from the evening. The Dance Troupe had an end of the year party, and so we all went out to a restaurant together. We actually rented the space for the evening, and we were joined by a local band that we often go to festivals with.

I must say, I’ve gone to a lot of parties in my day, and I’ve done a lot of karaoke, but I’ve never partied or done karaoke with members of a rock band before. It was quite the experience. They brought their own instruments, and if they knew the song that a person was singing, then one or more of the members would join in on their respective instruments. In addition to accompanying karaoke tracks, they did their own set list, and they called me up to help them out with English vocals. I think you could go ahead and say that it was my fifteen minutes of fame. I think that it was one of the best parties I’ve been to in Japan (or anywhere, really), and it was all thanks to the people that I was with. Their enthusiasm and good will were absolutely amazing.

Sunday has been quiet. I’ve spent a lot of time catching up on correspondence and cleaning my apartment. After the pace I’ve going at for the past two weeks, I’m ready to slow down a little and enjoy the next week and a half before my vacation to the States. If I have to take a memory from today, I think I want it to be my general sense of health and well-being. I’m extremely thankful for it right now, because without it I never would’ve made it through this month, let alone this term. With the flu around me (in regular and swine forms), in addition to regular colds and other vague illness (and the fact that sometimes I don’t sleep), a lot of unfortunate things could have happened (and might still, for all I know).

Sometimes, it really is the small things (like stickers, great people, or good health) that can make all the difference in the world.

And then they sang a song
The rare old mountain dew
I turned my face away and dreamed about you

In a parallel universe, I update my blog every day. Part I. November 15, 2009

Posted by Earthdragonette in Apologies, Dance Troupe, Just Bizarre, Student Moments, Taking Initiative.
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1 comment so far

Unfortunately, that universe is so close to me, and yet so far away. Following  Brian Greene / Elegant Universe - esque jargon, that universe and my universe are slices of cosmic bread on the cutting board of reality. Unfortunately, those slices are completely oblivious to each other, except in a vague way that occasionally inspires the bittersweet and humbling taste of guilt.

It’s sort of what I feel whenever I forget to answer e-mail (also one of my well-known vices…)

Ahem.

So, welcome back! How are you today?

Things have been quite busy, as usual. Let’s skip the chitchat and get down to business. I have 26 memories that need to be announced and elaborated on. To break it up a bit, and keep things from getting too long winded (too late…), I’ve got ten listed here, another ten listed in Part II, and the last six (AS WELL AS AN ABSOLUTELY FASCINATING ANNOUNCEMENT) in Part III.

Apologies as usual for the “Lists and Lists Galore” method of blogging that I seem to be embracing. ^_^;;

Here we go!

#1: October 21st: Dance Practice Hilarity
This was a dance practice that we held before a pretty substantial festival that we went to the following weekend. We all already knew the dance that we were going to do (D.J. Ozma’s Macchibo), and so we spent two hours sitting around, talking, and occasionally practicing the dance. At one point, we decided to work on our timing, and so we did the dance while standing in a circle. This was hard for me, though, because seeing everyone else dancing mirror-image fashion really confused me. I pointed this out, and one of the troupe members turned around and did the dance with his back to me, thus prompting a flurry of comments about his backside and me complaining just so that he’d turn around and give me a chance to look at it.

-__-;;;

There are times when I wish I didn’t understand Japanese. Although the whole thing was, admittedly, pretty hilarious.

#2: Fievel VS My Little Monkey Saga: Part I
As I pointed out in an earlier post, Fievel is becoming bolder, and I began to wonder at one point he and My Little Monkey would run into conflict with each other. I was right to expect some overlap, but surprised that Fievel is turning out to be the winner in the Epic Battle for Julie’s Love and Attention. The thing about My Little Monkey is that, while he is a persistent little monkey, he is also easily distracted, and if I don’t respond to his demands/requests/questions/comments/concerns RIGHT WHEN HE HAS THEM, then there is a chance (however slim) that he will lose interest in me and go off somewhere else.

Fievel, however, is constant, and never, EVER loses interest.  Every possible break that exists in the school’s schedule, he darts to my side, English sticker card in hand. And he doesn’t leave. Come rain or hail or sleet or snow, the child simply refuses to go.

(Sorry about that.)

Seriously, though, he is, at present, the victor in the Fievel VS Monkey battle, if only because he just never gets up and eagerly seizes on any spare moments of attention that My Little Monkey’s absence allows. Also, he gets bonus points for being infinitely lighter than the Monkey, so I’m more willing to entertain his requests to be carried around.

You know, there are some days where I wonder if I mightn’t be a jungle gym.

#3: Disturbing Yet Heartfelt Movies are Disturbing Yet Heartfelt
I’ve been hanging out a lot with Rocko lately, and so he took the opportunity a few weeks ago to show me some of his favorite movies. One of them, It’s All Gone Pete Tong, was one of those movies that I started out kind of disliking, but then fell in love with. It’s, more or less, about a drugged out D.J. that loses his hearing and eventually finds a path to a redemption of sorts. It was extremely interesting, but one of those films that stayed with me for a while. Rocko felt the need to show me Children of Men the day after we watched It’s All Gone Pete Tong, and so by the time I went home that weekend, I was kind of in a state where I questioned my existence and the value of reality.

Because, you know, that’s what you do sometimes.
 

#4: A Significant Way That The Universe Wins: Baskin Robins Is In Japan
And not only that, but I was able to get Halloween flavors. Although, to be honest, I like their regular chocolate flavors better.

That’s pretty much it. I just like ice cream.

#5: Serious Bonding With the Dance Troupe
October 25th, the troupe all piled into a couple of cars and we drove down to Owase to celebrate the seventh annual Kumano Kodo festival. It wasn’t all that large, but there were a really large number of dance troupes there, so I was able to see a lot of different dancing styles throughout the day. There were some that were obviously influenced by Chinese dance styles, and then one group did a pretty respectable version of Michael Jackson’s Thriller (I was particularly fond of that one).

The day was really, really cold and rainy, though, and so when we weren’t dancing (we had a three-hour break at one point), we all huddled inside one of the buildings, ate festival food, talked, and occasionally napped. It was really relaxed and reminded me a lot of the trips that I went on when I was in band in high school. I also spent some time with D.J. Ozma Jr. – we played cards and, at one point, played catch with a ball that was in the shape of Doraemon’s head.

#6: Culture Festival Preparations Are Fun
The culture festival for my middle school was on Halloween, and so the week up to it we were all busy trying to clean and decorate the school, finish art projects, put the final touches on musical performances, and occasionally sleep. Every year that I’ve been in Japan, I’ve done a performance with the music club, but since the club doesn’t really exist anymore, I haven’t been doing anything this year. This left me with a little (a very little) free time, and so I was able to spend my afternoons wandering around and helping various student committees.

My favorite afternoon was the one that I spent with the student government. Every year, the school puts together a huge mural of 105 individual sheets of paper that, together, make a large and elaborate design (the art teacher likes me, and so I always get to do a piece of the mural, too). Anyway, the student government is responsible for assembling this to some extent, and I decided to help them out. It took us a couple of hours to tape everything together and get it ready to transport to the gym, but we had a really great time together. They’re all intelligent, somewhat quiet second year boys, but they were super lively when we worked together. We spent a lot of time joking around in English and Japanese. (They really surprised me with how much English they wanted to use around me).

It was an unexpected and lovely afternoon.

#7: No, Really, I Enjoy This
I must, because the week before the middle school culture festival, I averaged about 3.5 hours of sleep per night. This was due to trying to get my part of the mural finished, to practicing a dance that I performed for the students, to staying on top of my work, and also to doing some extra special Halloween-related preparations for my elementary schools.

God, I love coffee. And my students.

#8: Darkness falls across the land…
So, every year, I show my first year JHS students Michael Jackson’s Thriller. It’s short, sweet, and relatively easy to understand even if the students don’t have a Japanese translation in front of them (which I did provide them with this year, but still).

This year, though, my first year students have a very special, very intense love for the King of Pop. I think that knowing about him before his death made that unfortunate event more meaningful. It seems to me that they hold him as some kind of symbol of the English world and the link that they have to it. He’s their favorite artist to watch, and every time they see the projector set up for class, they hope that they’re going to see another one of his songs.

Anyway, given this interest, I decided that this year, I wanted to make the Thriller lesson a little more extensive and interesting. So, after we watched the music video, I gave them a copy of the spoken section (the part where Vincent Price scares everybody … ever). You know the part:

Darkness falls across the land
The midnight hour is close at hand
Creatures crawl in search of blood
To terrorize y’alls neighborhood…

I told the students that they had to memorize four lines of it and recite it to me for a speaking check. The bonus for them was that for every extra line that they memorized, they would receive two extra credit points.  At first, the students were skeptical – although I made the worksheet in such a way that they could read the English words, they didn’t understand a lot of them, and I think that the idea of a recital really made them nervous.

But, they pulled through, and quite well! The activity turned out to be surprisingly popular – especially because they got to chant about blood, death, and zombies (which are all subjects that teenagers enjoy to some degree). (One student did manage to memorize the whole thing…)

I was vastly entertained whenever I heard them practicing in the hallways during cleaning time. It was particularly funny because as soon as one student would start, others would join in. I’m only half-joking when I say that at one point I began to have serious concerns about my students inadvertently raising the dead.

Luckily, though, that does not seem to have happened.

#9: I Turned My Kids into Animals
Halloween really is a great time of year for English lessons. As you saw earlier, it gives me an opportunity to be slightly wackier and more creative than usual.

This year, I switched my curriculum around so that my first and second year elementary students would be studying animals during the month of October. This was the perfect backdrop to, well, dressing up like a witch, turning on some Disney Parade music (which all of my students identified before the first measure had finished), and “casting a spell” that turned them into a variety of animals. It was something that my music teacher did when I was in first and second grade, and I thought that my students would like it, too.

I turned out to be right, although I’m still fending off questions as to why I drive to school when I claim to be able to fly on a broom. Children are such curious little beings, aren’t they? They also don’t forget anything.

#10: I Also Wore a Gypsy Costume
This was part of my strategy for the activity described in #9. With a few modifications, it easily doubled as a witch’s costume. I was really nervous about wearing it to school, though, because it looked pretty ridiculous to me and I thought that my schools might object to it on the grounds of it looking unprofessional.

Imagine my shock, however, upon discovering that all of my co-workers loved this dress. I guess they thought it was really cute, and they told me that it was the kind of outfit I should feel free to wear every day. I walked around for two days feeling like a small, vulnerable puppy dog that everybody wanted to take home with them. It was surreal, and just goes to show how this country can still surprise me – even after almost three and a half years.

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