Weekend Silliness
At our school, classes run every day: 7 days a week, Sunday-through-Saturday. Thankfully for us, our English classes are only Monday-through-Friday -- so we teachers are free on the weekends. Also thankfully: most of our students have Saturday afternoons and Sundays until suppertime free. This means that weekends are when we can break from the Teacher-vs-Students formality, and fall into casual, easy, fun.
Each Teacher, and each class, handles their weekends a little differently: some just share meals together on campus, some leave the city completely, and others stay in town and just "wander". Some have done something new every weekend, others stick with a routine and rotate a small group of students over each weekend. Sometime this week, I realized something pretty cool: no matter how the weekend was spent -- no matter how high- or low- key the activities -- the students were just completely enthralled by the fact that, Dude, our Teacher is Cool. (at least in their eyes!). And any opportunity to get closer to these kids, to escape that barrier of classroom stereotype, is amazing. There's so much more to be seen, and said, away from the schooldesks and chalkboard.
So anyhow: back to weekends. As far as how my own weekends have been spent: the first Saturday here, A few other teachers and I took a decent-sized group of students to "Dinosaur Park" in Changzhou (pic). This was just under an hour's ride on the public bus -- which, on a Saturday afternoon riding to the Big City: was quite packed. We stayed until dark, and the kids had a blast. I've got a paper-journal entry written up about this trip, and if I get time while here I'll post it: otherwise, I'll get it up as soon as I get back to the States.
Last weekend, a handful of my students met at the front gate just before noon, to leave campus for lunch. We walked to a noodle shop that was about 15 minutes away: I told my students that whatever they ordered me had to be under 10 yuan, as that's all I had in my pocket. No problem, they said -- 6 even, and I had WAY too much food left over! Afterwards, a few of the students left us and went to the bus stop, headed to their family's homes for the weekend. The rest of us (4 total, I think) went to the "mall" to get some shopping done -- and really, just as an excuse to stay off campus. My kids are awesome, wonderful, and totally incredible: I love them to death. The week leading up to that day I'd had a cold, and apparently that fact coupled with my announcing at the noodle shop that I had 10 quai led them to the conclusion that their Teacher needed some caring for. When we left the supermarket, I didn't realize that a couple litres of grapefruit juice, a smaller bottle of carrot juice, and a packet of cough drops -- were for me. These were dropped casually into my fridge once we got back to my apartment. And yes, I feel much better now, thank you!
The rest of that day was amazing: as the afternoon wore on, no one wanted to leave. We played cards (Uno) endlessly, and the group grew as more teachers arrived with students. Music was added, and snacks materialized. That Saturday afternoon became one of the best impromptu-parties ever: really awful karaoke, heated card matches, snacks, dancing, yelling, and above all -- lots and lots of laughter. Students that were supposed to leave at xx-o'clock to catch a bus ended up saying "oh, that's ok, I'll leave later and take a taxi" -- and stayed until a LOT later. Everyone, Teachers and Students alike, had a great time.
This weekend (the-day-after-tomorrow, this coming Saturday), we've already started making plans. The kids are excited: we used our class break this morning to plan. On Saturday, the entire class and I are going to Changzhou. We'll visit the Cinema (good luck, Teacher, at understanding... but it should be fun no less!), tour a temple, go shopping, see a "scary house made by a man and not ghosts!" (I'm guessing... a haunted house?!) and generally stay out as late as possible. Once we catch the last bus back, most of the students will head either to their dorms or home to spend the rest of the weekend with family. At least 3 girls of my class, though, will come back with me: we're having an "American Girl Slumber Party" in my apartment. The Teachers I live with are bringing girls from their classes also, and we're splurging on cheap "hair stuff", nail polish, snacks, and generally plan to revisit junior high. Everyone is supposed to bring a pillow and blanket -- it'll be crowded, but at least we have a clean floor! The girls couldn't stop talking today once they found out ("OH, I have seen these in film!"). Bonus: we live next door to the guys, so I believe a bit of late-night pranking is also on the menu. Shhh.
So anyhow. I am constantly amazed by how little it takes to absolutely change someone's week: so simple an activity (a little nail polish, a bowl of noodles shared) -- and the glow of laughter carries over into class for days to come. We are so incredibly spoilt: we who spent countless free seconds crashed in front of glowing screens, constantly searching for that ineffable "something" that will fulfill the weekend's boredom. Sure, weekends around here tend towards the hokey and silly and just plain dull a lot of the time -- but the payoff is so, so worth it.
Each Teacher, and each class, handles their weekends a little differently: some just share meals together on campus, some leave the city completely, and others stay in town and just "wander". Some have done something new every weekend, others stick with a routine and rotate a small group of students over each weekend. Sometime this week, I realized something pretty cool: no matter how the weekend was spent -- no matter how high- or low- key the activities -- the students were just completely enthralled by the fact that, Dude, our Teacher is Cool. (at least in their eyes!). And any opportunity to get closer to these kids, to escape that barrier of classroom stereotype, is amazing. There's so much more to be seen, and said, away from the schooldesks and chalkboard.
So anyhow: back to weekends. As far as how my own weekends have been spent: the first Saturday here, A few other teachers and I took a decent-sized group of students to "Dinosaur Park" in Changzhou (pic). This was just under an hour's ride on the public bus -- which, on a Saturday afternoon riding to the Big City: was quite packed. We stayed until dark, and the kids had a blast. I've got a paper-journal entry written up about this trip, and if I get time while here I'll post it: otherwise, I'll get it up as soon as I get back to the States.
Last weekend, a handful of my students met at the front gate just before noon, to leave campus for lunch. We walked to a noodle shop that was about 15 minutes away: I told my students that whatever they ordered me had to be under 10 yuan, as that's all I had in my pocket. No problem, they said -- 6 even, and I had WAY too much food left over! Afterwards, a few of the students left us and went to the bus stop, headed to their family's homes for the weekend. The rest of us (4 total, I think) went to the "mall" to get some shopping done -- and really, just as an excuse to stay off campus. My kids are awesome, wonderful, and totally incredible: I love them to death. The week leading up to that day I'd had a cold, and apparently that fact coupled with my announcing at the noodle shop that I had 10 quai led them to the conclusion that their Teacher needed some caring for. When we left the supermarket, I didn't realize that a couple litres of grapefruit juice, a smaller bottle of carrot juice, and a packet of cough drops -- were for me. These were dropped casually into my fridge once we got back to my apartment. And yes, I feel much better now, thank you!
The rest of that day was amazing: as the afternoon wore on, no one wanted to leave. We played cards (Uno) endlessly, and the group grew as more teachers arrived with students. Music was added, and snacks materialized. That Saturday afternoon became one of the best impromptu-parties ever: really awful karaoke, heated card matches, snacks, dancing, yelling, and above all -- lots and lots of laughter. Students that were supposed to leave at xx-o'clock to catch a bus ended up saying "oh, that's ok, I'll leave later and take a taxi" -- and stayed until a LOT later. Everyone, Teachers and Students alike, had a great time.
This weekend (the-day-after-tomorrow, this coming Saturday), we've already started making plans. The kids are excited: we used our class break this morning to plan. On Saturday, the entire class and I are going to Changzhou. We'll visit the Cinema (good luck, Teacher, at understanding... but it should be fun no less!), tour a temple, go shopping, see a "scary house made by a man and not ghosts!" (I'm guessing... a haunted house?!) and generally stay out as late as possible. Once we catch the last bus back, most of the students will head either to their dorms or home to spend the rest of the weekend with family. At least 3 girls of my class, though, will come back with me: we're having an "American Girl Slumber Party" in my apartment. The Teachers I live with are bringing girls from their classes also, and we're splurging on cheap "hair stuff", nail polish, snacks, and generally plan to revisit junior high. Everyone is supposed to bring a pillow and blanket -- it'll be crowded, but at least we have a clean floor! The girls couldn't stop talking today once they found out ("OH, I have seen these in film!"). Bonus: we live next door to the guys, so I believe a bit of late-night pranking is also on the menu. Shhh.
So anyhow. I am constantly amazed by how little it takes to absolutely change someone's week: so simple an activity (a little nail polish, a bowl of noodles shared) -- and the glow of laughter carries over into class for days to come. We are so incredibly spoilt: we who spent countless free seconds crashed in front of glowing screens, constantly searching for that ineffable "something" that will fulfill the weekend's boredom. Sure, weekends around here tend towards the hokey and silly and just plain dull a lot of the time -- but the payoff is so, so worth it.
