Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Same old, Same old

I haven't updated in a while, but not much has been going on. I've basically settled into my routine. I work Monday-Friday, go out on the weekends, same thing pretty much. I have been taking Korean classes for 2 hours every week with a tutor, and that's been going ok. My friend said I'm learning quickly, but I'm not so sure. It's a difficult language. I don't really hang out with the foreigners in Samcheonpo, with the exception of my good friend and a couple of other people, they're not very fun. I have met some cool people in Jinju. I went out to a club with two of them last weekend. We had to wait 3 HOURS to get in. I'm never doing that again. But I had a blast, any club where I can get on a stripper pole is ok with me.

There are these two girls in my school but they're not actually students. They're about to start university, and they've been studying English for 10+ hours everyday. I'd like to hang out with them but I haven't gotten a chance. I've met a few other girls which is cool. A lot of public school teachers are on vacation, so when they get back hopefully I can meet up with them again.

My mom is coming to visit for the Lunar New Year holiday. She gets here Wednesday and will be in Seoul, but I won't be able to visit her until Saturday. Unfortunately I have to work 4 days next week, so she will have to come here for a few days. I'd rather just stay in Seoul, maybe go to Busan or something, but I don't get much vacation. There is one guy here who's friend came to visit and they spent the whole week in Samcheonpo and went to Busan for the weekend. So he comes halfway across the world to stay in a fishing village and then go to Busan in the winter. Cool trip haha. I'm not going to do that to my mom, that would be pretty fucked up, plus  I don't want to spend my vacation here anyway.

I'll try to update more but I don't really do too much, I'm trying to not blow all of my money.




                                       Dinner at my school. We don't usually have so many sides but this is pretty typical.





                                        Lunchtime

                                        Korean pancake/pizza...amazing




Monday, January 14, 2013

My Job

I don't think I'll be doing anything worth writing about in the next week or two, so I'll write about my job. I work at an academy (hagwon), which is a private after school academy. Mine is an English academy, but there is a math program at my academy as well. They have all types of academies; music, math, korean, and I'm sure there's more. I know for sure some of my students go to multiple academies. I'm not sure how I feel about academies and the whole hagwon system in general. On the one hand, it certainly helps Korea get consistently high scores on international academic tests. On the other hand, the students don't have much free time, and Korea has a lot of stressed out people and leads the world in suicides, or is at least top 3.

Academies are a lot different depending on who runs them and whether they are a local academy or a chain. It is much more expensive to send a kid to kindergarten hagwons for instance. I have a friend who works at another hagwon in town, and he mostly hands out coloring pages to his students, and they barely speak English. Where I work is a lot more rigorous. Excluding the lowest level class, all the English students have class two days a week. In addition to that, they also have a lot of computer work to do every day. Many of them are still there when I go home at night.

I work late; I go to work in the late afternoon and leave fairly late at night. I personally love it, because I'm a night owl and this allows me to stay up pretty late and sleep all day. However, the other teachers around here work a normal roughly 9-5 schedule, and a lot of times they're not up for going out when I get off work. Plus it sucks if I want to go somewhere for the weekend, because leaving on Friday is kind of pointless. I work about 35 hours a week, but I only teach for about 12 hours every week. The rest of the time I am doing prep, helping the low level kids, or walking around telling students in the computer room to be quiet and study. Lately I've been studying Korean with my free time.

I've worked here for about 4 months, and I have taught six different classes, and had 3 different schedules. My boss has shuffled around some of the classes, some because she merged them with others, and now because the new semester will start soon, and some of the students are leaving or going to middle school. There are no high schoolers at my academy. I like most of the students I teach. They are really obedient and generally don't cause too much trouble. However, my academy is really disciplined. There is a kind of points system, where if a student is good or bad I can give them points so they can get prizes later. Plus my boss is always yelling at them and stuff which helps. She'll just come by the class, yell something in Korean, and a kid will sit up straight really fast.

As far as teaching goes, I don't have to make my own lesson plans. Everything I teach is from a series of books. The schedule is the same every month, and we finish one book every two months. So one day is listening, one day is reading, one day is speaking. Really, it's a pretty easy job. My classes are all an hour and a half. For the younger kids, it gets a little hard trying to stretch out the lesson, but for the older kids it's hard to actually include everything sometimes. My coworker teaches more classes than me, but even so I know people at other schools who teach way more classes. I also do some TOEFL (a national English test) prep with some of the advanced classes. As far as English skills go, my classes range from elementary students who can string together a sentence or two to middle schoolers who I can carry on a conversation with. While they are all pretty good with a few exceptions, some of them are really smart, and it makes me feel good to see students getting better.

I'd say I like my job. It's the first job I've had that I've genuinely liked. With that being said, I could not make ESL a career. It's just kind of a joke really and I don't think I have a professional job. I could see myself doing this for some time, but no way could I be 40 years old doing ESL.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Dentist

This isn't really cool or interesting, more of an information guide to living in Korea. Basically, dentistry here is really cheap. Back in the States, i got some fillings done before I came here. But one of them kept hurting, and I ended up needing a root canal.

In Jinju, there are several English speaking dentists. I went to Ye Dental first. Great place, but way too expensive. they wanted 1 million won ($1,000) for a root canal + crown. I ended up going to Mir Dental instead. At first, i thought it was 400,000 won ($400) for a root canal and crown. But I don't speak Korean, so there was a translation issue. The 400,000 was only for the crown itself. There are cheaper options; porcelain, silver, etc. But I went for gold because why not? Anyway, I ended up going five times. Overall I paid about 550,000 won ($550) for the crown and root canal. They didn't charge me for one visit because I told them about the confusion. Even at $550, that's less than half the price of a gold crown in the states. I would recommend Mir Dental. They did a good job, and they  have an English speaking endodontist and dentist. However, you have to go to the 5th floor. The dentist on the 6th floor doesn't speak English, so you need to stay on the 5th floor. Plus the women working there are beautiful which doesn't hurt. Not like the dentist back home with bleached blonde old ladies (although they are quite nice)

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

New Years 2012

Normally on New Years Eve I get really trashed and party all night. Actually, I did that on New Years Eve Eve. So this year, I was told about the sunrise in Samcheonpo. Apparently it's a big annual thing. The reason its so special is because Korea is so mountainous, so in a lot of places it's hard to see the sunrise. I decided to meet my friend at 7 AM, because the sunrise was around 7:30.

I took a taxi there, and it was packed! There were hundreds of people there. they had a food area and tent, but there were so many people I decided to check it out after. A shame, because they were packing up by the time I got down there. I'm guessing they had New Years soup which is a special soup that has dumplings and rice cakes in it. They make it at my job occasionally, it's quite good.

My cab dropped me off under the bridge, but my friend got dropped off on the bridge. It's quite a long bridge, so I walked that way and we met halfway, at the second suspension portion. The crowd was so thick near the foot of the bridge. It was hard to move! But as I went further down it thinned out, so we were able to get a nice viewing spot. The sunrise was supposed to be about 7:30. We were worried it might not be that good, because it was pretty hazy out. But we were wrong; it was spectacular. People were cheering as the sun came up. I have a lot of pictures and videos. I hate getting up early but this was definitely worth it.





                                   It would have been cool to be on a boat


                                 Hello there Mr. Sun
                                 Hurry up I'm cold!

                                People cheered when this happened




                               They finished performing 5 seconds before I took this picture