It's been ages since I last posted anytrhing. My apologies: When our travel-adventure becomes day-to-day school and not much happnes I feel like there's not much to post about. But of course there always is. And my day-to-day life may have become a bit mundane to me but every now and again I have a wake-up call and realise that this is not quite your average 25-year-old South African's experience!
For example, for the last 4 days I have been teaching with a face mask on. Seems almost normal by now but pretty much unheard of where I come from! This is because the number of swine flu cases in Korea has risen sharply over the last few days and the government is trying to prevent a pandemic. The media is full of speculation about how the pandemic could affect the economy, education etc. At the moment, doctors have recomended that high-risk schools be closed down.
Teachers are to send students home who have a fever over 37.8 degrees (yes, all schools have digital thermometers, of course! and we all have teh machines stuck into our ears once a day) and everyone has been told to wear masks and use alcohol-based hand cleansers and wash their hands with soap and water freuqnetly to protect themselevs from infection. There does seem to be something bordering mass-panic going on. Today the number of deaths dues to swine flu in Korea stands at 33 and it has risen rapidly since Monday. This includes a few low risk, young and healthy people which is probably why there is particular worry about it at the moment. I guess because it is so densely populated, Korea is at a higher risk of H1N1 becoming a pandemic than many other countries. It is also getting colder and people's immune systems are lower.
I think the fact that there have been a lot of exams, and still quite a few coming up, students have been studying very hard and not sleeping enough and not eating well, means that their immune systems are down. A lot of my classes at the high school have almost half the students absent.
So trying to teach English with a mask on is pretty tough: pronouncing words clearly becomes obsolete...I do often pull it down to say a word that they don't understand. It also gets kinda hot in here, my own breath warms my face up alot. And the peanut butter-and-toast-breakfast is only a breath away! After eating an apple I ended up with a thin, slightly sticky layer over my face as I breathed the sweet juices in and out of my mouth!
Anyway, I think it's good that Korea is being so careful about swine flu: some measures do seem a bit extreme but when one lives so on top of one another it's probably better to be safe than sorry.
is that 33 people to date or 33 people in one day?
ReplyDeletealso i hear that over prescription of TAMI flu has mutated the virus into a super resistant killing machine!
do be careful..