my experiences as an English teacher in South Korea. For one year, and then another...
a bit of solitude
Things I can maybe ACCEPT, but will never UNDERSTAND about Korea
blatant industry based on adultery and pre-marital sex VS. prudishness everywhere else
cruelty to animals
eating dogs
rampant plastic surgery industry which makes people look less Korean and more western. so tragic.
why Korean people so often picnic on bare, ugly concrete when there is a grassy patch just a few metres away....
why most Koreans don't swim
Blog update COMPLETE!
I finally finished a marathon session of updating my blog. SORRY to those loyal readers for leaving you in the lurch for so long.
There is now so much to read and so many pics to look at you should be satisfied for a while.
Herewith I'd like to thank EEBEE and LAUREN for always reading AND commenting so faithfully. Thanks to everyone else who reads but doesn't comment...my 'silent' readers!
snapshot of korea too
2010 New Year's Resolutions
keep in touch!
read lots of academic papers to get back into it
publish my Zulu insect names paper!!!
spend more time exercising
spend more time outdoors
live simpler, consume less
eat less meat
sNaPsHoT oF kOrEa
traditional decor
Funny Korean T-Shirt Konglish: it's true!
"My mother and I agree: my father is charming." (at the market -why didn't I buy it??!!)
"Get out of my fucking face." (Worn by a 10 year old girl)
"Let's do it like the bunnies do, all day long." (worn by a 12-year old girl)
I have started another blog. I've called it 'my teaching journal' and I hope it will become a vehicle for me to develop myself as a better and better teacher.
It won't necessarily be a 'pretty' or very entertaining place, but a place for me to express myself as a teacher. So if you are interested in that aspect of my experience in Korea have a look at www.ujessicateacher.wordpress.com
I've had a few weeks to think about my new year's resolutions for 2009. Most of them have to do with life in Korea and making the experience here more positive for myself. I feel we had a bit of a rocky start, but with the new year comes the opportunity for a fresh start. Hence my new year's resolutions are as follow:
1. Learn Korean: I would like to really apply myself to getting to grips with this language. In particular I want to learn basic everyday phrases with which I can communicate with people and hopefully have more positive interatctions with Koreans!
2. Take things as they come: I have safely concluded that things here are done DIFFERENTLY. There is no longer any doubt about that. Now the challenge is in simply accepting that and going with the flow!
3. Think Positive: this aspect of my personality has taken a bit of a beating since my arrival in Korea. Here's to a revival of my optimistic and happy approach to life! (Thanks Philippines for the kickstart!)
Books I have read during my time in Korea
*A Change of Tongue (by Antjie Krog)
*The Grass is singing (by Doris Lessing)
*Three-Letter Plague (by Jonny Steinberg)
A Guide to the Birds of East Africa (Nicholas Drayson)
Angela's Ashes (by Frank McCourt)
Der Vorleser (by Bernhard Schlink)
Free Food for Millionaires (by Min Jin Lee)
Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard (by Kiran Desai)
Magenta (by Denis Beckett)
Nelly Kelly (by Lena Kennedy)
Schlaflos in Seoul (by Vera Hohleiter)
Silent Spring (by Rachel Carson)
Sophie's World (by Jostein Gaarder)
Tara Road (by Maeve Binchy)
The curious incident of the dog in the night-time (by Mark Haddon)
The Hottentot Venus (by Rachel Holmes)
The Mind of South Africa (by Allister Sparks)
The Old Man who Read Love Stories (by Luis Sepulveda)
Weep not, Child (by Ngugi Wa Thiong'o)
"Wind in my hair": Boating in Panglao
Take a look at Julian's blog: It's very aptly named "Third Rock from the Sun"
I was under the impression that the cost of living in SK was quite low, but this is not quite the case: I think maybe Koreans earn more than we do in SA (when one converts it) and so for them it doesn't seem all that expensive but for us, saving, and converting everything to Rands (it will take a while for us to get rid of this habit) things are not that cheap. This is not intended to be a complaining session about prices, I just thought it'd be interesting: For example a Litre of milk is 2000 Won ~R14, eggs are 3000 Won for 10 ~R21 and apples are 600 Won a piece ~R5.50 these are products which Koreans eat and drink a lot themselves, so are relatively useful for comparisons. To give you an idea about western food prices: butter is 6000 Won for 450g ~R45 and rooibos tea (yes!) is 5000 Won for 20 tea bags ~R38! The deodorant myth is true: a can of Nivea deodorant (pretty much teh only one available)is 8500 Won ~ R65!! As for bed sheets, well I'm glad we brought one along, they are like hen's teeth: in Korea everyone sleeps on quilts! Below is a list of some of the 'cheap' items in Korea, all the yummy stuff :)
Students' Nicknames: One of the first activities I have done with my students is for them to choose their own nicknames. This is part of my effort to get my classes to be as English as possible to encourage teh studnets to sepak English only. The nicknames have been really entertaining! (Although I can't really let on to them how entertaining I find it!) I gave them a list of about 40 English girls names to choose from, and many of them did this, but there were some who chose their own names independent of thelist, they are hilarious! This list appears below and I will keep ading to it as I remembr more of the classic nicknames!
Things that ARE cheap in Korea (most things are not...)
seaweed
green tea with brown rice flavour
Internet cafe: ~R7 per hour
soju
instant very sweet coffee ~75c a small cup (or free in banks and many shops)
radish
service: no tipping in restaurants!
rice
bottled water ~R6 for 5L
cabbage
My students' English Nicknames
Cinderella
Windy
VIP
Neutrogena
Dog Mozart
Human
White Milk
Bling
Baby Princess
BonoBono
Monkey
Primadonna
Audrey Hepburn
Top
Fanny
Money
G-Dragon
Things to adjust to in SK:
THE STARING! We really feel like aliens: people stare at us so much!
Toilets (at school and other public places: squatting is the name of the game!)
Shower (at home: hand held, over the basin: whole bathroom gets drenched!)
Bowing: to seniors and important people - well, actually to almost everyone except kids!
Shoes: take them off indoors! And wear 'indoor shoes' (=slops, not the in-between-toes type)
Driving: on the other side, luckily I'm only ever a passenger!
Food (of course: mostly tasty but some still very weird!)
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