Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Got my ARC!

Today I finally got my Alien Registration Card!  Wooo!  So, that leaves a few big things to get done:
1. Get a bank account set up (tomorrow, possibly?)
2. Get a cellphone
3. Get internet service set up in my room

There's other stuff I need to do or get, but, yanno-- I won't even think about those things until I'm finished with the current stuff.

I snapped a bunch of pictures, so, here they are!


A view of the teacher's room. All of those cubicle-y desks are for teachers. The strange pink cubicle in the left of the picture is where I'm at. I get the special desk. (aka: there's nowhere else for me to sit.) It's hard to see in the picture but it's crammed really tight-- there's more desks on the other side of the cubicles on the left, and also on the right. So we're looking at the middle aisle, but there's two more aisles on either side. Packed!!

Some snapshots from my walk to work.


This is a library I pass while I walk to work.

These are some houses I pass.


Some more. I dont see too many houses like this, so I enjoy looking at them.


After I pass the neighborhood, I walk through a park. Here is a nice part.


All parks have these sorta exercise machines in them. Anybody can use them, but mostly I see old people hanging out. (There are some tennis courts to the left, though they're not that visible here.)

Well, that's all I have to say. I didn't go out last weekend or do anything interesting because I got really bad cold. I'm hoping that it starts to clear up soon. I don't feel that bad anymore, though my voice is still hoarse and I'm coughing a little.  Apparently, foreigners here have a hard time staying healthy here and get colds very often.  I will do my best to prevent that.

Well, I'll post again when I get a phone.. or something else interesting happens.


One last picture. Just part of the walk.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Another crazy Korean commercial.

This one features a popular Korean girl band, the Wondergirls. (They're currently in the states, trying to make it in the american music scene.)

Here's the insane commercial:

Korea, you so crazy!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Dinosaur Time





It was dinosaur time.

Have a disorganized post!


Teaching is hard.
Whew! Its been a while since I've posted.  To be honest, it's been pretty uneventful for me.  I'm almost done with my third week of work.  Let's see, how do I feel about it..  Well, this week, it's been a rollercoaster ride. The kids seem to be behaving terribly for reasons I can't see or understand.  To make it all worse, I've also been getting observed this week. Basically my boss comes and sits in the room while I teach.  It's incredibly nervewracking and made my lessons much clumsier than usual.  She observed me on Monday and will observe me a few more times in the future. (I thought she was going to observe me today, but, I guess something came up.)
 
Although I realize that my classes don't go that smoothly and that I need to work on my technique, I'd rather improve by observing other classes and taking notes rather than being observed and then sitting down to a one-hour discussion about how much I suck.  I just feel like a nervous wreck after that kinda thing.. but, oh well.


A bunch of coworkers and myself at a local bar.
 
Weather = slightly less horrible
The weather has been pretty cold, still, but it hasn't snowed again.  Yesterday it heated up to almost 40F, so, a lot of the snow melted. The walk to work is SIGNIFICANTLY nicer now that the sidewalks aren't all covered in thick layers of ice.
 

Foggy Korea is Foggy! Iceless sidewalk, yay!

I've been out to Seoul a little, but only the foreigner-dominated zones. I'd like to see the sights once it gets decent out, but until then I'm mostly just going to bars and whatnot with some of the other teachers. I really wanna get some independence, but first, I need my Alien Registration card. It MIGHT be ready for me to pick up tomorrow..  But maybe not, it might be Monday or Tuesday when it's ready.. nevertheless, I'm excited to get it. I'm gonna get a cellphone as soon as I can!


Food picture for dad: Korean version of a California Roll. Spicy and delicious!

Anecdote time!
Well, I guess I should share the only thing of interest so far. I went out to the foreigner area, Hongdae. It's known for having tons of dance clubs and western-style bars, packed with foreigners.  I went out with a bunch of the girls from the school--It was freezing cold outside but we just went from one bar to the next, dancing, chatting, and drinking.  In one of the bars, there was a Korean man who was shirtless and acting completely drunk, dancing around with people and whatnot.  Kinda strange, but nothing too unusual.. until he got up on a table and got completely naked, and then just.. stood there. Staring into space, naked.  It was a combination of hilarious and confusing.  He was up there for a while, too-- there's no bouncers at that bar, so someone had to go get bouncers from the bar next door to throw the guy out.  A pretty bizarre occurrence, indeed! 

THE END.



Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Weird Korean commercial.

This commercial is on tv ALL the time!  I BELIEVE it's a commercial for a loan company?  There seem to be a lot of those, but, maybe I'm wrong. I'm not a good source of information.



There's another version that I like WAY more, but I can't find it on Youtube! I'll definitely post it if I find it, though.

Alright, well, I still don't have any pictures so I'm just gonna write a brief update.

I started working last week on Tuesday (Classes were canceled on Monday), so it's been more than a full week now. It's been.. well, a mixed bag.  Some classes have been great, well-behaved students, etc.  Some classes are .. well, not disastrous, but definitely difficult to get through.  My throat is sore after most days, just from talking so much (and raising my voice above the roar of the children.)

This Saturday I have to go in to work between 2 and 7 PM, since my classes were canceled last Monday afternoon. I am not thrilled AT ALL by this prospect. :/

About my usual workdays..
I work the morning shift, so I start working at 10 am every day (have to arrive 15 minutes early to be ready by 10), and I stay until 7 PM on Monday, Wednesday, Friday.  On Tuesday, Thursday, I leave at 5:30 PM. That's just the way the morning teachers are scheduled to work. One hour of every day is lunchtime (break) -- lunch is provided at the school for free every day, though I can go out to eat somewhere else if I want.  I can use my lunchtime however I want-- leaving the school, sleeping at my desk.. whatever.

.. Well, that's all I'm going to post about right now. I'll post more interesting info (as well as some pictures) soon.

Monday, January 4, 2010

A long overdue update; now from Korea.

Alright, well, I think it's way past due for me to update a little about my life.

Visa Interview Process
I completed the visa process for an E-2 (English instructor) visa in mid-December. I interviewed with the Korean Consulate in Chicago via MSN messenger.  It was a very short video chat, lasting less than 10 minutes. The questions I was asked were the following:
-Have you ever been to Korea?
-Have you been reading or researching Korea?
-What kinds of things have you learned?
-Do you have any teaching experience?
-In your experience teaching English, how long does it take a student to gain a working knowledge of English?

That was the end of the interview process. Nobody gets the same questions, but you can imagine the kinds of questions you'd be asked are somewhat similar in terms of topic. I received my passport (with the visa pasted inside) about 4 days after completing the interview.  I contacted the school and they purchased a plane ticket for me, leaving on the 29th of December at 10:30 am.

The trip from USA to Seoul
My trip was problematic, of course. My plane was delayed by over two hours leaving my hometown, so I almost didn't make the connection for my overseas flight in Dallas.  Luckily, my next flight was also delayed by about 45 minutes.  I panicked until I checked in at the gate.. what a relief!  My luggage, even though there was only about 45 minutes, made the transfer as well!

When I arrived in Seoul, I went through Immigration without a problem. They looked at my visa, stamped stuff, and let me through.  After picking up my luggage, I went up to a Customs agent who took my custom form (I had nothing to claim), asked me a few questions which I couldn't understand at all, and then laughed and waved me through.

Strangely enough, my luggage was never opened. I had one large suitcase and one very small one, both of which had TSA-approved locks on them.. but neither were opened at any point.  The locks have a special built-in signal that pops out if the lock is opened by key, and the signals weren't showing. None of my items were shifted or moved around at all.  So, actually, the trip went smoothly in that sense!

When I left the Customs area, I immediately saw a man holding a sign with my name. I waved to him and he took me to a van, loaded my stuff, and drove me to my apartment building.  I didn't actually know where we were going-- I hadn't been told if I'd be going straight to my new apartment, or if I'd be staying at a hotel for a while.  He took me to the apartment building, where the Director of my school met me and showed me around.  He also took me out for dinner at a nearby traditional restaurant. It was an expensive, full-course meal.. most of which I couldn't eat because I was so exhausted and jet-laggy.  Also, some of it was so incredibly spicy that I couldn't eat it at all.

Crazy Taxi: Real life version
I'd like to elaborate a little on the taxi ride from the airport to my apartment complex.  My school is actually in Incheon, so the ride wasn't all that long-- maybe around 30-45 minutes, but it was one of the most terrifying rides of my life.  Taxi rides have a reputation for being a bit scary in a lot of different places, but the degree of terryingness was shocking to me.  The taxi ran red lights whenever nobody seemed to be coming from the other way, swerved across many lanes at a time without warning, turned into areas that weren't supposed to be turned into, etc.  Everyone in Incheon (and all the cities in Korea, from what I hear) seems to drive pretty recklessly, so the taxis aren't doing anything incredibly unusual.

But just because everybody's doing it, doesn't mean it's a good idea. There's a reason why there's a lot of fatal car crashes in Korea.  (For my family: imagine that everyone drives like Dad, except that nobody is aware of the other cars around them or of the laws of traffic.)

Pokin' around for a few days
The first night, the 30th, I just went to bed right after eating dinner.  I was soo exhausted! I woke up the next morning, the 31st, and walked to the school to meet my boss and have a little orientation.  The walk is around 20 minutes, which can be easy or treacherous, depending on the weather. My first time walking to the school I found out the unpleasant fact that they haven't figured out how to clear sidewalks here. Almost the entire path to my school (approx 1 mile) was covered in thick, slick ice. It was like being at an ice skating rink, except I didn't have skates.  It was incredibly hard to walk and I wobbled and nearly slipped every few feet.  I can't believe I didn't fall and crack my head open.

I bought grapes at the supermarket (Lotte Mart) next to my school and went home. I was still extremely jetlagged and fell asleep early in the evening. I had originally planned to go out to a bar to celebrate at the very least, but I ended up just setting an alarm so I could wake up and eat my grapes!


Grape time! (I tried to show the view from the window but it didnt work, oh well!)

Happy New Year!
I immediately went back to bed after eating the grapes.  The next day, January 1st, was a national holiday, and so most places were closed.  I took a walk around the area surrounded my apartment and found an electronics store. I also checked out the convenience store on the first floor of my apartment building as well as the internet cafe on the 2nd floor.

PC-bang (internet cafe)
Internet cafes are called PC-bang here. "Bang" means room, so the meaning is "PC room."  It's exactly what it sounds like-- a large, dark room full of expensive computers.  The place is mostly frequented by teenage Korean boys playing online games. Mostly Starcraft and games like that, but I've seen some other kinds of games that I can't name.  It gets really loud in there cause they're all playing together in groups and yelling out orders to eachother. There are people using the computers for other things as well, but the gamers seem to take up the majority of the audience.

Oh, the PCbang is really cheap, too. It's 1,000 won per hour, which is a bit less than 1 dollar an hour.

Boring life details.
On the weekend (2nd and 3rd) I went shopping for some groceries and basic electronics that I needed-- a hairdryer, specifically, as well as a computer mouse and headset for voicechatting. I brought my own webcam, but I won't be able to use it until I get internet set up in my room.  Before I can do THAT, though, I need to complete the Alien Registration process and get my card (Alien Registration Card, or ARC).   It may be about a month until I'm able to set up internet access in my room.. so, be patient, everyone!

First day of work!
Today was my first day of work.. for the first week, I'm only teaching part-time hours.  During the mornings I prepare and "train".  Today I realized that my "training" involves me sitting in a room by myself, reading the same lesson plan over and over. I'm not sure why I'm supposed to use all this time for "training" when the lesson plan is already decided for most classes.  All I have to do is follow the directions, so.. I'm not sure if there's something I'm missing, or what.  My boss wanted to help me out and spend more time talking to me, but she had to fill in for some of the Korean teachers who couldn't make it to school. I think I'll be observing some classes later this week, but.. today was a disaster.


The view from my 17th story apartment. Snowwww.

It snowed about a foot here.  It snowed for hours before classes even started, and it's been snowing all day. Cars are stranded all over the place, and attendance at school was shockingly low.  Busses are stranded, taxis aren't running.. basically the only good way to get around today was by walking.  After two hours of "training" and one hour of "break" (aka, I ate lunch and then stared at my lesson plan for the rest of the hour because it was too miserable outside to go anywhere), my boss told me that she'd canceled all of the classes for the afternoon, including mine, and sent me home.


In the morning I cross the street and go down the road, heading off to the right.  There's also a subway entrance here-- that tall building with the green-covered scaffolding on the side is blocking the view, but the entrance is right there on that corner.

Bummer! So, after about 3 hours of sitting around at work, "training", I left.  I'll have to make up for the cancelled classes sometime later this month, on a Saturday.. Totally sucky, if you ask me! But, I guess there's nothing that can be done when the weather takes such a sudden turn for the worse.


Another view. Mostly residences, I don't pass through here..

When I saw the snow this morning, I didn't think it would be such a big problem-- I figured that this amount of snow was typical, but apparently it's not usually this bad.  I'm kinda bummed because my easier lessons were going to be today (Monday-Wednesday-Friday) schedule.. and tomorrow my classes will be pretty tough.  The classes I give tomorrow are classes that have no pre-set curriculum, so it's up to me to plan and structure the whole course.  Also, the classes are 80 minutes long, so if I run out of stuff to do, it's going to be pretty obvious.  I've got several hours tomorrow to plan, though.. so I guess I'll worry about it then.


By the time I got home I was dripping wet from the snow.

I met my coworkers today.  Not all of them, only the teachers who work in the morning-- the teachers who only teach in the afternoon didn't come since the classes got cancelled.  I probably met around 8-9 other foreigners and lots of the Korean teachers. I couldn't spend much time talking to any of them because they had classes to go to, but they all seemed friendly enough.

Free lunch!
One of the perks of the school is that I can have lunch there for free every day that I work.  There's a full staff of cooks there, and all of the preschool/kindergarten classes eat there with their teachers.  There were some non-spicy options, but mostly spicy stuff. I ate some spicy stuff and acted like I wasn't dying. But I was.

End of boring entry.
Well, that's about it so far. I know this entry is incredibly long, not very interesting, and contains a lot of information that I've already emailed to some of you.  But for the sake of making sure everyone's on the same page, I summarized it all.  I'll write again when I have something of interest to say, or at least some nice pictures.. Maybe I'll become friends with some of the other foreign teachers, and actually venture out into the city sometime.

Weird anecdote.
Today was the first time I saw a non-asian face since I got here!  Not only did I see the teachers at school, I bumped into a white guy in Lotte Mart. I looked up, saw another white person, and the next thing I know, the loudspeakers at the store are blaring information in English! Until now I'd only ever heard the korean announcements, but suddenly the announcements were like, "Welcome to Lotte Mart! Lotte Mart is a discount department store with quality blahblahblah."  I think the presence of 2 foreigners caused them to put on the english introduction.  Also, walking home from the store, I bumped into another foreigner. Literally, because the walkable path throught he snow was too narrow for two people to pass eachother-- so we both just kinda said "Hello" without knowing what else to say.

The end. For now. I promise to take more pictures-- particularly of my apartment, once I get settled in more.