Monday, February 23, 2009

Last Round at Shonai Chuu

I just finished the first of my last 10 days at Shonai Chuu. This is my most difficult school, and I remember having some real difficult times the previous two rounds I was there last year. When I was there in December, I wrote that one of the English teachers would be leaving, and a new one would be starting there in January. I met the new teacher today, and his name is Yamanaka sensei.

One of the biggest issues I had with my previous times at Shonai Chuu was working with the English teacher of the older kids, san-nensei. I realized today how true that really was. At the risk of speaking too soon and/or jinxing myself, I'd say that Yamanaka sensei and the previous teacher, Deguchi sensei, are in many ways direct opposites. I can remember a few times last year having to play a human tape recorder for students in a classroom that was almost too loud to hear myself speak in. Today I had three classes with the san-nensei students and every class was kept relatively quiet and wholly in control by Yamanaka sensei. I am not looking to figure out why these teachers were so different in the classroom; my point is only that they are and it makes all the difference in the world. I had one of the best days of teaching I can remember in a very long time, and I hardly did anything as a teacher worth talking about.

In fact, I was a human tape recorder today, and I didn't mind it a bit. I read sentences for the students in my best American English so they could try to understand me and answer a few questions. I probably sounded like a voice on one of the audio cd's that accompany the textbook, except with a little more nasal tone (I am getting over a cold). I did do other things, and really enjoyed helping the students with their writing section of the review test. But, I have to say I felt really good about doing what I was doing in large part because Yamanaka sensei acknowledged the spot he was putting me in. Before the classes, he gave me a short head nod, or tiny bow, and said 'I'm sorry for using you as a tape recorder.' That really helped.

I saw students working hard on a review test today that probably wouldn't have bothered a few months ago. These same students listened to me and Yamanaka sensei today when their norm a couple of months ago was to talk to each other while consciously not listening to the teacher(s).

In a few weeks time all the san-nensei students will be taking their entrance examinations to get into high school, so I'm hoping the hard work keeps up till then and pays off. I've heard of high schools here full of students that don't pass their entrance exams; from these places it is much, much harder for students to then go on to university.

Shonai is the poorest of the four junior high schools I work at. The city of Shonai looks generally poorer and more rural than Iizuka city. Academically, it is no doubt one of the worst in the area. Matter of fact, I also work at the most academic junior high school in the area, Ichuu. Ichuu has many students from the wealthiest and more well-off families in the area. Many students at Ichuu attend private academic lessons afterschool, or 'cramschools' called Juku. A teacher told me that it costs families $200-400 a month to send their kids to Juku. As for students that don't have such opportunities, they must rely more on good teaching and personal effort to get ahead.

2 comments:

Marj Ballenger said...

Paul, as you have just discovered, a bad class is the fault of the teacher not the students. My prayer is that you become a teacher because many children need someone of your caliber. If you have a bad class, look inside. Thanks for sharing your experiences. Love you, Marj.

Elizabeth said...

I'm with you in regard to how much of a difference a co-teacher can make...my experiences definitely changed depending on who was in the room.

Congrats on finishing your time at Shonai, and best of luck tomorrow.