I work at 3 schools. One of them is inexplicably 45km away despite there being at least 150 schools closer than this one and other people much better placed to go there. Fortunately I own a car so it's not been too much hassle and I've just got on with it. The school is lovely for the record, but I also don't get any money for fuel, toll roads I am almost forced to take or any subsidies (I also got screwed on pay in other ways, but that's a tale for another day).I have however tried to do a service to my replacement and constantly emailed everyone I have any sway with: POE, co-ordinator, POE dude I met at orientation, Principle, VP, co-teacher, etc. 'Please give this school to someone else: If the next person doesn't have a car, it'll be 3 buses and 2 hours each way. That's absurd.'Today I got the good news: Next teacher will no longer work there.So why am I posting this in the rant? Well instead of working at the school 45km away, they've selected one 53km away. I've looked at the boundaries of the province I'm technically in and there is literally no two schools further apart. Furthermore, I met the native teacher of a school 1.5km from my house last week: She travels 30km to get there, using two buses. I said it makes no sense, it's crazy and met the usual wall of "Office of Education says it's like this and so it must be" rhetoric. TLDR; Tried to do my successor a good turn, ended up screwing them inadvertently.
I think I am losing it. I have had to come in to deskwarm and that always put me in a godod mood. I am now faced with the Devil's choice of staying in the air conditioned teachers room and have to tolerate colleagues trying to talk to me or going to my classroom and sweating like a Korean taking a creative writing test.This weather is just plain nasty. When will the rains arrive. I feel like I've been bukkakeed each time I walk out the door. I'm so tetchy I'm picking fights with Canadians on waygook.All must die!
Quote from: englishrose on July 23, 2015, 10:46:44 amI think I am losing it. I have had to come in to deskwarm and that always put me in a godod mood. I am now faced with the Devil's choice of staying in the air conditioned teachers room and have to tolerate colleagues trying to talk to me or going to my classroom and sweating like a Korean taking a creative writing test.This weather is just plain nasty. When will the rains arrive. I feel like I've been bukkakeed each time I walk out the door. I'm so tetchy I'm picking fights with Canadians on waygook.All must die!http://data3.whicdn.com/images/92790531/large.jpghttp://data3.whicdn.com/images/92790531/large.jpg
Quote from: AndyKanerva on July 23, 2015, 11:53:43 amQuote from: englishrose on July 23, 2015, 10:46:44 amI think I am losing it. I have had to come in to deskwarm and that always put me in a godod mood. I am now faced with the Devil's choice of staying in the air conditioned teachers room and have to tolerate colleagues trying to talk to me or going to my classroom and sweating like a Korean taking a creative writing test.This weather is just plain nasty. When will the rains arrive. I feel like I've been bukkakeed each time I walk out the door. I'm so tetchy I'm picking fights with Canadians on waygook.All must die!http://data3.whicdn.com/images/92790531/large.jpghttp://data3.whicdn.com/images/92790531/large.jpgSorry dude,I thought I had made it obvious I was just winding you up for the fun of it. I thought you were doing the same. Apologies if I genuinely annoyed you.
ME: I want to do (this craft: http://www.waygook.org/index.php/topic,89233.msg563090/topicseen.html#new), but I need to check Daiso first and make sure I can find the little plastic squeeze bottles.CT: They can just bring them from home.ME: Oh, okay. Are they common in Korea?CT: After drinking Coke or cider, of course.ME: Oh, no, I meant the small bottles, the "fish."CT: THEY CAN BRING FROM HOME.Holy jeez, fine. Control your fingers, please. Ten to one says that she forgets to mention it to the parents, anyways.
Quote from: meepmoopimmarobots on July 22, 2015, 01:49:27 pmME: I want to do (this craft: http://www.waygook.org/index.php/topic,89233.msg563090/topicseen.html#new), but I need to check Daiso first and make sure I can find the little plastic squeeze bottles.CT: They can just bring them from home.ME: Oh, okay. Are they common in Korea?CT: After drinking Coke or cider, of course.ME: Oh, no, I meant the small bottles, the "fish."CT: THEY CAN BRING FROM HOME.Holy jeez, fine. Control your fingers, please. Ten to one says that she forgets to mention it to the parents, anyways.Ha, I kind of want to do that too, but I don't think I can get the big bottles in time. I can't ask the students to buy a coke or cider- most of them have no money. Anyway, Daiso definitely have the tiny fish bottles, and they have metal nuts and wire (the wire might be in the garden section).I might make one at home, just for fun (I don't have a TV, so I usually just stare at the walls).
22 years old, first job is in Korea teaching English, pay is decent. Everyone keeps saying I must be 'so excited' to be here.Honestly though?Despite being here for about two weeks, I feel so frustrated with myself and homesick. I didn't really care much about where I worked so much as getting it and I know I shouldn't look a gift-horse in the mouth here but damn, I wish I could just spend time with friends and family again. Sometimes I find myself wishing I heard back from a dollar store nearby my house rather than coming here to be quite honest. Ugh. And then I get annoyed with myself for being this way as I genuinely enjoy the act of teaching, but I'm so overwhelmed by language barriers and a general lack of the familiar. I want to embrace the change and I know I will at some point (right?), but god damn do I feel like bawling my eyes out like a big baby at times.Newcomer here and my first post is a bit of a rant. Not a great first impression, sorry!
I get to have classes in the English room. We have a big aircon unit in there, but if it's less than about 24 degrees the students complain. At least I have something, and I am in control of keeping the doors and windows closed (aircon works better like that, who knew?).Next week all the teachers are away for training for two days. Luckily, I get to stay behind so that the students can have a class.The following week is deskwarming. If the teachers' room is not cool enough I am going to sit in the English room. Alone and (hopefully) shivering.
If you have only been here for two weeks you have not actually done any teaching. [...]
Is summer camp normally a sh*t ton of work or am i making this too hard on myself