Another advantage was working with 3 new co-teachers and learning from their varied methods. One of the sixth grade classes was composed entirely of students in the band, and since their English teacher Stella was also their homeroom teacher, she gave me a lot of freedom in the classroom. We didn't focus entirely on the textbook and learned fun, musical things like the hokey pokey and yellow submarine. They were such a pleasure to teach, it showed me why people decide to become teachers. For our last class, we had a birthday celebration for a couple students, and Stella and I gave out prizes to students who did well on the last exam. Several members of the band played:
They even made me give a speech and play the erhu for them, and presented me with this card that the whole class had signed. In just a short month, these students truly touched me. I'm going to miss them.
1 comment:
Dear ETA friend!
I'm so sorry for the last response (and having it attached to an unconnected post.) but I hadn't opened my blog for months and was just going to archive it when I saw your comment!
I wrote JennygoestoTaiwan.blogspot.com, and I worked at Shin Sheng and Li Ming schools in Yilan city.
You had asked about dragonboating... My dragonboat team represented Fo Guang University's CLIC. If you're familiar with the program, just start bugging Peggy around March to get it moving or find out who's working on it. If you're not familiar with Fo Guang, let me know and I'll hook you up with some more info. I really suggest training and competing, when asked what my "one favorite thing" about Taiwan was, I almost always say it was Dragonboat Festival Day.
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