Pop Pop would be disappointed in my journal-keeping abilities. I hadn’t been in Chile 2 months before I had almost abandoned blogging altogether. Why? I could make excuses all day long that I had been simply too busy (not untrue) to keep a blog, too buried in lesson planning (untrue) to be able to write weekly blog posts. Excuses aside, the fact of it is simply that I hate writing blog posts. They take forever to write, they require a certain element of creativity which I can only tap into with great effort, and I had even convinced myself that keeping a blog was unimportant. However, due to the petition of family members to the contrary, I realize that I do value being able to share my experiences with those close to me. Damnit.
To review the past month or so in 50 words or less: I passed my certification course, which turned
out to be one of the most physically and emotionally difficult things I have
ever done. Yes, emotionally: entering an
intensive training course with the cocky attitude of “I went to college, I can
handle this” and quickly having one’s pride beaten to death by a month of sleep
deprivation and constant “constructive criticism” is enough to reduce a man to
tears. Ask me how I know this.
Now to the present: I
am a gainfully employed travelling ESL teacher with a full class schedule. This fact is a strange one for me to think
about. My goal all through college was to be a teacher…and now I actually am
one. And I had no idea how bloody tricky
it is to teach ESL. See, I teach using
communicative methodology, which means that my only teaching tool is the
language which I am teaching. The
students do not know English, and English is the only language permitted in the
class room. It’s like teaching music
theory to someone who has never heard music before, using only individual
sounds and musical notation to teach it.
Doing this, I have gained a very deep appreciation for what my own
language teachers did for me in college.
They always made it look so easy (the good teachers, at least).
The job has its ups and downs, as does any decent
profession. Being that I teach adult
ESL, (most) all of my students are smart, educated, and very motivated to
learn. They ask questions that are
difficult to answer, which is good in that they challenge me to become a
smarter teacher. They ask questions that
are easy to answer, which are good because they make me feel smart. There is a very profound joy in seeing the
linguistic concept click in a student’s mind and the look of understanding come
across their face.
The down of this job is the “travelling” part. I give classes to working professionals
before or after work, or on their lunch break.
Thus, I have the opportunity to see many different parts of Santiago, a
sometimes positive and sometimes negative aspect of the job. Most of my classes are in Las Condes, a
virtual Central Park in upper Santiago.
New, shiny skyscrapers housing international corporations, cafes and
sushi restaurants on every corner, all surrounded by beautiful parks and flower
gardens to take walks through:
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| Said flower garden. There are several such gardens located in a big park in Las Condes. |
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| The view from a building where one of my classes is. |
And
then there’s my class in Pudahuel. If
Las Condes is like the Central Park of Santiago, Pudahuel is the border town in
Mexico that’s been destroyed by the drug war.
Located on the outskirts of the city, Pudahuel is an industrial desert
replete with chop shops, shipping warehouses, and dust-filled winds. This is the part of town where my institution
only sends male teachers, and for good reason.
From downtown Santiago, it takes two hours to arrive to this class via
the 1 of 2 city busses that go that far.
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| On one side of my walk to my Pudahuel class, there is a cement wall topped with razor wire that surrounds what is, from what I can tell, a dump for paper products. |
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| On the other side, miles and miles of vineyards, dusty and brown from the winter season |
This weekend I will be moving into my new apartment in
Providencia, known fondly by Santiaguinos as “Sanhattan.” I’m sure I will have more to post afterward. Right now, it’s time for another drink, and
for a Pino Empanada. More to come!




Well you will be pleased to know that we read your blogs. I love them even though you might not think they are important. We all read them.
ReplyDeleteWhat an adventure you are having. Pop pop would be jealous and by the way he's sitting on your shoulder. :)