Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Keys

I was talking with a friend of mine, who lives in the States, the other day and I realized how funny my key chain would have looked to me, when I got here the first time, several years ago.  I was trying to describe how many keys I had and it's a lot and I actually need to add at least one more!!  I open the door to my apartment and have to open a gate, kinda like a screen door, but without the screen.  So that's one door I need to lock and we need to get a padlock for the gate (the at least one more key that I need to add).  Then, because I live on the second floor, I go down the stairs and unlock the door at the bottom.  After that door is the gate in the wall around the house, which has a padlock.  Then I either walk or take a taxi to the preschool (depends on how tired I am and how early I leave the house!)  At the preschool, I have to unlock the padlock at the gate, then unlock the front door.  I also have the key to the back door, which leads out to the patio for recess time.  When I'm done at the preschool, I walk the few blocks over to the main building.  At the main building I have to unlock the gate and then the rest of the doors are unlocked by the time I get there, but I have the keys for them.  The front door to the school, the gate leading to the stairs, the door to the office floor (off the stairs) and the door to my office/teacher's room.  I also have the key to my bedroom door and the filing cabinet at school, on my key chain.  All in all, I have 13 keys (I think) on my key chain!!!  Actually, I also have another key, but nobody can figure out what it goes to, we've tried it in all the doors and cabinets that we can, both at the apartment and at school, but it doesn't fit anything.  Of course, that doesn't mean that it doesn't go to a door that we have somewhere, but it could be that it's just a really bad copy. :)  Oh, I also have the key to the library, but that's kept separate from the rest, although I'm not really sure why. :)  I really don't have all that many, compared to many people that I know, but it sure seems a lot compared to what I had in the States!!  There I had my apartment door key, my car key, the key to my classroom, the key to my parents' house and the key to my grandparents' house, nothing else!
Before I ever came down here, to Ecuador, I never really thought about something as simple as keys being a cultural difference, but it truly is, or at least appears that way to me.  Every single door has a separate key, and different kinds of doors use different kinds of keys.  Metal doors have a long key, with a rounded head, while wooden doors have a long key too, but the head is more like part of an octagon or some other multi-sided shape and the padlock keys have a rounded head, but are really short.  Apparently random little details fascinate me. :)  I'd be silly and take a picture to put up, but my memory card for my camera is being a stinker and not downloading to my computer so I can't transfer any pictures over, till I figure out what the problem is. :(

Saturday, May 8, 2010

High School

Well, I've taught the high schoolers for about 3 weeks now and so far I really enjoy it!! :)  It was a shock to me how fun it actually is, because I always said that I like to teach the little ones because of how much love they give, all the hugs and being excited to see me.  The high schoolers don't usually come up to give me hugs, but they look for me when they're not in class to talk to and appear to enjoy having me in their class once a week.  I also discovered how much fun I have joking around with them.  It's made going to youth group a little more interesting/different, because much of the youth group is composed of Emanuel teens, so that puts me in sort of the same level as my students.  Youth group here includes anyone from 14 or so until you get married, but the church here has started to divide the group into 2 when we have the teaching time.  The singing and games are still all together, but during the teaching, the teens are in one group and the young adults in another.  That's been really nice, especially now that they're my actual students and not just older kids in the school I teach at!

I'm really enjoying getting to know some of the high schoolers better, several girls have been bugging me to teach them cookies, so I need to figure out a way to fairly do it, so the others don't get jealous of me spending time outside of school with some of the girls, maybe rotate or let anyone who wants to come.  I'm not sure yet, once I figure it out, I may be making more cookies than ever!  Either that or having willing "slaves" to help me mix the cookies for selling at the teachers' booth during the soccer games. :)

One thing I was worried about before I started, and it hasn't been that big of a deal yet, is the respect issue.  Never having taught older kids before, aside from camp counseling, I wasn't sure how it would be gaining their respect.  I get the younger kids' respect because I'm older than them (it's truly entertaining to ask little kids to guess my age, apparently I look anywhere from 10-65!), but the teens aren't THAT much younger than me, although I do forget sometimes that it really has been 10 years since I graduated from high school!  So far, though, I haven't had any trouble with it, aside from the kids in octavo (equivalent to young US 7th graders) and that grade is notorious for having issues, we think it has something to do with hormones or something. ;)  That class has about as many discipline issues as my younger kids, but without the excuse of still learning the school rules!  They've gotten better the past couple of weeks, though, so I do have hope! :)  All in all, I'm actually enjoying it, when I can take a moment to breath!!! :)