Friday, July 17, 2009

Just A little Hello!

This next week is going to be very challenging and exciting. We are starting practice school, which means that all the English Education volunteers will be paired with a Moldovan teacher who will act as a mentor and help us compose lessons for practice school. I will be teaching 5th grade and 9th grade. As far as I know 25 5th graders from the local village will be in my class. Children from the local villages signed up to take part in the practice school. We all were given the correct textbooks and every day we will teach a 45minute lesson in english. I am so nervous and also excited to finally start teaching (even if it is just for practice!). Practice school will last for about two weeks. Wish me Luck!!

Monday, July 13, 2009

Site Visit to Perminent Site!

This weekend I traveled to visit the village that I will be teaching at for the next two years after my training here in Costesti.My new village which is in the north west part of Moldova, has about 5,000 people and the school that I will be working at has around 614 students, 500 of which learn English. The trip there was pretty eventfull. On saturday I met with my school Director in Chisinau (the capital) and we took a buz straight into the village. I had to travel into Chisinau by myself and for anyone who knows me, it won't come as a surprise that I got a little lost. The Peace Corps set a place for us to meet our directors but the map they gave us to find them was hand drawn and for those of us who are directionally challenged, it was difficult. (plus my director does not speak english, so when I was late to getting to our meeting place, you can just imagine how our conversation went on the phone!) But with the right attitude and with a little help from above we finally met each other.

The ride was by bus and it took around 2 hours to get there from Chisinau. Once I got there I got to meet one of my partner teachers and some of the students who go there! My school seems so wonderful. They have a lot of computers with internet for the teachers and the students to use, and they have a seperate English library. I was very impressed with my partner teacher and my director. They were so open to my ideas and it seems like the students are very involved in extra curricular activities. (eventhough some are raising their sibblings by themselves along with taking care of the family garden and house!)

My host family consists of a retired couple. My host mother is 60 and her name is Elfimia and my host father is 67 and is named Nicolaie. It will be a very different experience from my family here in Costesti and I know I will miss my family here very much. But my new host family seems very reseptive and VERY generous. The conditions of the house are very simple and I do not have an indoor toliet like I do here in Costesti..but they gave m the biggest room in there house, and I could tell that they have been preparing for me to come for sometime. It's so amazing how generous people are here, even when life is difficult and they might not have a lot to give. Since my new host parents do not speak any english, our conversations were limited so hopefully in a few months that are left in training I can improve on my romanian.

Later that night, my partner teacher and some of my future students took me out to the center of town and showed me all the buildings and most importantly the disco!! So before I left Chiscarine, I got to dance the hora (the national dance) with most of my future students! Interesting to say the least!

So coming back I got lost again in Chisinau - where it should of taken me 2 hours to get back to Costesti, it took me 4...but my host mother pointed to the word in our english/romanian dictionary that night, which meant to me that the important thing to remember is that I managed and made it home safely without TOO much trouble.

Monday, July 6, 2009

PST IS SOO CRAZY BUSY!

Sorry I haven't been the greatest at updating this! I've send some emails out to people describing my experience here, but I just realized I haven't really done that on here. Romanina is getting really hard in that there is so much to remember from day to day and you really have to practice a ton to have it semented in your brain. Luckily I am hearing the manguage everywhere I go, so I've started to understand the gist of what is being said, it's just creating the sentences on my own that is so difficult for me.

Today I"m learning where my perminent site will be after my training! I have a feeling it will be fairly close to the capital since I brought perscription medication here, but the farthest site in Moldova is only 4 hours from the capital so one is never really far from the Peace Corps Office. I'm a little nervous about my site visit though because all the volunteers are being split up for the first time and everyone has to travel by themselves to meet their director and their new host families. I've really started feeling comfortable with the host family I have now, so it will be hard having to adjust to a new one so soon. Luckily I will be in Costesti, my training site, until the middle of August, so I still have time with my host family here.

Teaching English here in Moldova will be an excreme challenge I think for me. The good thing is that everything is extremely structured here as far as how they want you to write out your lesson plans and how to conduct classes here. However, that can also serve as a challenge because creativily might be hard to impliment due to the strick nature of how classes are run here.

I miss everyone in the states and I hope everything is great overe there! I have to run to class right now, but I'll make sure to let eveyone know about my perminent site as soon as I find out about all the details!