Sunday, 23 April 2017

Be An Adult Jam, Be An Adult

So, I don't think I actually told most people about the Parent-Teacher conference at our high school. For me, the experience was a total alternative reality. When I normally think of Parent-Teacher conferences my thoughts involve an experienced teacher who probably has child development bench marks ticked off on a scatter plot...or at  the very least a vague idea of what is going on in their own classrooms. There are parents who...well…I'm not a parent so I don't know how they feel normally (...besides tired.My guess is you are always tired...)

Anyways, it was told to Izora and me that Term 2 was Conference time. Thus, I needed to try and be a real adult for just a few hours and give off the impression that I know not only how each kid is doing in my class but which one is which (African names are haaaard). However, I had just changed from working with the Grade 9s to the Grade 8s a few weeks before. So I did not know how each kid was doing in my class and I had absolutely no idea what their names were. Minus Isaac. That one was easy.

I also needed to find euphuisms to explain to some parents that their kids totally suck and ruin everything- and do so through a language barrier.  I wore a red blazer and purple dress- hoping I could be at least DISTRACT with a LOUD and ABRASIVE color palette if things got weird.

Out of my 80 or so Grade 8s, I had about 20 families come to see me.  I did have some parents looking for an explanation for the super low English marks for the Grade 9 classes I was shortly responsible for (and who's exam I marked). I felt really bad but those classes where so enormous I had absolutely no idea who anyone was with just a name on a paper. In my most "compliment sandwich" way possible I tried to tell them that the entire Grade 9 sucked and wouldn't listen...but hey, maybe that wasn't your kid!

**Interjection- as I write this,  two learners, who are not mine, just walked in for the sole purpose of taking selfies with me.... "don't say she's your girlfriend," one of them said to the other…

Oh God...
 I'm going to be blasted so hard on teenage PLK social media**

Most of the conferences went OK; unfortunately I couldn't answer most parents’ questions about the Grade 8 Term 1 exams because at the time I too busy crying in the library because Grade 9 was mean to me. But, I could tell them how many times their kid was late to class and if they make my head hurt or not.

I had one older brother come in HOT, both literally and figuratively (he was cute and his shirt was tight), for his younger brother. The learner had skipped my class so many times in the beginning of the term I didn't believe him when he tried to come into my class one day:

"You're not in this class," I yelled at him as he slinked through the door.
"Yes mem, that's me!" ::points to roster::  ::takes out ID::
"Well, I've never seen you before. That means you're really far behind and have a lot of work to do."

The second time her appeared I made him stand up in front of the room because he was talking, we got in a physical wrestling match over his backpack, and thus solidified a rather fantastic and productive student/teacher relationship. His brother was as frustrated as I was by the learner-pissed that he had been skipping, lying about it, and saying he didn’t have homework. “I’m taking your number, and I’m going to set up meetings! He will be in class the rest of the term, and if he’s not, I will know about it!” the brother told me. YOU GO BRO. Let’s educate together!

And maybe the best part of all the conference chaos was that in our school the learners attend the conferences with their parents. They either cower in fear once the gig is up and their lies have been uncovered or they receive direct praise for a job well done. It greatly changes the dynamics of my meetings with parents to have the leaners there, but also allows a rare moment for me to chat individually with each student. Maybe something resonates.

Then, there was an extremely awkward conversation with Watch Girl and her mom. Remember that tiny precious learner I drove home one day when she missed her transport and she gave me a watch the next day to say “thanks?” Yah. So. That watch was her mother’s. She stole it off her bureau. Mom had been looking for it for about a month.  Watch Girl, I thought we had something going on! Now I look like an asshole thanking your mother for the gift she didn’t know she gave me. Now, I trust no one.

In all, the conferences took hours and I was at school from 7:15am to about 8:15pm. Once we started I had a queue for a solid 2 hours of parents waiting to talk to me. It was overwhelming and my face got red and sweaty. Still, I think I fooled most people about being an adult. Izora and I celebrated by going home and throwing a 5-month birthday party for Nana. Because adults throw parties for dogs on school nights, right?



Wednesday, 22 June 2016

I'm Going (Going) Back (Back) to the Village (Village)...

This past weekend I accompanied Lizzy to Thulamahashe (yes, that is spelled correctly) a city/village somewhere in South Africa. I keep trying to Google it and it's not really working out for me. All I know is I selectively listened when Lizzy told me where it was and 7 hours/4 minibuses and taxis later, I was in a different provence. 

Lizzy is returning to the Mother Land of the USA in about 2 weeks  so a trip to Thulamahashe to visit her friend Tembi was part of the farewell tour. Since I consider myself an honorary village girl (Namibiz 2013) I was more than happy to tag along. I talk a big game about village livin' and taking the loud, crowded, smelly mini taxes because that was my life for a while, but I've been a princess since landing in Polokwane and it was time to get back to my roots. 

Tembi is a beautiful, sassy, articulate young lady who now works for the Peace Corps in Pretoria,. Getting her take, as a native South African, on that type of governmental volunteer program was really cool. We crashed also with her 2 younger sisters (one Grade 11, and one home from the University of Limpopo on school holiday) and her 2 little sons (ADORABLE).

Unfortunately I woke up on Saturday, after 12 hours of sleep, feeling like a wet pile of garage that had been rolling around in a cement mixer. I was neither the prettiest, the most sociable, nor the most conscious girl of the weekend. I think I won the awards though for Mucus Momma 2016 and Grossest Girl in Thulamahashe though.

Anyways, it's 5 days later and I just now am beginning to resemble the person I once was. Just in time to snag Jamie in Jo'burg (who flies in tomorrow!) to begin an epic 3 week Polokwane/Jo'burg/NAMIBIA adventure with special appearances by 3 of my fellow gorgeous WorldTeach volunteers and MOMMA AND POPPA JAM themselves. There will be lots of shouting. There will be too much eating.

I have to drive to Pretoria now and there have been riots, fires, and political protests there the last 24 hours soOoOoOooooO I'm really just hoping nothing else gets added to my already too long rental car damage bill.

Here's a video of the village, yo


Sunday, 12 June 2016

What Your Teacher Thinks as They Invigilate Exams (Spoiler: It’s Mostly About Farts)




…I wonder if it’s more boring to take this exam or stare at kids as they take this exam…Why does it take so long for kids to sit in their seats and close their mouths?...oh wait, cause there are 50 of them...they are many, I am few…Pffff, it’s not my time they’re wasting….I’ll wait…It’s really cold in here…I wonder if these kids are going to cheat…My thoracic spine hurts…It’s probably my unsupportive shoes….dad wouldn’t be happy about them…but I do look pretty snazzy today….but also kind of like Justin Bieber…I definitely think Bieber would wear this outfit…Is that kid cheating…why is he playing with his hat?...Do you think the kids could smell it if I farted?...Could I pass this exam?...After this it’s lunch…Whoops, definitely farted…maybe if I move around the room they won’t know it’s me…is my angry face on?...this exam is hard, I think I might fail it…why the hell is it so wet over here?...do I need to yell at someone about this?...yah, this fart is pretty smelly…this is taking a long time….what am I drinking tonight?...Ok now THAT kid totally just farted…don’t laugh, don’t laugh…talk over the laughter about something important… YAH NAILED IT, GREATJOB...this is the longest exam ever…Tebogo is totally cheating, I’m going to write something on his paper…when does the liquor store close?…what am I doing at the gym today?... dude, I’m so gassy, what the hell?...is it too late now to say sorry?...he say me have to work, work, work, work, work, he see me do me dirt, dirt, dirt, dirt, dirt…that answer's wrong…so do I let McCheater pants finish the exam or make a big scene out of this?...my armpits are sweaty, but my hands are cold…FRIDAY FRIDAY FRIDAY…ok crap, that fart actually made a lot of noise...pretend  to cough!...this is the slowest 15 minutes of my life…is it unethical to take 30 minutes off of their time to write the exam because I’m bored...Dumbledore would say "yes"…ok fine…I think I’d prefer to take this exam right about now…farts…

Monday, 6 June 2016

Weird Shit People Say to Me....


Do you punch a guy every week? Is it like your agenda?

Tell me, what's up? Something's going on. You usually walk around about 80% confident, but today you are 100%. What’s happening?

I thought you were a millionaire because you’re renting a car.

I’m afraid of you and you don’t even wrestle…

Friday, 27 May 2016

Everyone is Running Around Yelling....

If any of y'all were with me on my Namibian journey you may remember the disorganization and drama that is the Southern African exam system. We started our first day today, meaning we're in for a few WEEKS of testing blocks followed by mayhem when the learners are supposed to be in class (...I think...?) but just scream and cause trouble for the rest of the shortened day. I told all my kids to come to school today (some thought it was a holiday?) because I was going to teach and tell them what was on the exam, but instead I've spent the entire day in my cold class room lonely and confused.

This has been a super roller coaster week anyways-I shed my first tears at school and because I'm still kinda embarrassed about it I'll tell yah later....


Life lately however, has been a collection of hilarious and weird microcosms that describe the constant randomness that is teaching at my school.


-on Wednesday, in the span of 10 mins I wrestled a cell phone out of a girl's hands as she tried to shove it down her shirt, had a learner ask for a stapler only to have him raise up his leg and start stapling his pants, and had a teacher ask me to cover her class because she had to go deal with "spiritual matters." It was something with a learner and seeing "The Black Lady," who I guess is like "Bloody Mary?" and needing to inform the grandmother about the small curses he has been experiencing being put on him week.

-also on Wednesday, a Grade 10 learner who has become my shadow (and sings Rihanna's "Work, Work, Work" to me whenever he sees me...) started enthusiastically explaining some American movie he watched last night. It was possibly the funniest half understood conversation I've had here yet. Apparently some character had to lick either an ice sculpture or statue (...unclear...) to make friends because no one liked her. When I asked the name of the movie he said, "Slap Her...She's French." I absolutely LOST it. There is no way that is the real name of a movie. Apparently though, 2002 was a tough year for the cinematic industry, because that is in fact, a real and actual movie.


-on Thursday I had library duty, where I usually play some sort of music quietly because I can't handle silence. I flipped on the Frank Ocean albums and looked up to see the heads of the eight Grade 11 and Grade 12 boys in there start to nod to the beat. A few songs in, one learner was totally unproductive; his glasses were off, and he was singing the lyrics to his homework paper-not writing, not reading, but in the zone. Another was rocking a cobalt blue afro pic in his school-cropped short hair, rocking back and forth doing math and singing the harmony. Earnestly and genuinely he looked up at me said, "Miss, can you please raise the volume?" All the other learners whipped their heads around and agreed. I don’t know if I’m helping their education or shaking their concentration but hey, whatever I need to do to get my boyz in the library....thanks Frank Ocean for making me cool.


-and right now, as I type this, tired and feeling kinda sick, there is a tiny tiny 10th Grade learner dancing next to me, alone, to the South African rap music I'm playing. I'm actually hoping his English isn't very good so he doesn't know I'm typing this exact sentence about him.


Sunday, 22 May 2016

Let Me Explain....

 I’ve been writing a lot less this time in Africa. Sorry self, sorry everyone. But if I can make any concessions and excuses they are as follows:

-School has picked up. We’re getting closer and closer to exam time (where essentially schools shut down and the kids only test) so I’ve been needing to get a lot of business in order. My classes are really far behind- partially due to constantly thinking I can get more done in a class than is realistic and partially due to behavior issues. My kids are precious angels and simultaneously devil children. I love them to pieces, but a few of them make it really hard sometimes. I had to walk out of class on Tuesday and count to 10 I was so angry. I hoped this would have the same effect as the few times my mother got so fed up with my brother, sister, and me that she got in the car and drove away. Back then, I knew I was in for PAIN when either her or my dad came home. That wasn't wasn't really the achieved effect when I entered the classroom though, and I just got even madder.  But, my co-teacher had my back like a champ. She followed both my classes to their next class and told them they couldn't come back to English class that week until they wrote me a letter of apology. PREACH TEACH!!!! I'll have to throw some pictures of these letters up here, as they are pretty great. Although, most of the kids who wrote them were the ones who didn't actually misbehave and I felt bad. 

-I have a routine now. While I usually hate knowing exactly what my day is going to be like before it happens, it's kinda nice this time around. Things have fallen into a system, and since I'm me, I'm usually out of the house by 6:45am and back 12 hours later. Long days. 

-My laptop got stolen out of the locked trunk of my car. I should be more mad about the loss of pictures, months of learner's marks, super important saved information, and just pure annoyance, but....what can you do? I've just got to buy a second hand PC and get back on that blog train. It's just dumb because that computer was almost 10 years old, couldn't even run Google Chrome, and was basically just powered by the sands of time. So, basically, South African gangsters got a crap ton of pictures of drunk college kids in costumes, lesson plans, and obsolete computer parts and I got a really limited Christmas list this year.

-I’m “studying” for the GREs. By that I mean I’m actually serious about it now and am constantly filled with anxiety and a lack of self worth because I can't solve math problems I could do in high school. Well, actually, my giant GRE study book also got stolen out of my car....so I've taken a short sabbatical. The theft of the book might actually be more infuriating than the laptop cause I KNOW ain't no one else looking at that shit.

-My friends (I have some now!) like to hang out and chill. I’m good at chilling. I like chilling. So I have been chilling.

-The #GirlSquad American Fortess (a.k.a- our house) tends to enter into a state of antics after 7pm. Somewhere between cooking dinner, organizing for the next day, and yelling at Nana, we find ourselves YouTubing classic American folk songs, talking about teaching, complain about something, laughing at everything, and sometimes being generally unproductive. Well, I'm unproductive and easily distracted. Izora and Lizzy get things done, I instagram and sometimes think whiskey and tequila go together (...they don't). When I was in the Namibian village, it was much easier to talk about yourself over the internet when you have no one else to talk to.


-I've been coming up with cool challenges for my learners. I teach Art Club on Saturdays now and I try to prompt and promote creative and critical thinking with cool assignments. I'm still waiting to see some return on investments here as I don't always explain things the best.

-both Adele and Beyonce have new albums. I mean, that's just rude. How am I supposed to get anything done?

So, please accept my apology in the form of this video of morning assembly!







I Am Very Inspirational

I've been working with this learner who is a wonderful, beautiful, articulate, intelligent old soul. I'm helping her start a non-profit (...we're in the very ELEMENTAL stages...don't give me too much credit yet) called "Beauty For A Purpose," centered around girl empowerment and positive self esteem. 

She's also a poet, with a whole notebook full of teenage angst  and mature insightful work. She wrote a poem about me.  It's adorable. It's too much. It's below.


Miss Jay

The searchers of wisdom and knowledge
Savior of the world, the speaker of the
Voiceless, the young woman after
Wisdom rather than the Gold, stylish
And unique, her personality is breath-taking
The color of her skin doesn’t determine
Her character, the English and Art teacher
Flew all the way to South Africa and Namibia, driven
By love and kindness, Miss Jay the mother

Of Education (word I can’t read) of our days