It’s
the end of the third cycle. There are no
weeks here at KIS… they follow a system of a six day cycle. It’s horribly confusing at first, but it
actually makes a lot of sense. I’m not
even going to attempt and explain it, but suffice to say that the schedule of
classes shifts every week as per the 6 day cycle. If there is a holiday, that day’s classes
will be held the next day and so on.
I’ll
say this. Teaching is really hard
work. I like the engaging aspect of
it. I love sharing all the esoteric junk
in my head with the students and tie in all my various experiences to seemingly
silly ideas. It’s the repetition and
test paper prep that I’m beginning to dislike.
Repetition, because there are always students who miss a class because
they are ill or had to go for football, who want a catch up one-on-one class. I have a new found admiration for
teachers. Kids can be infuriating, you
have to talk when all you want to do is shut-up and close your eyes.
Sometimes
I forget that my students are 15, 16, and 17 and expect too much from them, but
at least I was not expecting someone to say “Lenin” when I asked who started
the First Gulf War or give “Air tax” as an answer for government taxes. I’ve taken it upon myself to make my class
more than just economics. Yesterday, we
talked about the atom bomb, the Korean War, definition of a second, CIA and the
paintings of Jackson Pollock, 9/11, the economics of politics and why e2πi
= 1.
So
at final count I have 88 students in the 11th grade for economics
and 17 students as my advisees or in my tutorial group. The kids range from the bright and studious,
to the suck ups, to the smart and lazy and the downright delinquents. Basically every classroom you’ve ever experienced
in the world, it’s just strange being on the other side of the fence and
imagining which one I was.
I’m
also the new co-advisor for the National Honor Society, but, as the name
suggests, these kids are so good that I usually don’t have to lift a
finger. I was disappointed that there is
no school newspaper or a debating club at KIS, so I’ve started a debate and speech
club… let’s see how it goes.
Apart
from the school work, which eats up a lot of my time, I’m still enjoying hiking
and poker on the weekends, and table tennis in the evenings with the other
staff members.
Kodi
is a beautiful place, and teaching is great, especially for a self-advertising braggart
like me who loves a captive audience… but there is still something
missing. A panging loneliness in the
quiet and gloom of an old mountain cottage… even if there is a roaring fire to
warm me. Can’t put my finger on it...
And oh yeah, I saw my first herd of bison, about fifteen strong, last week a little ways from my house...
And oh yeah, I saw my first herd of bison, about fifteen strong, last week a little ways from my house...
Mighty! Great to read about what you're up to. Kodi must be a little like Coonoor (where I grew up) or Ooty. Beautiful, but maybe a little lonely and small-town-lost at times.
ReplyDeleteWrite! Ruminate! And know that people on the other side of the planet are curious! :)
-Johnjohn