Sunday, November 26, 2006

English Camp?

Just came back from doing an English Camp. You know, one of those camps that should give students an fun English environment to practice their skills. That's the theory. In practice it means you cram two VIP-busses full of students, watch cartoons in Thai for some reason and sing Thai karaoke along the way, drive to a nice location near a huge National Park and then don't go anywhere near that National Park. Instead you stay in a nice holiday resort with trimmed hedges and activities center around a place called 'The Cowboy Room'.

This is also where you meet The Dream Team: a group of farang teachers with special expertise in setting up these kinds of camps. Again, this is theory. In practice it sometimes turns out that you're suddenly dealing with Joe, Schmo and D'oh. In this case fresh of the bananaboat and without a clue about doing this sort of thing. Al they have is a prayer (If I open my eyes this will all have been a dream) and a song (If You're Happy and You Know it) and a frightful please-somebody-help-me-face.

To make things even more interesting Joe, Schmo and D'oh are supervised by two guys that do most of the talking. One is from Iran and the other says he's English but he's not. Which is why he makes all those typical Asian mistakes when he speaks and why everybody is told to "clap your han tree time" every five minutes. Bad? Yes. But to avoid any loss of face nobody says a thing. Everybody just chalks it up to a good learning experience, laughs amongst themselves and agrees that these guys will never work in this town again.

Day two: to the zoo. This sounds good. We get to see some animals and talk about them with the students. Theory. Practice: we get the Thai style zoo experience. That means you race around the whole zoo in carts (and in15 minutes tops), while you're hanging on for dear life. The English, then, is limited to 'Look over there a...wait...too late', 'What was that?' and 'I don't know'. Then it becomes clear what the hurry was all about: a terrifically unbuddhist snake show and an eighties style seal show with beach balls, hoops, applauding seals and everything.

Bad? Probably. But you just can't beat applauding and high five-ing seals. Besides, our job was extremely easy this time round. And the whole thing was so out of this world that we couldn't stop laughing. Too bad I forgot my camera. Then again: of course the zoo had a photographer at the entrance. And sure enough he made a simple picture into the memento of excruciating happiness that now graces the top of our bookcase and this webpage. That's the way to remember this English Camp. Through a nice bit of Thai camp.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

In three...two...one...

We have a new job. Apart from teaching our thirty students in the English Program every day and teaching kids in the Thai Program one hour a week, we now have to educate all the students who don't have an English speaking teacher regularly. That is the majority of kids in the school. Even the parents of the Thai Program kids have to pay a couple of hundred hard earned Baht for it.

The school has a pretty good way of trying to bridge the gap: every Tuesday and Thursday they have a farang teacher come to a small but well run TV-studio and teach a small lesson. Not only does it get more kids in contact with English, kids also do all the behind the scenes stuff. They're behind the camera, mix the audio and do small items on things they've learned and even do a newscast.

For us teachers it's a whole new ballgame. You have to cram a lesson in 3-5 minutes, appeal to grade one through five and everything you do is on LIVE TV. No second takes. The whole school and especially the kids in your own room will be watching. Not exactly like presenting the American Idol final or anything, but still... Great fun.

Anyway: here's a picture I took while teaching everybody about 'I like to+verb'. In this case 'I like to take pictures'. If you look closely you can see me on the monitor. I'm the yellow blurry thing with the silvery blurry thing (my camera).

Sunday, November 05, 2006

I got the news

Tuurlijk. Thailand had de coup. En er is altijd wel een verhaal in de pers over iemand die op een of andere uiterst gruwelijke en geweldadige wijze de moord steekt. Op de voorpagina van de papieren versie van de Daily News staat iedere dag wel iemand zonder hoofd, iemand met hoofd maar dan aan een touwtje dat aan het plafond vastzit of een of andere auto die is omgetoverd tot een blikje sardientjes (in flink wat tomatensaus meestal).

Nee dan het Nederlandse nieuws. Hoe meer ik er zie hoe minder ik het begrijp. De komkommertijd zou zo'n beetje afgelopen moeten zijn toch? Zomaar een greep uit de binnenlandse headlines van deze week:

'Mysterieuze autokraken toch niet zo mysterieus'
'Potloodventer moet T-shirt dragen'
'Anoniem solliciteren niet nodig'
'Seksbazen niet bonafide'
'Werken op hoogte wordt veiliger'
'Bos en Balkenende botsen in eerste tv-debat'
'Springen waterleiding leidt tot overlast'
'Elke gemeente werkt op 27 manieren samen'
'Justitie controleert gevangenen'
'Hans Klok heeft spijt van vrouwonvriendelijkheid'
'Vredenburg opgeschrikt door vondst verdacht koffertje'

Ik weet het niet zeker, maar volgens mij gaat alles dus prima daaro :) Sjeez.
Dan nog even de eerste in een serie boekentips: Himalaya. Niet zeiken, gewoon lezen.

UPDATE: Je kan AL palins boeken blijkbaar ook gewoon extra gratis online lezen... Nie mis van deze man.