Thứ Bảy, 6 tháng 8, 2016

12 Things You Will Experience During College

Back when he was still relevant, Asher Roth released a single called “I Love College,” which became an unexpected hit — blasting from the stereos of college freshmen and overeager high school students everywhere.
I Love College” developed into such a sensation partially due to Roth’s sick beats, y’all, but mostly because the singer had some surprisingly insightful lyrics about the Best Four Years of Our Lives (for example, don’t pass out with your shoes on).
In all seriousness, though, college is wonderful, and like Roth said, it would be great to “go to college for the rest of my life” — living in To celebrate this wonderful time in our lives, when we can reasonably “pass out at three, wake up at 10, go out to eat, then do it again,” I’ve compiled a list of the 12 experiences — good, bad, and strange — that happen during your four-year tenure:

1. You will develop a caffeine addiction.

I used to loathe the taste of coffee before I got to college. Now, as I’m typing this, I’ve just finished my fourth cup of coffee (and it isn’t even four in the afternoon yet). In fact, my body has become so used to caffeine that I can fall asleep right after chugging a Red Bull.
The chemical dependency that college students have on caffeine is probably unhealthy but what else is going to keep us awake (and somewhat alert) during all-night, midterm season library all-nighters?

2. You will realize that you can’t please everyone.

During college, you will learn that there will be people who inevitably dislike you — sometimes with good reason but other times without — and you can kiss their butts all you’d like, but there is ultimately nothing you can do to change their mind. It’s not the end of the world; just learn to accept this, be cordial when you see them around campus (even if they return your friendly smiles with glares designed to terrify you), and make friends elsewhere.

3. You will learn that rejection isn’t as terrible as it’s cracked out to be.

Whether it results from the professor who hates the paper you spent weeks slaving over or the boy who never texts you back, you will face rejection at least once during college. At first, it’ll sting. You’ll tell yourself that that professor might have a PhD and eight books to his name, but she doesn’t know what she’s talking about. You’ll try to convince yourself that you didn’t like that boy anyways (and his friends sucked).this bubble where responsibilities are, for the most part, minimal and nonessential.

However, hopefully sometime during your four years, you will realize that rejection is an inevitable, healthy part of life. Maybe you’ll follow that professor’s suggestions and revise your paper or maybe you’ll start dating boys who are better for you, but you will learn to use rejection as an opportunity for self-improvement rather than bitter grousing.

4. You will learn to value your friends.

When you’re away from your family, your friends become your most important support network. These are the people you turn to on campus when something goes wrong but also when something goes right. They are the folks who will listen to you — complaining or gushing in solidarity with you. Hopefully, your friends will also be the ones to point out instances where you’re acting like an idiot — and you will learn to listen to them because their insight probably supersedes your own, in some situations.
You will also realize what it means to become fiercely loyal and protective of your friends — people can mess with you, but they better watch out if they try to mess with those close to you.

5. You will figure out (somewhat) how to drink.

During high school, “drinking” probably entailed stealing your parents’ alcohol or begging your siblings to buy six-packs of Miller Lite from the gas station for you. During college, drinking is a whole other game. You will learn what it means to take a shot; more importantly, you will learn what it means to take too many shots. After the initial glamor wears off and you’ve spent one too many unproductive, hangover-crippled days in bed, you’ll begin to drink in moderation — well, moderate moderation.
Just remember: “Beer before liquor, you’ve never felt sicker. Liquor before beer, you’re in the clear.”

6. You will make out with a terrible kisser (or two or three).

Before you to get kiss Prince Charming, you have to go through a lot of toads, some hornier than others. During college, you will come to realize that not everyone kisses like a Fabio whose lips have been well oiled with many years of practice. Sometimes, people kiss terribly (sometimes, otherwise perfect people kiss terribly, which is the worst shame of all). They will thrust their tongues down your throat in a misguided attempt to emanate sex appeal. They will slobber all over your chin. You will be able to smell their lunch on their breath. Summon all your willpower not to vomit in your mouth during each one of these less-than-perfect encounters and use them as opportunities to improve your own technique or as fodder for funny stories later on.
(On a happier note: eventually, you’ll find that person whose kisses make your toes tingle — just wait)

7. You will feel terrible because of someone else.

High school students are known for being particularly apt at psychological warfare (can anyone say Mean Girls?). College students are even better at it — especially because we have a few more years of worldly wisdom with which to poke you where it hurts. At some point, someone will make you feel like the scum of the earth, worse than you’ve ever felt. It could be an ex, a former friend, or someone who is mean to you for no good reason at all. Though their words or actions will sting — especially in the moment and perhaps for a period of time afterwards — realize that they can only affect you as much as you let them.

8. You will start to discover the qualities that make you wonderful and unique, despite what anyone else says.

You’ve always known deep down that you’re awesome, but college will smack you in the face with this self-realization faster than you can say “bad bitch.” Your four years of mingling with Ivy Tower elites and perfecting the art of pre-exam cramming will (hopefully) lead to a significant amount of self-actualization and growth. You will begin to discover who you are behind the glitzy façade you put on for the outside world, and you will eventually realize that all of your idiosyncrasies — as strange and quirky as they may sometimes seem — are what make you special.

9. You will develop feelings for someone you shouldn’t — at least once.

It could be a professor. It could be the hot German graduate student who is always grading exams at your favorite coffee shop. It could be your best friend’s ex-boyfriend. At some point during your college career, you will fall for someone you know full well is off-limits. You’ll realize that you’ve begun to develop feelings when you catch yourself going to class 20 minutes early so you can make conversation with your professor before he starts lecturing. Or when you find yourself hanging at a particular study spot or in a particular frat more than usual on the off chance that you run into your crush.
You will attempt to nip these feelings in the bud. And sometimes, you should. But other times? You should just let them continue to chug full speed ahead.

10. You will begin to learn how to forgive people who have wronged you.

This is perhaps one of the most challenging tasks we face in life, but it is one we begin to learn to cope with during college, as we become semi-adults and the way we treat other people becomes much more serious than before. Though it may not be necessary to forget our grudges, we will learn how to gradually forgive them rather than let our anger or pain eat away at us. We will begin to realize that one mistake (or even a dozen mistakes) should not tarnish someone forever in our eyes — that their actions only reflect the fact that they are just as flawed as we are.

11. You will trim your social circle.

It becomes difficult to see your friends in college. Between classes, homework, work, the ever-exhausting internship search (especially for upperclassmen), and more homework, you will hardly have a moment for yourself — much less for other people. When you’re during high school, you are guaranteed to see your friends at least five days out of the week — either in class or at lunch, complaining about your pre-calculus assignment (ah, pre-calculus: the good old days…). During college, everyone runs on his or her own schedule, and you may go days or even weeks without seeing some of your close friends. However, even though time is a hot commodity during these four years, you will learn how to carve out portions of your schedule for those who matter to you. And vice versa.

12. You will meet people who come from drastically different backgrounds than your own.

I went to a Jewish prep school for most of my life (which probably resulted in my love of Nice Jewish Boys and bagel brunch — I take bagel brunch very seriously). As a result, the kids I knew growing up came from very similar backgrounds. When I got to college, however, I started to meet people from all over the country and the world; being able to get to know people who come from backgrounds different from my own has been one of the most enriching parts of my college experience. Diversity is the spice of life, they say, and there’s no better place to discover that than in college.

Resource: thoughtcatalog.com


Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 8, 2016

7 Books About College Life

I really envy all the kids heading to college this fall. Independence, new friends, no parental supervision—just 15 hours of classes per week, afternoon naps, and all the bad cable TV you can watch. As an adult, I’m lucky if I spend only 40 hours a week at the office. Instead of strolling home at noon to watch crappy TV, I fight traffic to get home after 6:00 p.m. to watch a cranky toddler.
Yes, college sounds pretty good right about now, and my best shot at reliving it is through literature. Below, find a list of seven books set on college campuses, all great reads whether you’re an eager freshman or looking to relive your glory days.
Fangirl, by Rainbow Rowell:Earlier this year, Rainbow Rowell perfectly captured high school angst in Eleanor & Park; her new book brings the same sense of verisimilitude to the experiences of awkward college freshman Cath, who feels more comfortable holed up in her dorm room writing fanfiction about her favorite Harry Potter-esque fantasy series than she does hitting the quad and making new friends. Luckily, Cath turns out to be better than I was at opening her eyes to the new world around her (but then, in my day, an always-on internet connection was still a really big deal).
Tam Lin, by Pamela Dean: The definitive fantasy novel for English majors, this retelling of the Scottish legend is set on the campus of fictional Midwestern liberal arts college, where the characters spend most of their time having those deep-into-the-night discussions of literature and philosophy than only happen at college (and maybe after a few illicit drinks). The fantasy narrative is subtly updated, but the campus atmosphere is truly transporting. Dean described the book as a “love poem” to her college days and the study of English literature.
Wonder Boys, by Michael Chabon: Kids aren’t the only ones having adventures at college. For instance, there are professors like Grady Tripp. The once-successful novelist has been struggling with writer’s block for years; he inadvertently gets involved in the life of a suicidal student and winds up driving around with his boss’s dead dog in the trunk of his car. Chabon’s funniest novel, Wonder Boys was made into apretty great movie starring Michael Douglas and Tobey Maguire.
Lucky Jim, by Kingsley Amis: Arguably the first “campus novel,” Amis’ most popular work is a treatise against the pretensions of acedemia. Jim Dixon, a history professor at a British university, is trying to secured a tenured position but keeps running afoul of the snobby department head. His attempts to impress the world with his academic credentials do not go well, culminating in a rather unfortunate drunken public lecture and an ironic ending.
The Rules of Attraction, by Bret Easton Ellis: A story of the intersecting lives of a bunch of sex-and-drug-obsessed college students. I was in college when the movie version (the only adaptation of his work the author likes) was released, and I read a lot of pearl-clutching articles saying the film proves kids were throwing our educations away, living debauched lives of drug use and promiscuous sex. Of course, I was reading those articles rather than doing anything of the sort, so I can hardly gauge their accuracy. The book is pretty raunchy, but strikes me as an exaggerated black comedy in the same vein as Ellis’ American Psycho. (Assuming that book was also supposed to be funny.)
The Secret History, by Donna Tartt: Tartt’s landmark debut follows the lives of an incestuously close group of friends at an elite northeastern university. The characters’ various obsessions eventually devolve into murder and a coverup. Along the way, they spend a lot of time contemplating Greek philosophy, social structures, and truth versus beauty, as you do when you are a pretentious undergrad. Usually without the ritual murder.
The Big U, by Neal Stephenson: Neal Stephenson’s debut novel starts as an imaginative satire of college life (the entire school is enclosed in one giant building, creating a fully insulated college ecosystem known as American Megaversity) and gets weirder from there, pitting different factions of students and social cliques against each other in a plot that expands to involve genetically-engineered lab animals and homemade super weapons. Stephenson reportedly doesn’t like the book and was initially happy to let it go out of print, but don’t let that stop you.
Resource: barnesandnoble.com

Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 8, 2016

10 shocking facts about Korean schools

As a foreigner teaching in a public elementary in Korea, I’ll readily admit, there are many differences between Korea and the U.S. Each day is far from boring.
Within the first month of teaching, here’s 10 shocking facts I learned about Korean schools:

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1.  Korean high school students have a 16 hour school day

Just how strongly do Koreans feel about education? It would shock you.
The average high school student generally has class from about 8am until 9:30pm or 10pm. For the average Korean high school student, the goal is to get into good college and often, the competition is high.
As a result, many will attend a hagwon (aka a private after school learning program) to accelerate their learning. Hagwons are private entities, which help reinforce higher education and English skills, so there is often a high demand for them. Often, they are run strictly like a business, running one class after another, prepping students for exams and drilling skills into them from the textbook. For students, this is perhaps, their one social outlet and way to meet other friends.
Due to education being the main extracurricular sport, the average teen doesn’t get home until midnight. Thus, dinner is actually served at school.
Middle school is a bit more lenient, as classes end around 4pm, with a possible hagwon learning afterwards.

2.   School on Saturdays.

If you think Korean students have the weekend for recreation, think again. The official school days were originally Monday to Saturday, which didn’t make for happy students or teachers.
Since 2010 (during my teaching assignment), the school schedule, has changed and loosened up. Now the Korean public school system has two Saturdays per month, off.

3.  Oh, respected Teacher…

In Korea, the saying is “Teachers are as high as God“.
You wouldn’t guess that from their pay scale, but teachers hold a valuable and respected place in society.  Korea emphasizes education and schooling to the power of a hundred. As a result, Korea possesses a high regard for its Korean teachers as being pillars of the schooling system.
Retirement age isn’t until 65 years old. Seniority means increased pay and the overall work hours, holidays and vacation benefits are said to be better than regular office jobs.

4. The Business side of Teaching

Whoever thought I’d be making Powerpoint presentations (download a sample here) and saving files on USB memory sticks for my teaching job? Those tools sound like an office job. But these are tools of the trade in my school.
Dress attire? Professional to office casual attire is recommended, starting at elementary school.  Korea is a fashionable and stylish culture. A nice suit with jacket or blazer is a good starter as one must look respectable when teaching.
Classrooms come with a computer (or computer counsel), connected to either, an overhead projector system or an LCD flat screen.  This doesn’t mean all teachers are tech saavy, though.
10 shocking facts about korean schools

5.   The  five year teacher-principal rotation cycle

Teachers rotate schools every five years.  It doesn’t matter if you love your school or not.
After each five year term, the teachers, vice principal and principal undergo a lottery system and have to change schools. Thus, each year, a school may get new staff.
This system is born to give each teacher an equal opportunity to work at good schools and bad. All teaching staff is subject to a valuation system and receive points for exams they take, workshops they attend as well as, receive incentive points for how well their school ranks in the district .
Read about the “Korea model schools”  that Korean teachers all want to work at.
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6.  Role playing via Hollywood style

Some schools have blue screen technology and/or rooms with “role-playing sets” for kids to enact situations in.   One class example we saw was a market checkout scene.. they had aisles, shelves and a real conveyor belt.
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I eventually even worked at a Korean musical camp and we had role-playing rooms from traffic school (I had to wear a police hat and jacket and set up traffic cones) to a hospital room, with eye charts, stethoscope, height and weight scales, examination table, wheelchair and a doctor’s lab coat!


7.   Corporal punishment is still alive.

While in the U.S., corporal punishment of children blares “lawsuit”,  the Korean educational system and parents have less of an issue with physical discipline in school classrooms.
Corporal punishment used to be allowed, and now, is somewhat tolerated,  covertly. The school system is cracking down on this abuse, but it still happens in some schools. One of my fellow expat friends said they have a disciplinary stick in their school, that Korean teachers use  called the “magic wand”. Usually the disciplinarian is a male teacher.   Click here for an article on the subject (although it is a bit dated)
Korea has however, employed physical discipline for disobedience in the past. The one below is a hands-off method I’ve seen used in some classrooms, as a way to make the students reflect on their wrong behavior, by challenging their mental endurance.
Common punishment (though not corporeal) for young ones is hands out or raised in air.
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8.   Why some Korean students have “English” names.

Korean folks with English names are often very proud of them. Alice, Lola or Angelina… Some just make you want to hold back a giggle, because they’re either dated or feel like “roleplay names”.  But ever wonder where Koreans get their names?
Well, you can blame it on the foreign English teacher that gave it to them!
Some school English programs and hagwons suggest students be given English names for better immersion and occasionally it’s up to some twenty-something half-grown EFL teacher to do so! In my EPIK teacher orientation, one  lecturer told us we might want to have a fishbowl of at least 25-100 English names for kids to choose from or to assign to students.
Then again, some teachers let their students pick their names!  So if you have a student that comes up to you and introduces himself as Robocop (true story!)  you can probably guess what happened.

9.  Students take responsibility for the cleanliness of their school.

One thing I admire about Korean values is that the Korean school system teaches students to be responsible for the care of their school. While employed janitors tend to major chores… trash on the school grounds, are actually done by students each morning  before the school bell rings! 

10.    Shoe Etiquette in the Classrooms

You know that Asian tradition of taking your shoes off when you enter a house?  Yeah, well I practice it in the U.S. with my family in Hawaii.
Koreans have a similar tradition, as they consider the feet to be dirty; so dirty that in fact, they wear house slippers at home.  But the shoe etiquette goes beyond the house and into the classroom. Students and school staff must remove their outdoor shoes and change into “school slippers” upon entering the building.
Resource: http://grrrltraveler.com