After only a minor hiccup at Manchester airport with the weight of my bags (who knew a rucksack could carry so much stuff - certainly not me!!) two flights and over 15 hours in the air I finally arrived in Korea on Sunday evening and have now been here for just about a week. During this first week I’ve been staying in a dorm room at Daejin University, to the north-east of Seoul along with over 300 other new EPIK teachers. During the daytime I've been attending lectures and classes on everything from Korean culture and history, to classroom management and making our English more understandable, and during the night I have desperately been trying to stay cool by sleeping directly underneath the air conditioning unit! Most days have run from around 8am to 8pm and in this heat and humidity that’s pretty exhausting. Pair that with fairly severe jetlag and, well, I was mess for the first couple of days.
Dorm Room |
They eased us into the week quite gently with a campus tour
and welcoming ceremony on day 1 but the pace increased quite quickly from day 2 onward On Tuesday morning I was up and at the gymnasium for 7.15am ready for
my medical – which took over two hours and included everything from eyesight and
hearing test to blood and pee test(!) and even a chest x-ray – they’re nothing
if not thorough!! From then on it was back-to-back classes on all things
Korean. We also got put into groups of three and allocated a lesson topic that
we would have to deliver to a class later in the week.
Wednesday was full of classes again but it was really
Thursday that everyone was looking forward to. A day trip into Seoul! For those
of us placed there (around 150 teachers) it would be a first chance to see the
city and for the other teachers at orientation it might be the only time
they’re in Seoul until they make the trip from there provinces during a weekend
or holiday. We visited Namsangol Hanok Village and watched a Korean
traditional performance. After our Bibimbap lunch we went to the National Museum of Korean Contemporary History and the main palace in Seoul,
Gyeongbokgung. It was another hot day and everyone was exhausted as we boarded
the bus back to Deajin University. I perked up a lot when I received a message
from the outgoing EPIK teacher from my school. I found out where I’d be working
and living. Yongdu Elementary School is where I’ll be teaching and I’ll live
just a short walk away in an Officetel just a minutes walk from Jegi-dong
subway station. I've been told this is near a really cool market area,
Dongdaemun, so I’m pretty pleased with what I've got and I certainly feel very
lucky to have found out all this information days before many other people. My
co-teacher’s name is Seunghee and I’ll be meeting her for the first time on
Monday when she will take me to the apartment then to the school for a tour.
Friday was really the day that we got down to some serious
lesson planning. None of us had taught before so we got a bit of guidance from
the lecturer that will assess our demo class on Sunday and were able to piece
together a decent objective and a rough idea of the activities we’ll be doing. We’ll
be teaching the demo lesson on Sunday afternoon – one of the last things we’ll
do on campus.
Without doubt, the funniest lessons this week have been my three Korean language classes. These have been after dinner from 7.30-8.30pm. By this point most people are keen to get back to dorm rooms, Skype friends and family or just chill out after a full day but the Korean teachers have been great and extremely patient with us! I'm getting the hang of it now and can recognise all of the characters and know what sounds to make. I know some key words and phrases and have memorised "Hello, it's nice to meet you" for when I meet my co-teacher and the principle of my school.
Without doubt, the funniest lessons this week have been my three Korean language classes. These have been after dinner from 7.30-8.30pm. By this point most people are keen to get back to dorm rooms, Skype friends and family or just chill out after a full day but the Korean teachers have been great and extremely patient with us! I'm getting the hang of it now and can recognise all of the characters and know what sounds to make. I know some key words and phrases and have memorised "Hello, it's nice to meet you" for when I meet my co-teacher and the principle of my school.
Traditional dance |
Gyeongbokgung |
I've had a good time here at orientation; the lecturers have all been interesting, funny and brilliant presenters (including the Scouser who had to slow his speech riiiight down). It’s been an easy introduction to Korea and it was great to meet loads of people I’m sure to keep in touch with once I’m settled in my apartment but it’s time to pack up our stuff and get going.
I’m ready.
Next stop: Seoul.
Until next time,
Until next time,
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