Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Lista.....observa! Enseña como estudiante! Escriba! Termina! Ready.....observe! Student teach! Write! Finish!


Hoy empieza la mayoría de la clase. Estoy sentándome en mi terraza ahorita, disfrutando la vista maravillosa, y preparandome para empezar en media hora. Nuestras observaciónes de otras clases son hoy a viernes, enseñando como estudiantes empieza el sábado y terminamos eso en el 25 de julio. Ay dios mío. Pues, soy una Cornellian, pero esto es nada...pero va a ser significamente menos tiempo libre que he tenido hasta hoy.  Desde la última vez:


Cosas que he hecho:
-Fui a un concierto de una banda Arequipeña tradicional 
      
Resultado de imagen para chile
Más fútbol- Argentina perdió a Chile en el final de la Copa, sobre que nadie está feliz aquí.  Peru tiene algunos problemas con Chile, y por eso todos querían que Argentina ganara.  







-Canyon de Colca- demasiada bonita, se dice que es dos veces tan profundo que el Gran Canyon.  Desafortunadamente, la agencia con quien fuimos eran solamente para turistas....y fuimos a un bus (el lugar de un camino) a través de la canyon; todavía bonita pero no tan bueno como caminando por la canyon.  Recomiendo caminar por la canyon sin una guia o hacer un viaje de dos o tres días si quieres verlo.  










-Condors- vi algunos condors volando en la distancia- son hermosos y GIGANTES con una envergadura de alas de más que tres metros. 





-Baile de Salsa! Fui a una lección que pienso que supuestamente fuera nivel básico....pero todos podían bailar MUY bien.  Pensaba que sabía cómo bailar...apenas podía bailar con ellos!   Pues, era divertido.  Conocí a un hombre israeli y bromeabamos que eramos los únicos judeos en Arequipa (que es gracioso porque conocí un chico Israeli dos días después en la tur de Colca) .
-Tur de camina de Arequipa, incluso algunos visites a restaurantes (pisco sours deliciosos, chocolates y cervezas locales, y rocoto relleno, un plato típico) y algunos hechos sobre la arquitectura (sabías tú que los gárgolas en las iglesias en Arequipa son estatuas de la puma, sagrada a los Incas pre-hispanicos?) 
Pisco Sour, una bebida tradicional de Peru (Chile dice que ellos lo inventaron, también. Los dos tienen los derechos de fabrica)
Pisco Sour, a traditional Peruvian drink (Chileans say they invented it, too; both have the original rights to it)
-COMIDA. Todavía hay mucha comida buena, por demasiado poco dinero.  Muchas papas y arroz.








Y una cosa o dos que he aprendido: 
Es muy fácil hablar inglés aquí en mi situación.  Voy a empezar hablar solamente en español afuera de clase, incluso a mis amigos americanos, para mantener mi español.
Hechos interesantes:  Yo vivo en Yanahuara.  Yana significa ¨negro¨ y Huara significa ¨ropa interior¨,  se llama por la ropa interior negra que las personas indigenas llevaban mientras pescar en el río Chili (el río frío) cuando los Españas llegaron.  
Picchu Picchu y Chachani son dos de los tres volcanes que envuelven Arequipa (todos que puedo ver de mi terraza :) ). Los dos significa ¨muchas montañas¨ en dos lenguas indigenas diferentes. 

Y la entrada de mi cuaderno de hoy, si alguien tiene interés en mi clase, está abajo en inglés! Hasta la próxima!



ENGLISH


Today begins the craziness of the class. I'm sitting on my terrace right now, enjoying the awesome view, and getting ready to GO in half an hour. Our observations of other classes are today through Friday, student teaching starts Saturday and we finish by the 25th. Holy cow. I mean, I'm a Cornellian, so this is nothing....but it'll be significantly less free time than I've had thus far. 
Since I last wrote:

Things I've done:
-Watched a traditional Arequipan band play
-More soccer- Argentina lost to Chile in the final of the Copa, which no one is happy about here. Peru has some serious political issues with Chile, so everyone wanted Argentina to win.
-Colca Canyon- ridiculously beautiful, they say it's twice as deep as the grand canyon.  Unfortunately we got tourist trapped and went on a tour bus through the place; still beautiful but not as cool as hiking.  I recommend hiking it yourself or doing a 2-3 day trek if you want to see it.
-Condors- saw some condors flying in the distance- they're a beautiful GIANT bird with over a 3 meter wingspan.
-Salsa dancing!  Went to a lesson I'm pretty sure was supposed to be basic level....but everyone was SO GOOD at dancing. I thought I knew how to dance....I was just good enough to keep up! It was a blast, though. I met a cool Israeli dude and we joked we were the only Jews in Arequipa (which is funny 'cause I met another Israeli at Colca two days later).
-Walking tour of Arequipa, including a couple touristy food tastings (some delicious pisco sours, local chocolates, local beers, and rocoto relleno, a traditional stuffed pepper dish) and some fun facts about the architecture (did you know the gargoyles on the churches in Arequipa are actually statues of the puma, sacred to Incas pre-Spanish?)
-FOOD.  Still lots of good food, for ridiculously cheap.  Lots of potatoes and rice.

And a thing or two I've learned:
It's so easy to get caught up in English speaking here. I am going to start talking exclusively in Spanish outside of class, even to my American friends, so I can practice keeping my Spanish up.
Fun facts:  I live in Yanahuara.  Yana means ¨black¨ and Huara means  ¨underwear¨, named after the black underwear the indigenous tribe wore while fishing in el Rio Chili (the Cold River) when the Spanish settlers got here.  
Picchu Picchu and Chachani are two of the three volcanoes that surround Arequipa (all of which I can see from my terrace).  Both mean ¨many mountains¨ in two different indigenous languages.


And today's class journal entry, for anyone interested in a glimpse into my class:

July 7, 2015


Lesson planning practice definitely helped with the demystifying of the teaching process. I have a much better sense now of how to walk through the steps of planning how to teach a unit.  I can tell, also, that the process will get easier as I practice.  This is clearly a J-curve for learning; I have already learned an overwhelming amount about the components of a good lesson.  Even writing out a sample plan today helped me crystallize how I would approach creating my own. At first it was really difficult to look at so much material and decide first what we wanted to teach and then how to parse it together into a cohesive lesson plan that was more engaging than simply going along with what the book says. When Evan and I read the suggestions from the bok on supplemental games, exercises, etc, my immediate reaction was to ignore it all and come up with techniques from scratch. I have to continue to remind myself, though. that I don’t have to reinvent the wheel. I can use the book as a base and add my own flavor to it instead. Grammar is still a lot to take in, but the more pieces we learn, the better grasp I have on how our language is weaved together and the better I will be at fielding student questions.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Para empezar.....To begin.....

Translations in English will be below- I need to keep up my Spanish writing skills!

Hola de Peru y bienvenidos a mi blog para mis aventuras! Yo he estado aquí en Arequipa por cuatro días y en Peru por una semana, y empecé mi clase de certificación de TEFL esta mañana. Estabamos en Lima antes:

En frente de una catedral en Barranco
In front of a cathedral in Barranco

Yo en frente de Huaca Pucllana,
 las ruinas pre-Incas en el districo Miraflores de Lima
Me in front of Huaca Pucllana,
the pre-Incan ruins in the Miraflores district of Lima

Bria en frente de Huaca Pucllana
Bria in front of Huaca Pucllana


Parapentes cerca del Parque de Amor en Miraflores
Paragliders close to Love Park in Miraflores



Estoy aquí con mi amiga de escuela secondaria, Bria, y vivimos en Yanahuara, Arequipa, un districo muy bonita, en una casa más bonita con una vista increíble:

Basicamente, la vida es buena!  Tengo que escribir reflecciónes cada día en mi clase, y por eso voy a poner algunas en este blog (en íngles, abajo), si quieres saber lo que estoy pensando sobre mi clase.

Trataré de escribir lo que he hecho:
Lima: 
El circuito magio de las aguas (fuentes bonitas con espectáculos de luces)
Barranco (districo viejo de los españoles)
La Plaza de Armas (centro historico, arquitectura bonita)
Larcomar (centro comercial se construyó en la cara de un ancantilado en la costa)
Electricity Museum (lo econtré por el azar- cosas eléctricas viejas (radios, etc) y la historia de hidroelectricidad de Peru)
Futbol- La Copa de Sudamerica está pasando ahora. Peru estaba en los semifinales! Fue increíble! No estaban en los finales.  Menos increíble. 
Caminamos por la costa al Parque de Amor, vimos muchos parapentes
Huaca Pucllana, ruinas maravillosas

Arequipa:
Monasterio de Santa Catalina
Mercado de San Camilo
Basílica Catedral de Arequipa 
Día de Volkswagon

Both: 
COMIDA.  Mucha buena comida, por poco dinero.  Muchos restaurantes tiene un menú, un plato especial diario que es MUCHISIMA comida por S./8-12, o 3-4 dolares.


Y una cosa o dos que he aprendido:
Poder hidroeléctrico empezó en 1902
Comprar una tarjeta de SIM toma mucho tiempo.  Claro necesita tu número de pasaporte, etc....entonces recibes demasiado mensajitas de Claro (lo mismo que Verizon en los EEUU)
Peruanos son muy abiertos y ayudables.  Un chico quien nos conocimos y con quien hablabamos por una hora me ofertó enseñarme la guitarra.  
Necesito relajarme- voy a tener mucho más tiempo aquí que lo que estoy acostumbrada (más que nada) y pasar una tarde para leer si yo quiero está normal en este ritmo de vida aquí!

Reflection from July 1, 2015

The grammar in this course will help me understand my own language so much better than I ever have. I was nervous before about knowing how to explain to my students the rationale behind strange English idiosyncrasies; I’ve always just been grateful that I learned such a complicated language as my first. As we discussed in class, my language competence is plenty sufficient, but when it comes to metalinguistic awareness I’ve got some definite gaps to fill.  I realized, though, how much my previous Spanish experience will help me with explanations, and if we are going to cover grammar concepts as thoroughly as we did today throughout the whole course,  in a month I’ll feel much more prepared to answer grammar questions than I do now.  The linguistics we learned today will also no doubt help me out a lot- I am fascinated by linguistics, and I will use the phoneme triangle to explain pronunciation as much as I will use the use affixiation to discuss prefixes and suffixes.  I have a feeling I won’t go into as much detail with students as we did today, but knowing all of those details about English’s roots makes me feel much more comfortable teaching English. As much as my English knowledge will improve, though, I am realizing how difficult it will be to maintain my Spanish while I’m here. Speaking English all day with a bunch of English speakers will, as John pointed out, not be helpful in that regard. I will have to work hard outside of class to improve my Spanish and make a concerted effort to go out and meet locals. 

ENGLISH

Hello from Peru and welcome to my blog of my adventures! I've been her for four days in Arequipa and in Peru for a week, and started my TEFL certification class this morning. We were in Lima before (see pics above) I'm here with my friend from middle school , Bria , and live in Yanahuara , Arequipa, a beautiful (and pretty rich) district , in a nice house with an incredible view (also pic above) Basically , life is good ! I have to write reflections every day in my class , so I'll put some of those on this blog (in English, above ) , if you want to know what I'm thinking about my class.
I'll try to keep a list also of things I've done:
Lima: 
El circuito magio de las aguas (beautiful LED fountain display with shows)
Barranco (old Spanish district)
La Plaza de Armas (historic center, beautiful architecture)
Larcomar (Shopping mall built into an ocean cliffside)
Electricity Museum (randomly happened in on it- awesome old appliances/radios/etc and the history of hydroelectricity in Peru)
Futbol- La Copa, the South American World Cup, is happening right now. Peru made the Semi Finals!!  It was awesome!!  They didn't make the finals.  Less awesome.
Walked down the coast to Lover's Park, saw a bunch of paragliders
Huaca Pucllana, amazing ruins

Arequipa:
Monasterio de Santa Catalina
Mercado de San Camilo
Basílica Catedral de Arequipa 
Volkswagon Day

Both: 
FOOD.  Lots of good food, for ridiculously cheap.  Most places have a ¨menú¨ , a daily special that's a full meal of SO MUCH FOOD for about 8-12 soles,  $3-4.

And a thing or two I've learned:
Hydroelectric power in Peru started in 1902
Buying a SIM card here takes a long time.  They need your passport number, etc....and then you get SO MANY TEXTS from Claro, essentially the South American equivalent of Verizon
Peruvians are so open and helpful. A dude we met and talked to for an hour on the street offered to give me guitar lessons.
I need to chill out- I'm going to have much more down time than I'm used to (aka more than zero) and taking an afternoon to read if I want is totally in line with the pace of life down here!