Scrub Home stay girl, SCRUB!
Teaching December 11th. 2006, 9:34pmSometimes the absurdity of teaching English in my school makes itself openly apparent. I’ve been tutoring a girl in an intensive 1 on 1 sort of class. She goes to a privately run religious all English elementary school. I’m sometimes helping her with reading, sometimes with her homework, or science projects. I’m basically a paid to help the girl review her work in class and prepare her for her upcoming tests and speeches. Keep in mind, this is a 10 year old girl that studies in a second language entirely.
Her mother is sending her away for a home stay in the United States. She’ll be attending school, living with a family, and will be immersed in English for an extended period of time. Some of the students at our school are staying for approximately one month while touring Ivy league schools on the east coast. She might be traveling for the same period of time, or she might be staying longer. I don’t know if she is touring with the groups of students that are going, or if she is doing her own thing. Since she isn’t in class with other students, she might be doing something entirely different.
I’ve been told to prepare scenarios, dialogs, or vocabulary lessons based on what I think she might encounter while staying in the United States. Whoa. That’s a pretty tall order, considering I know none of the details of her stay. According to my director, she’ll need to know how to speak to her host family, as well as be able to stay in a classroom full of English speakers.
Since she already studies in an all English environment, her uptake of English classroom commands is excellent. She knew all the vocabulary I prepared for the lesson today. I made sure to cover things about asking for repetition, asking about clarification, and how to get more details. We also went over the vocabulary for readings books, (turn the page, flip through the magazine, etc).
Since I have to worry about English for her home stay host family, we did a dialog about introductions, as well as vocabulary for getting ready for bed. My mind is overwhelmed when I look at the books at our disposable for general vocabulary. She’ll probably never need to know how to do laundry or change a car tire, but how much focus do I give to paying cash for something? Is it more or less important than listening to directions how to go somewhere? What’s there to cover, and how much depth does it need? I’ve never really prepared someone expressly for this purpose.
I can think of a few role plays that will help. I think that the girl is bright enough that she knows how to ask for help when she doesn’t understand. She certainly doesn’t seem scared about going, but perhaps it’s because it’s still a few weeks away. I teased her by telling her she’d have to work like Cinderella, cleaning all the dishes and floors for her evil home stay parents and children. We reviewed the cleanliness and scrubbing chapters intensely. She didn’t believe me, or so I hope.
6 Responses to “Scrub Home stay girl, SCRUB!”
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December 11th, 2006 at 10:22 pm
I can’t imagine doing something like that, staying in a foreign country at the age of 10!
Good luck, little Korean girl.
December 11th, 2006 at 11:52 pm
Only two things she really needs to know:
1. Can I have a beer please.
2. Where is the toilet?
Survival english….
Oh and maybe make sur she can communicate about sickness…
December 12th, 2006 at 2:48 am
From a classroom teacher perspective, the amount of slang she’s going to run into with other 10-year olds is mind-boggling. When I was substitute teaching sometimes even I didn’t know what they were talking about. But on a basic level, I would say being able to ask for and understand directions is more important than paying for things in cash. Although covering money is important, the different coins and bills and their relative value. You don’t want some punk conning her out of her lunch money.
December 12th, 2006 at 10:01 am
Only two things she really needs to know:
1. Can I have a beer please.
2. Where is the toilet?
This is my Father’s EXACT line of reasoning when learning a foreign language for a vacation.
December 12th, 2006 at 10:04 am
Jason, to be fair, you didn’t get on a plane before last year.
December 12th, 2006 at 10:19 pm
RE: My flight experience.
Not true! It was this year.