Archive for January, 2008

A mistake of war.

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Today was the first day back to class for the new year, and it’s also the start of our winter intensive classes. This means I get up extra early and teach, get some new classes, and have a completely different schedule for a month. Then in February, we mix it all up again, and then in March, we settle on the students and classes we’ll teach for the next six months or so.

I had done my morning classes. They were a mixed lot of new students, returning students, students I used to teach, and students I haven’t seen in a year. They went well enough, despite the first day problems of never having enough books, students wanting to switch classes, and an uncooperative copy machine. They got done quickly, and I had a good time seeing some old faces again.

I had been busy fighting for a new book series for one of my classes that I’ve taught for a long time now. I know the level of these kids, and the book these students were assigned wouldn’t be suitable for them. The teacher that taught it last time said it would be too hard for students two years older than the students it was assigned. I needed to come up with a replacement, so I wasted a lot of my lunch break making sure my students weren’t being forced to have a good book. I found a nearly perfect replacement, but some of my directors demands, “MORE SPEAKING, MORE WRITING, MORE EVERYTHING!” makes if tough. Anyway, the students said the book was acceptable for now after the class had finished.

Fresh off that victory, I hadn’t had time to prepare my last class well enough. My coworkers couldn’t finish one of their workbooks during the normal session, so I’m giving the students a chance to catch up and finish a book I never taught before. Before the class started, some of the students came into the office to show me their new Nintendo DS games. One of the students had a new Korean version of Metroid Prime Hunters. I told them I had the game already. They wanted to see my new game, Worms Open Warfare 2. The students said it was like “Fortress”, which is cute but insulting. Fortress lacks the depth of weapons, strategy, and skill of Worms to a very large degree. Not realizing they were in my next class, I taught them about the DS’s “Download Demo” function.

On certain games, you can send a game demo that sits on the recipients DS in ram memory. If they don’t turn their DS off, and don’t run out of power, they can keep playing the game. I wanted to show them how to play the game, unaware they would be the very same students that I would be trying to teach the very next hour. Two of the students had their systems with them, and a third had a DS but had broken it’s hinge by dropping it and left it at home. The students were so excited they could play a game the didn’t own, and would keep opening and closing the lids of their DS to see if the game was still there. Every time they’d open the system with the sound on, it was shout a wormy “Hello!”

This got rather annoying about five minutes into class. One student killed his battery half way through class and had to turn it off. The other student still had the demo on his system when he walked out the door of the school. I taught him the controls, and advised him STRONGLY about NOT picking up the Korean language version of the FIRST game in the series. I made it clear that ONLY Worms Open Warfare 2 was worth buying, and that the other Worms game was terrible. He told me I had to bring another game with a different demo the next time they have class. I’m not sure how many of my games have a “take home demo” feature. The best one I know about is probably Worms for sure. It might be limited to a few weapons, but a game of Worms rarely plays out the same way even with a limited set of weapons. Brain Age might have a demo feature too?

The other DS games I have require the sender to act as the host for a mutliplayer game. I’m not going to be doing that between any classes for sure!

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Looking forward to in 2008

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If there was some kind of law against “Year in Review” wrap up posts in the blogging community, I’d support it. The week between Christmas and New Years is a dead-man’s land of content. My usual flood of podcasts has thinned to a trickle as everyone spends time celebrating the holiday cheer, visiting relatives, and being introspective making lists about things that happened last year.

I’ll be more progressive and instead of looking backward and making a list, I’ll look forward…and make a different sort of list. Things I’m wildly optimistic about, or badly want to have happen in the future:

  • In 2008, I want my wife to get a job at a better school. Right now she works as a English speaking “for hire” sort of contractor. She has no vacation time, and she has to deal with too much “non-teaching” related stuff. She’s hoping to get something at a better school where she can get Korean Revenue Service documentation. This documentation leads us to the next point…
  • A bigger apartment. Our current apartment is completely adequate for our needs, but having one more room or so would not hurt at all. This would free us up to have more space for hobbies. My wife’s paper art will need the space. Our current apartment’s location is hard to beat, as it’s near parks and still on the subway line. Having something in the neighborhood while still roughly the same size would be ideal. We can’t keep ahead of the apartment price bubble in the city (Apartment prices rise like 20% a year, it’s NUTS) but with better job security, we’d be able to get a loan and get something better on a more permanent basis.
  • A better job for myself? I’m alright where I work, but I’ve sort of hit a ceiling on my salary. There just aren’t people that stick around the industry as long as I have to put me on a good enough pay scale with other employers. I’ll have to be creative if I want to keep up the pace of growth.
  • A new hobby, off-line, and possibly outside would be best for my health. Walking the dog and playing the Wii only burns so much fat.
  • My friends visiting this summer (fingers crossed). I’ve been looking forward to showing my friends around Korea for years. It’s only now they started crawling out from their school related financial loans that I never had (Thanks Mom and Dad!) that they can start traveling the world. I’m extremely excited that two of my friends would make the long plane ride over to visit me if they can. I just hope I can make sure that their precious vacation days are well spent.

These are the things I am most looking forward to in the next year on a strictly personal, selfish basis. I wish no one ill will, or anything but luck for the new year.

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