
So last weekend the surrounding area of where we are living, which
is a small enough village area beside the campus, came alive. The
streets were filled with markets and street food, as well as what we
would call a carnival atmosphere (Thai Style).
One of Thailand's biggest rock groups Carabao (the Thai Metallica)
was set to play a gig next to the temple at the end of our street, so
we figured we would stroll up for a look.
When we got there they had
alot of the games you would find at a western carnival, including a
few you might not, such as throw the basket over the bottle of whiskey
to win the bottle or fire a dart at balloons to pop them, only the
balloons seemed to be made out of some NASA style material, which would
cause them to bounce back and narrowly miss passers by, which would
excite the Thais to no end, and we got a good giggle from it also.A friend of Rainny's was visiting so we all went out that night to try some pizza that we had heard alot of good things about, claims that it was as close as you could get to an genuine Italian pizza here in Thailand, and we can confirm it was amazing. We washed it down with a few German beers and the owner brought out speakers so we could throw on our own music and enjoy the night.
We put our heads down over the next few days to finalise our CV's
in preparation for job hunting in Khon Kaen, we were advised the best
way is to go into the schools and ask for the head of English
department and try sell yourself straight away. So we packed up the
bike on Wednesday and traveled around a few schools and made some
phone calls.That night, tired from the hunt we got a phone call from an English teacher who we had met the first week of the course who asked if Kristine and I could come to his school Thursday morning, so Kristine could do an interview for a kindergarten position, teaching 5 and 6 year old kids and for me to meet with the head of the secondary school across the road as they both needed teachers.
Ecstatic we woke up early and went down to the Sathit school, which means demonstration school and is very well recognised in Thailand and is also affiliated with the university, which means good pay and a lot of holidays as well as very good classroom set ups and facilities.
Kristine did the interview with the head of the school and the head of the primary school (she was there to translate) and they went through the questions and she nailed each one, so much so, that they asked her to start on Monday straight away, which we were both over joyed with.
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| P.E. ground |
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| Main Hall |
The day consists of 1-1.5 hours of warm up teaching such as date, weather and alphabet followed by that days lesson plan. Then the kids get ready for either P.E., music class, or some times they go to the library. After all that they are ready for their lunch followed by a nap, yep that's right, a two hour nap followed by a recap of that days lesson and some story time. The kids we met where soooo well behaved and each room has an English teacher, a Thai English teacher and 2 assistant teachers for explanations and helping out with controlling the room.
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| The other half... |
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| Half of Kristine's new class room |
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| Library |
They have a summer camp every few months on Saturdays, so we asked if we could attend this week to show interest. Working as a teacher is all about presentation and commitment, as a lot of teachers are backpackers who only want to work for a few months and then move on.
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| 1 of 4 playgrounds |
Now this Friday we have the Halloween party to celebrate and then we will head off to Laos on Sunday for our first visa run.















































