What are the rewards and fun parts of living in rural Honduras and teaching in a local school?
I love, love, love living here. I live with 3 other teachers in a little house in Villa Verde, our backyard is a National Park, and sometimes I want to stay forever. :) I have always said I wanted to live in Colorado because of how pretty it is, but here..... Colorado might have some competition. I have palm trees right in front of my door, a mountain to hike and just gaze at, and the most beautiful sunrises and sunsets. I have never lived in a rural area (I don't really count NWC), so it's been interesting to get used to the 'inconvenience' of things... however, I've grown to really appreciate certain things a lot more and to not care about other things as much. I go to town once or twice a week, but other than that I'm just at school and home and in our neighborhood. I tell people over and over again how simple life is and how much I enjoy that simplicity. I don't have a billion things coming at me every day. I have my work, my friends, God's beautiful creation, and my kids! The school is really beautiful too. It's a private school, so that normally means that only kids with money go there, but our school district (5 schools throughout the country of Honduras) has a really awesome scholarship program that partners Honduran families with American families to help pay student tuition. We have uniforms at our school (remember when that was always a debate in speech class?) and I finally see the benefit. I could not tell you which students in my class are on scholarship and which are not. Since it is a smaller school, the kids have also known each other for a long time, but if a new student comes in, I haven't seen any problems with them fitting in. It is really a beautiful environment to be in. A couple of our students are our neighbors, but most of them live in Gracias (20-30 minutes away). When I'm in town, I usually see some of my students and I love that! What are some of the challenges that you have been able to overcome?
The obvious difficulty is the fact that English is not the first language of my kids, so you never know if the reason they don't understand something is because they weren't listening, your directions weren't clear enough, or if it's simply because their vocabulary bank isn't as large as yours! I've also found it almost impossible to correct the grammar in their papers. I think part of the problem is that the school has only recently become a part of Abundant Life Christian Schools- the students have not had a solid curriculum and from what I've gathered, they were basically taught whatever the teacher thought of. No curriculum was used and it was rarely the same teachers the next year. Now that we are using a specific curriculum, I think that will drastically help with filling in the holes. Having a full curriculum has been great, obviously, but it has also provided its set of challenges. The curriculum we use is Abeca Curriculum which comes from Pensacola College. So, the curriculum is very conservative. I think this is great for the most part, and doesn't really hinder the students from learning. It is a really easy curriculum to follow and teach from and the flow from subject to subject and chapter to chapter is great. However, there have been a couple things within the curriculum- Reading, for example, that I've thought were a little too politically driven for me to feel comfortable teaching. Especially to a group of Honduran students that don't need to only here stories about the US. :) However, the really great thing about being a teacher is that you can choose how/ sometimes what you teach. For one particularly ridiculous story, I decided to turn it into a listening skills activity and just read to the students... and then left out a couple unnecessary paragraphs. If you don't make too big of a deal about it, I think it's pretty easy to see the benefits of the curriculum and then just work out in your classroom what you think is necessary to teach and what is necessary to leave out for the benefit of your students.
How important is it to know Spanish?
The reason I wish I knew more Spanish is for the social aspect of it. I'm a person that really likes to get to know others and hear their story so.... to not be able to do that is very frustrating. I've made a big effort this second semester to try and have conversations with people even if I know I'm not saying things right because I've realized that's the only way I can begin to learn. For those of us not fluent in Spanish, all of us have felt that our knowledge of the language has improved drastically, so that's been great.
How do you get around?
How many students in your class?
Behavior problems?
I haven't seen a ton of behavior problems in my class that aren't like classes I've always dealt with. My kids are getting to the age where there's all kinds of emotional drama to deal with but I'm pretty sure that's normal. I also have the usual amount of kids that can't sit still, that can't be quiet, that have bad tempers, and that forget to turn in homework. I just deal with those in the ways I usually do. I would say as a whole, the school is VERY talkative, so as teachers we've spent a lot of time brainstorming different ideas for classroom management. (4/6 teachers are not education majors, so I've been able to help them out a little with my nwc classroom experience ;)) The only thing that I know has been a concern is the lack of a school counselor. We teachers and the principals have to take over that role often, so that has been minorly difficult, especially when it's students that would be able to learn better in a smaller group. We do have psychologists from the main school in Tegucigalpa that try to visit and check on these particular students to see if any diagnosis needs to be made, but it's a bummer not to have someone in our own school all the time.
Can you live on the money you make?
Communicating with family/friends?
We got internet in our house in January, but up until then we would go to a restaurant in town that has free internet about once or twice a week. I also have a cell phone here that I use to call home occasionally. The phones are all pay-as-you go plans. One company has a plan that if you call the US and pay for 3 minutes, then you can talk the next 15 for free. This is actually a really good deal, I just have to pay attention to when 18 minutes is up and be willing to hang up and call back. :) It is slightly frustrating that people can't call me from the US, but I'm usually able to coordinate something online or use Skype.
I would really recommend looking into something like this school (or THIS SCHOOL!) because of what a great experience it is. I will for sure be staying next year (2010-2011) and we'll see after that. :)
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