Not counting my online teaching, tomorrow is my 40th
first day of school (not counting the ones as a mother). Is there anything different about this
one? Yes, both child and parent come tomorrow,
for 10 minutes, to meet and greet the teacher.
Tuesday will find me with half my students. Wednesday I will have the other half. On Thursday, I will have all 11 students.
School is a straight shot down Nguyen Huu Tho, with one
stoplight and one veer right. It takes
20 minutes in the morning, 25 minutes in the afternoon.
The school owns 64 buses. Yes, that means they employ 64 bus
drivers. Each bus carrying students has
a bus attendant, to help the children on and off the bus. Some children are on the bus for an hour and
a half. I don’t know if the drivers can
take their buses home or not, but the bus driver lounge has bunk beds for them
to sleep.
There are two guarded entrances to the school. Both look like they could pass as the gates
to Versailles, although they aren’t gold. From last year’s elementary yearbook, it
appears there are 10 security guards (but I bet that figure is low).
There are two 7-story buildings, with two wings on each
building connected to a central base. I can
only speak to the elementary school. The
gyms are located on the 5th floor, extending to the 6th
floor, one on each wing. The cafeteria
is in the basement. My classroom is on
the ground floor, different than the first floor. There is an Art room on 4 different
floors. The Music rooms are on the same
floor as the gyms. The library takes up
a whole wing on one of the floors. There
are two different banks of elevators (students can’t use them). There is one central staircase – two half
landings, side by side (I looked it up to see what they are called). This year, two of the four emergency exit
staircases will be used for regular movement.
I suppose getting over 600 students up and down one set of stairs is a
challenge. This is the first year the
school will have 5 sections of each grade (except Pre-K).
I was told the school employs 660 people, and 160 of those
are international hires. We have people
in Accounting, Admissions, Procurement, Construction Management (a building
just for administration is under construction), Maintenance and Engineering, Facility
and Logistics (a whole fleet of people to make photocopies – large and small,
color and black and white – AND they laminate).
There are life guards (the pool is in the secondary school). There are groundskeepers to manage the pond,
the flowers, the trees, and the AstroTurf, but I bet they don’t take care of
the mist-ers on the covered walkways. The
cleaners always seem to be everywhere – the restrooms are pretty spotless. Personally, I like the handy men, also known
as white shirts. It was explained to me
that they help with whatever needs to be done, like if someone falls down they
help them up. My teaching assistant used
one to put up wall decorations that required a ladder. I haven’t tested falling down to see if they
come help. There are also the nannies. I am assigned a teaching assistant and a
nanny. The classroom nanny helps the children
transition, no matter where we go, toilet, snack, lunch, quiet time Music, Art,
PE. She’s just there helping.
The cafeteria offers breakfast (5 different small-ish sorts
of things). Lunch offers 2 different
Asian dishes, a western dish, a vegetarian dish, salad, noodles, soup, two
kinds of vegetables and fruit for dessert (exotic things like guava and dragon
fruit). A complete lunch (soup, main
dish, rice, dessert) costs 60,000 dong ($3.00).
We had a fire drill last week, before the students
came. I think it was to help the fire
department have a drill. They came with
three trucks. They used the hoses to
spray water all the way up to the 4th floor. They had about 20 fire extinguishers that
they used to practice putting out a fire in the driveway. The coolest part was the ladder truck. It was used to “rescue” someone on the 4th
floor. No, they didn’t ask for any
volunteers.
As part of a team building experience, last Friday afternoon
the teaching staff was bussed to the city center for a scavenger hunt. It was a fun way to have returning teachers
help new teachers learn about the center and all it has to offer. It just got a bit competitive for me. Plus, the expected monsoon rains cooled us
off (and drenched us).
Right now, it appears that the school is incredibly
well-resourced and is working to make sure the students develop their English
language skills. We have a colleague who
lives upstairs. He is assigned to help
support 6th grade Science.
That’s all he does – makes sure every 6th grader has the
English skills needed for Science.
I have two non-Vietnamese students. Both are children of teachers on staff. My teaching assistant is bi-lingual. She set up the whole room, unpacking
everything, except the boxes of things for my desk. She is open to my suggestions and ideas, and knows
the things I need to know that are unique to the school and classroom. The nanny only speaks Vietnamese, but already
she understands my silly ways, and rolls with it.
It has been the least stressful start up ever. All those extra hands coloring, laminating
and cutting. It makes a big
difference. Now, let’s see what happens.
Sarah! This sounds amazing. What a culture shock, though!
ReplyDeleteGosh, you're missed in boring-old-Hannover. ;-)
40 first days. And in how many different schools and countries. Quite a story you have to tell my friend. Love you 😘
ReplyDeleteLet's see if I can name them all - Jessup, Deming, McCormick, Central, UW, East, Clark (all in Wyoming), AAS (Russia), AISR (The Netherlands), ISHR (Hannover), Bilkent (Turkey), and now AIS (Vietnam)!
ReplyDelete