On our second day we went to Maron Kindergarten for our orientation. We met a lady called Wendy who was going to be training us both she has already been in China 6 weeks, we met her international class, they were all so cute! I noticed that the children all seem to be really keen to speak English and when they could tell you a word they were very happy! Being in a school and seeing what it was like already made me feel better than the day before, it was nice to see what we would be doing as I felt like I had no clue before hand.
We sat down with Wendy and she explained so much to us over the week, giving us ideas, showing us her teaching and letting us teach some of our own lessons! She gave us a great indication of what to expect.
We then met her other class which is called a hop class (this is where you have a short 30 mins – 45 min lesson to teach the children un-play based) this proved to be more difficult as you only have a short amount of time and the children didn’t seem as engaged as her international class that she has for 3 hours each day. When we taught this lesson we used role-play through a story, songs, actions and recapping words. This type of class is less expensive than an international class and focuses more on getting the children to say as many English words as possible even if they might not be able to actually understand them.
Each morning all the children do their exercises outside, the children seemed to really enjoy this and all joined in. The children all do the same exercises then split off and do their own thing for example races or playing with big bouncy balls!
The children are given English names at around the age of 2, there was a range of different names at the Kindergarten including: Gerry, Rain, Cici, Sun, Hero, Linda, Alice, Justin, Bill and Bob.
Schools in China are VERY different from schools back home. The children are expected to do a lot more than the children back home, Wendy was explaining to me that children can be taken out of class and lined up for 45 minutes to be tested (this is at the age of just 3!!!!!!!). At the end of the day the children are expected to line up and wait this can vary from 20 minutes up to an hour an a half for their parents to arrive to pick them up, if they aren’t quite and move about to much they are told off – they are only between 3 and 5!
Wendy has warned me as I am moving to Beijing on Monday that schools will be different to here as children are more conditioned and the behaviour management is stricter including hitting and kicking the children (I’m not sure how I’m going to actually cope with that). I will be teaching 6, half an hour classes within 3 hours!!!!!!…it’s going to be crazy!
I have really enjoyed working in Maron Kindergarten, I felt like it has helped me to prepare a lot more and understand what the expectations are. I have been able to come up with some ideas that I will be able to take with me to my own classes.