My older kids, about 8-11 yr olds, are more work. They need more of a challenge but they really don’t speak English. So they know the basic nouns but anything more complicated and they don’t understand… and thus don’t pay attention and talk nonstop. It’s getting better as I discover their capabilities but it’s still shocking how worlds apart my classes are. Some students are so good and others can hardly do anything. I have one mehhhhhhhhh not very nice director who told me to make the kids speak more… except there are 33 kids in this class and I have 40 minutes with them. I’m actually at a loss on how she expects that to happen. I had another teacher point out to me … in the dictionary… in front of the class… that Sunday is the seventh, not first, day of the week (as I was teaching that the week commences with Sunday in the US). He then proceeded to explain that its fine if we say it that way but the children need to understand that it’s not correct (true, but I believe an American dictionary would say differently… anyone know for sure? G’ma this seems like your realm of work). Ahhh the French, I love ‘em. Overall I enjoy it, its just terrifying to be up there and realize that your lesson is not working and you look out over 30 ten year olds fearing the chaos that will probably ensue for the next 10 minutes.
Now lets talk about the good stuff… Paris! Last weekend I got to go to Paris with four of my friends. What a treat. Paris is only about 1.5 hours away on the TGV – which I love taking (I wonder where I got that love for trains… thanks Poppy ☺). When I’ve been to Paris in the summer, I’m just kind of over it. There are sooooo many people, its hot, vendors selling so much stuff, blah blah blah. But in the gray cloudy overhang of November, it was magical. Our hostel was about a fifteen-minute walk from the Eiffel Tower so we started our day there, proceeded to the Champs-Elysees. I bought a lovely WARM winter coat (I will be saving that receipt for the scrapbook), enjoyed a tall Starbucks coffee(!!), and had delicious pizza for lunch (exceedingly overpriced but worth it). We headed up to Montmartre, though by this point the only recorded actual hurricane to hit Paris was happening (maybe a slight exaggeration but not by much). After the monsoon calmed a bit, we headed up to Sacre Coeur for a beautiful sunset view of the city, ice cream (!), and general sparkly merriment. Sunday we headed to Notre Dame, had some lunch with the meanest French woman I’ve met as our server (and we had to actual French citizens with us, so that just proves that Parisian servers aren’t just being rude to us American tourists… they’re rude to everyone, take comfort) and the Centre Pompidou to see some modern art (Yves Klein, Kandinsky, Chagall all in one place… stop it). Finally we headed home exhausted but in a wonderful way. It’s the idea that so many wonderful people have found Paris as an inspiration (the brasserie where de Beauvoir and Hemingway used to hang out was about 10 minutes from our hostel) and finally I got to see it in that same light. Just lovely.
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