外教在中国:My Kindergarten Teaching Experience in China
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外教教幼儿园英语谈经历 |
分类: 百科博览 |
I mentioned before that travelling has always been in my blood.
Well, so was the teaching. I discovered my teaching passion when I
was in at secondary school. As a geek (yes, I used to be a typical
grade-grubber), I found helping others with their homework very
enjoyable and rewarding. I was always around when someone needed my
help with Polish, English, Chemistry or even Maths. My mom, my
aunty and most of my cousins have been or still are working in
education in some way. If you asked me what was first – teaching or
travelling – the answer is Teaching.
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A young teacher with Chinese student
My decision to teach English in China was not completely random. I
did my Bachelor degree in Education at the university, worked as a
teaching assistant (voluntary service) in a primary school for two
years during my study and I always enjoyed working with kids. The
last year of my study was crucial and at some point I had to decide
what I was going to do once I graduate. I knew two things: I was
the happiest person in the whole world when I was either travelling
or teaching. One day, one of my Chinese friends advised me to go
ahead and travel to China where I could develop both of my passions
and skills. I asked Cez what he thought about it and he was like
“Just go for it!” That was it. I sent my CV to a few Chinese
schools located all over China (which you can find too in here),
got my first interview, got the job on the spot, booked my flight
ticket and I was off to go to China!
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A girl just arrived at the school in Donggua
I firstly came to China in August 2011 where I worked in a high
school in Huayuan (a small town located in picturesque Hunan
province) and private learning center in Xiushan (a small city in
Chongqing province). At first, I was a little bit scared, but I
quickly adapted to a new teaching environment. I enjoyed my
teaching job more and more each day.
After my 10-month contract expired, I left China for 8 months. I
thought I would never come back. In the meantime, I was teaching
English in Siem Reap, Cambodia and would never think of moving to
China for another year. Why? I needed new adventures and fresh
start. I felt like I knew China well, actually too wall. It was no
longer a challenge for me.
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Entrance door to Bowen Kindergarten in Dalang, Donggua
As it turned out, I should have never said never. I’m back in China
right now teaching 2-6 years old adorable kids in Bowen
Kindergarten in Dalang district, Dongguan. After spending some time
in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand or Sri Lanka I started missing
China. I was missing Chinese schools, students, morning breakfasts,
Chinese culture and my stress free lifestyle. I booked my tickets,
flew to Hong Kong and took a train to my former workplace –
Huayuan. I was teaching during winter camp, but after a month Cez
got a job in Dongguan and we moved here together. I was overwhelmed
with the city – its huge shopping mall, supermarkets with plenty of
foreign foods available, cinemas and theaters around, a huge train
station and bus station. Something I didn’t have living in rural
Huayuan.
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Officially one of the team member
I got a job immediately and started right away. It was a little bit
different experience to me. I worked with high school students and
primary students before, but never with kindergarten kids… The real
adventure was just about to begin…
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Bowen Kindergarten: the reception and my office desk
It is, above all, a lot of fun. Fun, fun, fun. These little Chinese
“monsters” want to play, dance, mess around and laugh a lot. They
are extremely active and amusing. There is no way you can enter the
classroom without being noticed by them. Once they see me, they
touch and kiss my legs, grab my hands and twist them, scream “Hello
teacher!”, give me some candies and chocolates and send me some
kisses. That always makes my day.
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Bowen Kindergarte
Being around little kids makes me feel much younger and more
energetic. My English classes look like fitness classes. We jump,
we scream, we sing songs, we nod our heads, we tap our knees and we
can’t stop it! The more fun they have, the more happy I am. This is
the only one way to keep them focused and involved into the lesson
– through games and exercises. Surprisingly, although they are so
little and don’t speak proper Chinese yet, their English is
impressive and I don’t struggle much with attracting their
attention.
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Some of the art work made by my students on the wall
Although they don’t understand everything I say to them, smile
speaks all languages. I smile when I’m pleased with them and make
an angry face when they get naughty. They perfectly understand my
gestures and tones of my voice.
I know I keep saying that, but my students are like little angels.
They are adorable, cute and innocent. You simply can’t be angry
with them for longer than 5 minutes. If you see them cry, it breaks
your heart to little peaces. When you see them smile, you can’t
stop smiling with them.
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Chinese kindergarten students smiling
They all were given English names I still try to remember. It’s
difficult though when you work with more than 120 students every
day. The good news is… they all know my name!
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Chinese students coloring some picture
In total, I teach 6 classes:f N1 (nursery students) and K1 A and B,
K2 A and K3 A and B. N1 students are the youngest, while K3
students are the oldest and they surprise me with their high level
of spoken English every day. I spend most of my teaching time with
N1 and K1 (younger students) and Cez with K2 and K3 (older
kids).
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Chinese students colour a picture of he
I prepare my classes according to the book I was given on my first
day of work. Different book is used for different level. I mainly
follow the book plan adding my own ideas to make the classes more
interesting.
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A foreign teacher is dancing with Chinese student
Each of my class is divided into 6 different stages:
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A foreign teacher and high five with Chinese student
My lesson plan is prepared a week in advance and then approved by
Belinda – the principal of the kindergarten and Jeff – the owner. I
have plenty of CDs and DVDs in my office so I never run out of
songs or movies. When my students do well in the classroom I prize
them with stickers. I often stick them to their foreheads or
noses.
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Teaching stickers apples, flowers and star
With my K3 students the job is much easier as they speak basic
English. Students are 5-6 years old. I warm them up by playing
various games (partner information share, sevens), having
discussions with them (what did you do last weekend? information
research, finding out information) and sharing with them some
interesting pictures and histories which makes them back on the
track of using English again. Afterwards, I go from engage to study
stage where I explain the language, teach them new vocabulary,
language constructions (drilling in pronunciation, spelling, word
order, analysis of the word, tongue twisters, hangman, word search,
filling in gaps and crosswords).
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A foreign teaching is teaching students a new song
The class finishes with activate stage where I encourage students
to use any or all of the language they know and they’ve learnt,
they should use it as freely as possible (role play, surveys,
drawing pictures or producing materials (leaflets), debates,
discussions, story building, interviews). So far, my students seem
to be enjoying my classes, we crack jokes together, I always keep
them updated on how my family and friends are doing and what places
I have been to or I’m going to visit next. My lessons go
smoothly!
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Chinese students dancing
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Chinese students are dancing
The job suits me perfectly with my blogging and travelling
schedule. I have 4-6 x 30-minute classes every day from Monday to
Friday. Tuesdays and Thursdays are my favourite days as I am off
work at 12:00. I stay till 17:00 for the rest of the days having an
extra English afternoon classes. I have 10-minute break between my
classes and there is an afternoon nap break which lasts 3 hours
(12:00-15:00). Every class lasts 30 minutes for K1,2 and 3 students
and 15 minutes for nursery students.
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A foreign teacher is teaching fruit vocabulary to Chinese
student
I still manage to travel at the weekends and blog during my breaks
at the kindergarten. I try to keep the balance between both – my
job and passion. Teaching is the main focus at the moment as I want
to get good references and I’ve been really enjoying myself
here.
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Chinese students are drawing picture
There is our first China guidebook coming out very soon, where
together with Sarah
of thefurtheradventuresofbennett, we
share our teaching, living and travelling experiences in China
where you can find plenty of valuable reasons and tips why you
should try to spend a year in the Land of the Dragon and the Rising
Sun teaching English to Chinese.
Let me share my personal reasons. First of all, it was a great
opportunity for me (I want to be a professional teacher) to figure
out whether this is what I wanted to do in the future or not. I got
a lot of teaching experience, learnt a lot from my colleagues and
tried out new teaching tactics in the classroom. For the first time
in my life I was in charge of my class, my students, my schedule,
my lesson plan and my teaching materials. I got more mature and
confident as a mentor.
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Chinese students are learning letter H
Secondly, the job is stress free. Nobody puts any pressure on you,
there is no competition between teachers, everyone is loving,
caring and helpful. You are surrounded by people who truly care
about you and they are ready to give you a hand when you need it.
Thirdly, the working hours are short and you get a decent salary.
Most of schools provide teachers with free food and accommodation
so you can save up a lot of money for your travels.
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A foreign teacher is teaching English book
The last, but not the least reason is to be able to live like a
local. Working in China gives me an incredible opportunity to learn
Chinese language, get familiar with the local community, culture
and traditions. I spend every Chinese holiday here with a bunch of
Chinese friends, picked up some Chinese, understood their way of
thinking and living. I made new friends with locals and seen the
incredible places (Avatar Mountains, Fenghuang Town, Yangshuo
River) I would never see if I hadn’t come to China to teach in the
first place.
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Teaching board
To sum up, China feels like home right now. I feel fulfilled as a
teacher and a traveller. There are ups and downs, but at the end of
day I smile and this is what really matters, right?

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