Thursday, October 25, 2012

Khao Yai



There are certain times in Thailand when I am still really surprised at what this country has to offer. One of those days was on the weekend when I visited Khao Yai the National Park in the center of Thailand.
With a few days spare in my holidays I decided to make the trip there on the bus and explore the national park on one of the organized day and a half tours.
The first afternoon was the half day trip and somehow as we were driving along our guide spotted a thin whip snake hidden in the trees. I was standing right underneath it and still could not spot the snake. It was the first of many creatures the guide was able to spot and teach us about, while also letting us hold the animals and insects. We explored a bat cave with bats, centipedes, millipedes, spiders, scorpions and a scorpion spider.
The main highlight of the afternoon trip was standing near the exit of a bat cave as two million bats exited the cave to fly around for the night. We were standing well away from the exit but the million insect bats flew overhead floating in the sight wind.
The following morning we set off early to spend the day in Khao Yai. Early in the morning we spotted  gibbons and hornbills two of the main drawcards to the park. Hornbills are a toucan looking bird that sits high up in the trees. The gibbon is a monkey looking creature which also lives at the tops of trees. Never walking on the ground.  An excellent telescope helped us see the animals in a better view.
My group consisted of myself, two Dutch couples and a French couple and together we followed the Thai guide through the jungle for a couple of hours. The whole time we were under the canopy of the tall trees it was raining then when we came into a large opening luckily the rain stopped.
Next stop after the walk was Nam Tok Haew Suwat the waterfall used in the film The Beach. I was really excited to see this as I am a big fan of the movie. It did resemble what I remembered from the movie although people are no longer allowed to swim there. Our guide explained it was because too many drunk Thai people were drowning there.  I would not have swam though because of all the rain the water was really gushing down the waterfall.
Our last mission for the day was to go in search of a wild elephant.  It wasn’t hard to miss as the elephant was standing right in the middle of the road. I have seen elephants in Thailand but this was the first time I had seen a wild elephant. Wild elephants are unpredictable and can be quite dangerous so we stayed in the bus which was an open songthaew style bus and reversed slowly towards the elephant. Should the elephant have decided to charge us we could drive off in a hurry. Luckily it did not and we were safe. After spotting the elephant we headed back to the guesthouse after an impressive day exploring a magnificent part of Thailand.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

7-11

It is impossible to visit Thailand and not enter a 7-11 store. According to a credible internet source (Wikipedia) there were more than 6,300 stores in Thailand last year and that number is quickly expanding.
There are at least ten in the city I live in and there is one located at the entrance to the building where I live. I pass by the 7-11 maybe seven or eight times a day.
7-11 stores are always cool with their air conditioning blasting and there is nearly always a dog sleeping at the entrance to the store. It is funny when the dog decides the entrance is not cool enough and sleep inside instead.
When 7-11 introduce a scheme whereby you collect stamps for certain purchases it became a very successful promotion. My girlfriend Prang became almost obsessed with collecting the stamps to redeem for prizes. She asked her students and friends to collect the tokens for her.
The promotion was so successful that all the products you can buy to collect tokens were sold out.
Prang has already collected enough tokens for a backpack, a chair, a small lunchbox and we need only fifty more tokens for a small table to collect the full set of prizes.
Our new 'free' chair from 7-11.


Sunday, June 24, 2012

Bang Saen beach

Thailand is famous for its beaches. Many have white sand with clear blue water. Bang saen beach is definitely not one of those beaches used on posters around the World to advertise Thailand. The sand was dirty almost black, the beach umbrellas were so close together that no sun was reaching the beach chairs and the food being cooked along the beach smelt so bad I could hardly walk down the path.
I visited the beach because many of the students at school say it is their favourite beach in Thailand. This is because it is the closest beach to where I live and therefore it can be easily reached in a day trip. I am guessing many of the students have never visited the more famous beaches on the islands. Many Thai people also like visiting the beach without sunbathing. Which is the reason for the umbrellas being so close together. The most popular time to visit the beach in Thailand is at dusk when the sun is not so bright.
Bang Sean beach is also just near the University where Prang is currently studying her Master's Degree therefore I was intrigued to see what the beach was like. Prang and I decided to stay in one of the only room  for less than a thousand baht a night. The room was a tiny box above a toilet block which we had to walk through to get in and out of the building.
I was not impressed by the beach at all and I am in no hurry to go back.
Good luck getting a tan on these beach chairs.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Elephants, Tigers and Crocs

Si Racha Tiger Zoo  is a popular tourist attraction in the South East of Thailand. Although I had read reports of the mistreatment of animals and the poor living conditions for the animals I still wanted to see the zoo for myself.
Therefore Prang and I went for an afternoon visit one sunny Sunday afternoon.  Yes there was mistreatment of animals and yes the cages were small but I had never seen so many tigers in the one place. There were hundreds.  At a young age the tiger cubs are taken from their mothers and feed by pigs. It’s strange to see but they say the amount of tigers at the zoo is proof the plan works.
For a little extra money visitors are allowed to have their photo taken with the animals. I have never been near or had a photo taken with a live Tiger, Orang-Utan or Crocodile before and although the eopportunities.
The zoo also have a tiger, elephant and crocodile show. All three of these animals are very smart and trainable and can put on a good show. The least trainable of the three is the crocodile. A crocodile cannot walk across a tightrope and play basketball. All the trainers were able to do was open the crocs mouth and slide across the ground till their head was in the mouth of the croc. Every time the trainer finished the trick he looked genuinely excited that he still had a head.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Wai Kru Day

Teachers are well respected in Thailand and at the start of every year there is a day of teacher appreciation. It is known as Wai Kru Day and always held on a Thursday in June. At my school the ceremony was held last Thursday morning. All the students gathered together in an assembly and the teachers walked onto the stage in their year levels and sat in chairs. The students then presented the teachers with a specially made gift and kissed the ground at their feet as the teachers 'wai' the students. To wai in Thailand means to place your hands together in a prayer like motion and slightly bow your head. It is the common way to greet somebody in Thailand.
I actually took part in the ceremony twice. I was ushered onto the stage one time and was presented with a gift the students made which I immediately gave to the student who was hiding behind me before I walked off the stage. I was ushered onto the stage again when one year level did not have enough teachers to fill the seats.
I enjoyed participating in the ceremony and it was just another example of an event which happens in Thailand which would never happen in Australia.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Drink Milk, No Drugs

Today's slogan of the day. 'Drink Milk, No drugs.' Every student and teacher at morning assembly was given a small bottle of milk as they raised them as one and drank together. The slogan kind of works at least it is giving the students an alternative to taking drugs. Also in Thailand not many people drink milk and whenever people ask me why am I so tall they often say it must be because I drink a lot of milk. It's true I do like to drink milk but I am not sure it is the reason I am so tall.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Week one done

Having taught the same lesson 14 times I was quite glad to see the end of my first week of school. I decided on a lesson plan asking the students what they did on the holidays as a good start to the school year.
I taught 18 lessons for the week to 14 different classes starting with the secondary one students on their first day of high school and also taught to classes of secondary 6 in their final year of school.
As well as asking the students what they did on the holiday I asked what the students knew about Australia. 'Kangaroos and Koalas' were always the first answers but their wasn't a lot else they knew. Only one student mentioned the Great Barrier Reef and very few could tell me the capital is Canberra.
A couple of big differences from school last semester to this semester is that I am now teaching alone in every lesson. Therefore I have to discipline the students as well as teach. Luckily in my first week this was not an issue as the students were all well behaved.
Another difference is their are only two classrooms in which I teach which have air-conditioning and in many of the classrooms the fans at the front are broken or completely ripped off the ceiling. It's hot in the classrooms luckily the staff office has air-conditioning so I go and cool off at the end of each lesson.

Friday, May 25, 2012

All you hear is Lady Gaga

Every morning for about the last three months while in Thailand I have watched the morning news. In the news service their is very little news from outside Thailand. The show is all in Thai so I have no idea what they are talking about and even watching the pictures many of the stories still make no sense to me.
Today though I was able to decipher one of the stories. Lady Gaga is in Thailand and almost twenty minutes of the breakfast news was dedicated to her with footage of fans screaming and crying while waiting for her at the airport.
The only other non Thai news which I found out through watching the show was the death of Whitney Houston.
Many of the other news items show car accidents and people being arrested. 

New start, new school

Having spent much of time while in Australia worried about where I would be teaching when I returned to Thailand it was a relief to be given a good job at a good school. I returned to Chachoengsao to continue teaching and through an agency got a job at a school only five minutes or so by motorbike from the school where I taught last semester.
I am now teaching at Benchama Rat Rangsarit School. It is a public secondary school of 3000 students and I will be teaching secondary 1, 5 and 6. I am teaching the equivalent of year 7, 11 and 12 in Australia.
On  the second day of school myself along with four other new foreign teachers introduced ourselves in Thai to the whole school at morning assembly. I have lived in Thailand for close to six months and it was probably the most Thai I have spoken since learning the language.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Short time, not a long time in Australia

At the end of my first semester teaching in Thailand I decided I would return to Australia. I was planning to spend time with friends and family and hopefully work for some of the time as money made in Australia is worth a lot in Thailand. The students in Thailand get eight weeks of school holidays from the end of March until the end of May. I also thought I did not want to spend this time in Thailand as I did not have a lot of money to support myself.
Therefore I returned to Australia. Visited some of my friends and family and worked many different jobs in order to make some money. I painted a house, dug a few trenches, mowed some lawns and helped demolish a house.
Then on Mother's Day morning my Mum dropped me at the airport knowing I probably will not see her again this year.
I enjoyed my time in Australia I also enjoyed getting on the plane and returning to Thailand.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Riding an elephant

‘You can now all enter the water and swim with the elephants,’ the tour guide said just as a large piece of elephant poo floated to the surface of the water. I hesitated for a moment but then thought when would I again get to swim with an elephant and a large piece of poo. So I dived in head first, not really I moved cautiously through the water and climbed up on top of the elephant with the trainer. I scrubbed the elephant with a brush while sitting on top of the elephant which was sitting in the shallow water.
Prang did not enter the water and was hardly watching the elephants, she was too distracted watching the Eastern European men in their tight bathers. Following the half an hour or so spent in the water we walked back to the camp and were assigned an elephant each.  Our guide like most of the guides was Cambodian although he could communicate enough in Thai for Prang to have a conversation with him.
I am not sure if he felt sorry for her for having to spend time with me or whether he just didn’t feel like riding the elephant because after only ten minutes he got off and let Prang sit on the neck of the elephant and take charge.
For the rest of the ride our guide became our personal photograph taking almost one hundred photos in the hour.  At one point I rode on the neck of the elephant and could feel its muscles and bones move as it walked.
I enjoyed the ride and so did Prang and thanks to our guide we had many great photos to keep and share.  

Monday, March 26, 2012

Koh Chang


A four day holiday on the island of Koh Chang was a fun relaxing way to spend the last few days of the first part of my time in Thailand. My girlfriend Prang and I spent almost a day on buses, boats and minivans getting to the island. We arrived late at night to a small guesthouse with shacks on Lonely Beach. It was difficult in the rain and darkness to appreciate the location. All I could hear while I was trying to sleep was the noise of the tattooist only meters from our bed. We decided we would move the following morning to a better guesthouse.
Although when we woke the following morning to see the empty beach and clean water we decided to stay at same guesthouse but move away from the tattoo shack. Ko Chang is one of the biggest islands in Thailand and Lonely Beach was at one time Lonely but now full of tourists.
We spent the first day relaxing on the beach enjoying the sun. After one full day on the beach we decided the following day to move to a different part of the island. I really wanted to ride an elephant therefore we moved closer to where the elephant camp was set up.
We stayed another night at the Blue Lagoon resort without a tattoo parlour in sight. We organized and went on an elephant ride before returning to eat  some very delicious fish on the beach to end our time on the island.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Prang's Birthday

I was sitting in the cinemas watching a movie when it struck me that the movie was about Snow White. Somehow I had agreed to go to the cinemas to watch a Julia Roberts movie about Snow White translated into a language I can hardly understand. The movie was called Mirror Mirror so I probably should have guessed it would be a take on the Snow White story. I must admit though I did fall asleep for some of the movie.
I agreed to go because it was Prang's birthday and it was what she wanted to do. What I found interesting was that all the previews are in English and after sitting through almost twenty minutes of previews getting comfortable you then have to stand for the King's song. 
I will not be going back to the cinemas any time soon, especially not to watch a movie based on a fairytale.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Exam time

Every student at Saint Loius sits an end of year exam. This includes all the kindergarten students right through to secondary six. As I have taken on the role of teaching Primary 4, 5 and 6. I was required to write three exams, one for each year level. Each exams had to be 40 questions which was broken into 30 multiple choice questions and ten true and false questions. The exam had to be difficult to challenge the students but not too difficult so the students would fail.


I found it easy enough to write the exam for the Primary 5's and 6's as I had been teaching them all semester. The Primary 4 exam was hard to put together though as the exam was due the same week I started teaching the year level and was left little help from the teacher who left the school.

The English exam was the students final exam on Friday afternoon and I am sure they were all tired by then and could not be bothered with the exams.

It really doesn't make a big difference though. No student at Saint Louis can fail English.I am not sure if that's just the school policy or if it is a private school policy. It's a little disheartening when at the end of the semester those students who have tried hard get almost the same mark as those who have shown no progress at all. Many students at the school know they can pass English without trying and therefore do not try. Only one student in the 800 plus exams I corrected ticked true for every answer in the True/False. It was smart thinking as he got 5/10.

Some students at the school can leave without even being able to speak a single sentence in English. But it is not completly there fault, with 50 students in a class it is easy to get lost in the system and get left behind.

While the students sat their exams I along with all the other foreign teachers had nothing to do. Luckily the Facebook ban had been lifted and gave us something to do for at least a couple of hours a day. When all my students had finished there exams I had to correct the true/false questions for all 800 plus exams. Luckily I was helped by some of the other teachers who offered to help to ease the boredam. Then when all exams where marked I put all the results into the computer and my work at Saint Louis was done. In the final week we spent the week trying to sneak out of school for as long as possible as we had to be at school from 7.30am until 4.00pm to get paid a full salary.

Monday, March 19, 2012

My final lesson

There were no big goodbyes when it came to my final lessons with the students at Saint Loius. It's too difficult to try to explain to them why I will not be teaching at the school again next semester. The students also had a lot of work to do in their final lessons as I wanted them to do well on their exams and I knew they would struggle. In the past few weeks the weather has heated up a lot and many times I walk into the classroom and the students are all half asleep because it is just so hot. The students were also losing interest I could see they needed a holiday and so did I. Next week the students will sit their final exams then I am required to be at school for the week following before I am finished at the school

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Two weddings and a holiday

In the five months I have been in Thailand I had not attended a wedding then in the space of one week I attended two.
The first was the wedding of an Australian teacher who married a Thai teacher who is the head of the foreign teachers at the school. In Thailand the majority of the guests are not invited to the actual wedding ceremony they are invited to the dinner which is quite similar to a reception for a wedding in the Western world.
As the wedding was held on a Monday we all attended school as per normal and I went to the dinner in a van with many of the other foreign teachers. I ate a meal and listened to a bit of karaoke, which is also very popular in Thailand. At about 9.30pm we all got back on the van to return home. It is also common in Thailand for people to leave parties, weddings included as soon as the food has finished being served.
Two days later I enjoyed yet another public holiday in Thailand. This time it was a Buddhist holiday for Mugha Puja Day. Buddhist Thais visit the temple in the morning then return again in the evening. I visited the Wat Sothon temple in the evening to see what takes place and there where thousands of people walking circles around the temple holding candles. Prior to visiting the temple Prang and I spent the morning at an old market in the outskirts of Chachoengsao.
The second wedding of the week was also held on a school day and was again two people from school. On Friday afternoon I attended another wedding and there were so many people there it took me almost five minutes to find my friend Tim. I asked the groom how many people went and he said 1500. Large weddings are quite common in Thailand. The whole ceremony part was all in Thai so I didn't really understand although I did enjoy the food and the experience. Invitations to weddings in Thailand are given in an envelope which when you arrive at the wedding you give back to the couple with money in it to help pay for the wedding.

Monday, March 5, 2012

'Some students are absent because they are fat.'

Every class I teach there is usually at least one student missing because they are practicing sport, music or dance. Last Friday though I heard the best reason for some students being absent.
My Thai partner said to me "Some students are absent because they are underground." By underground she meant in the bottom of the building. I asked what they are doing. She explained to me the students are absent because they are doing an activity because they are fat. She continued to say the students will play games and learn how not to be fat.
At the end of class I went to have a look and sure enough all the fat students in the school were grouped together excercising.
It's the sort of bluntness you have to get used to when teaching in Thailand. If you are fat they will tell you, if you smell they will say etc. etc.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Ayutthaya

Ayutthaya is a very popular tourist spot in Thailand and an easy day trip from Bangkok. My girlfriend Prang and I decided to stay overnight and spend the weekend exploring the temples and other sights of the city. Leaving Chachoengsao we caught a minivan to Bangkok and then another to Ayutthaya. I am still unsure if any of the van drivers in this country actually know how to drive as the journey is never comfortable.
Making it to Ayutthaya we checked into a hotel then found our way to the floating market. Thailand is full of floating markets and they are all very touristy and this was no exception. It was clean and well maintained and not to crowded so I quite enjoyed it.
The following morning we found a tuk-tuk driver who would take us to visit the temples and wait while we explored then collect us again and take us to the next one. The temples in Ayutthaya are impressive and there is obvious reason why it is such a popular tourist destination. Having visited three of the most popular temples I also wanted to go see some elephants. The driver dropped us at the elephant kraal pavilion and we met some of the elephants which are looked after in the enclosure behind.
It was the highlight of the trip. One of the very young elephants was chasing Prang around trying to get her bananas. All the elephants seemed well looked after. They are an impressive animal.
Our last temple stop in Ayutthaya was Wat Mahathat, they temple which is where you can see the ancient Buddha head engulfed in the roots of the tree.
This temple seemed to be the worst affected by the devistating floods of late last year which submerged most of the city which is actually located on an island.
Prang and I decided the most comfortable ride back to Chachoengsao was to catch the train. Although it is a little slower than the vans I enjoyed sitting beside the open window watching the Thailand countryside pass by.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

I think I'm turning 25. I really think so.



For the one and only time in my life I turned 25 on the 25th of February. In Thailand it's also the year 2555 which made my birthday the 25/2/2555. It was a good enough reason for me to celebrate therefore I invited many of my friends to dinner at a local restaurant.
More than 30 people joined me for dinner at Nong Pu restaurant which the foreigners have nicknamed the Cock and Crab as there are large statues of a Cock and Crab at the entrance.
I enjoyed the night eating and drinking with my friends and following dinner we continued onto the usual hangout Sun.Moon bar.
I am not sure how I feel to be 25 but in Thailand it is either a very lucky or unlucky age. Hopefully for me it will be a lucky year.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Hello. My name is Dylan and I need a job.

Teaching in Thailand is a great job. I am really enjoying it and I feel I am suited for the job. Therefore when I was told I did not have a job at the school I am currently teaching at next semester I started on the search for a new school.
Life in Chachoengsao is also good so my first preference is to stay in the city. It is difficult though to know how to get a job. The first attempt to get a job was to visit the schools and personnally deliver my resume. My friend Tim is also looking for a job next semester so the two of us with my girlfriend Prang visited the schools of Chachoengsao to try and get a job.
If it was the students hiring teachers Tim and I would have been giving a job at the first school we visited. One of the students spoke in Thai and Prang translated for us. The student said '"I am in secondary six although if you are teaching next semester I repeat the year."
The second school we visited told Tim and I they only employ British and American staff. Although the teacher said maybe next semester they will only employ British, American and Australian staff. I am still a little confused as to why some schools do not employ Australian staff.
At the end of the day I did not have a job but at least I felt I was getting somewhere and hopefully something comes up soon. Neither Tim or I got offered a job on the day although Prang who already has a secured job was offered a job.

Teaching 800 students

I have just finished teaching for the week and have taught more than 800 students. One of the English teachers left so I am now teaching one lesson a week to 18 different classes in Primary 4, 5 and 6. Before this week I was teaching nine classes twice a week I am now teaching 18 classes once a week and will continue to do so for the next month until the exams.
I have been teaching Primary 5 and 6 therefore it was easy to teach the three Primary 5 classes I had not previously taught. Although teaching Primary 4 is a new experience. There seems to be a large gap between Primary 4 and 5 and its difficult to know how to structure the class.
In every class there is about 45 students therefore I am now teaching more than 800 students a week. I already struggled to remember five students names. I have no hope of remembering any of the students names.
Teaching the three year levels also means I have to write three exams. It could be interesting to write an exam for the Primary 4's having only taught them one lesson.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Jatujak Market

Since arriving in Thailand I wanted to visit the Jatajuk Market in Bangkok so on Sunday Prang and I took a van into Bangkok to visit the Market. I was quite suprised at how clean and organised the market was. I had heard many stories about how crowded and hot the market is although I actually found it quite ok.
I spent the day buying gifts and some new clothes and Prang's help haggling for a better price made everything much cheaper than the set price.
The stall holders have a price for foreigners and a price for Thais. As I was shopping with Prang everything was at Thai prices for me. To get back to Chachoengsao Prang and I caught the train which is a much more pleasent ride than the vans with drivers who seem to compete against each other as to who can drive the quickest. Driving 160 kilometres an hour weaving in and out of trucks on the freeway is not the most comfortable ride.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Teaching teachers

Every Monday after school I teach English to a class of 20 Science teachers. Although I know very little about Science I have been able to keep the teachers amused doing basic Science experiments and teaching Science vocabulary. The level of English among the teachers is quite varied and therefore they work together to try and explain the English words and translate to each other in Thai when necessary.

Valentine's Day

The most significant change in my life in the last month is that I know have a girlfriend. My girlfriend Prang is a Maths teacher in Secondary at St Louis School, the same school I teach at. For the last few months I had spoken to her a few times although I had never had the courage to ask her out for dinner.
One Friday night in January I decided it was time to ask her to dinner and I felt good about it. A few weeks later Prang was my girlfriend. The first big test though was Valentine's Day and it wasn't a great success.
I had no idea how much of a big deal Valentine's Day was in Thailand therefore I had not got Prang anything not even a rose. I turned up to school in the morning and on my desk was a large rose and teddy bear. A little embarrassing but many of the other teachers had also received gifts so it was not too bad.
My Valentine's gift to Prang was going to be a dinner out together at a restaurant. Easy enough only I do not know a lot of good spots to eat in the city so I asked Prang to decide. We ate at a nice restaurant which had only recently opened on the edge of the river.
I am guessing Valentine's Day was also the restaurants first big test as the staff did not seem to be able to cater for all the guests. We waited well over two hours for our meal and forgot to bring our food then still tried to charge us for food we had never been served. Also because of the wait I was quite hungry and not a very pleasant dinner partner.
All in all the day was not a great success. Luckily Prang is still my girlfriend and we went out again the following night to a different restaurant for a dinner together.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Academic Camp in Chantaburi

The opportunity to spend time with students outside the classroom I find is a great experience. Therefore when I heard the school were organising a camp to Chantaburi I offered to go with them.
One the morning of the camp everybody met and school and turns out there were only 42 students going with 27 teachers. I was one of only three foreign teachers so I thought I would have a lot to do teaching the students English. Throughout the whole weekend though only one five minute activity was dedicated to English and for those five minutes what I did was dance around like crazy wearing all sorts of clothes. The students worked in groups to list as many of the clothes as they could.
For the rest of the weekend the students learnt in Thai as we visited a Temple, a Church, a Market some wetlands and went swimming at the beach.
We were told we would be staying at the Paradise Resort in Chantaburi. I expected something quite nice and reports from teachers were the hotels they stayed in previous years were really comfortable rooms. Paradise Resort though was a school camp and I slept on thin mat on the floor in a room with twenty or so of the boys and a half a dozen teachers.
A couple of highlights of the weekend was the Aquarium we visited which had an impressive tunnel tank were we walked underneath the large stingrays, manta rays and small sharks. The other highlight was Oasis Sea World were we all watched a dolphin show. The dolphins looked very unhealthy though and I think they may be mistreated.
I am not sure the students learnt a lot on the camp but I enjoyed the experience and it was a good way to explore Chantaburi a part of Thailand I had not previously been.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Oh yeah you're not teaching here next semester.

Life in Thailand was going really well everything was just a little too good. I was enjoying the teaching and the school and outside of school I had a really good social life. I was looking forward to finishing the end of the semester returning to Australia for a few weeks before coming back to Thailand to continue teaching at the school.
All was good until I was told, "You cannot work at this school next semester. We have already employed new teachers." The news came as quite a shock to me as I had constantly been told if I wanted to stay it would be very possible. It's often difficult in Thailand to work out what is really going on.
Having no job next semester at the school next semester was quite disappointing as I had done a lot at the school in the hope I would get re-employed. All the teachers I work with where also quite shocked and disappointed I would not be working at the school next semester.
The decision not to re-employ me may have had more to do with the agency I work for rather than the school itself. As I said it's difficult to know. What I do know is I have to try get another job in Chachoengsao as I enjoy my life in this city.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

St Louis Family Night

The school I am teaching in hosted a couple of family nights were students performed dances while their parents and friends sat and ate at tables on the school oval.
Many classes prior to the night were cancelled as the students learnt their dances.
On the night my job was to stand at one of the main entrance gates and wai the guests as they entered onto the oval. To wai someone means to put your palms together in a prayer like gesture and bow slightly. It was very hot in the afternoon sun as we stood greeting the guests. After a couple of hours the majority of the guests had arrived and we were allowed to go enjoy the show.
Friday night was the younger year levels all of Kindergarten until primary 3 then on Saturday night was the older year levels.
The highlight for the Friday night was the performance by 'The Olives' one of the current most popular bands in Thailand. Their hit song is heard everywhere and the students all know every word.
On the Saturday night the students seemed to forget it was family night and did some very non PG rated dance routines. It was all quite funny though and a part of Thailand life I enjoy experiencing.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Chinese New Year

Thailand loves a celebration. As well as celebrating New Year on January 1 with the rest of the World they also have their own Thai New Year in April. On top of that they also celebrate the Chinese New Year. The Christmas decoarations had only just been packed away beside the river when the Chinese New Year decorations were put in place. On the Chinese New Years Eve many houses lit a bonfire in front of their house and burn fake money and gold which is said to be passed on to those who have died in the afterlife.
The streets were full of celebrations and at school on Chinese New Years Day every teacher was given a red envelope with money inside as a gift for the New Year.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Dressed for the occassion

As a teacher at St Louis every Monday I will come to school in my Thai shirt I was given for Christmas. Every Tuesday I will wear a pink polo shirt which we wear to help the King live a long life. Every Wednesday and Thursday I wear a shirt and tie, then on Friday I wear a sport uniform.
The students also have different uniforms to wear on different days including a sport uniform and every Wednesday all the primary students wear a scout uniform.

A typical school day

There is no such thing as a typical school day at St Louis School. Every day I still manage to see something which makes me laugh or something I am fairly sure would never happen at a school in Australia.
I arrive everyday at school to sign in using a fingerprint scanner before 7.45am. I will go to the foreigners office and sit there until the start of the first class. At 8am everybody stands for the Thailand national anthem and a prayer which signifies the start of the day.
Every lesson lasts 50 minutes and at 11am lunch is served for all the teachers in a communal teachers eating area. It’s free which is the great thing and for the most part the food is good. If I am hungry enough I will eat the chicken feet which are occasional served. A lot of the time I am not actually sure what I am eating, sometimes the Thai teachers do not even know what it is or cannot translate the dish into English. Every meal is served with rice which is a good thing at least I know what it will taste like.
The day is broken into seven 50 minute periods and depending on what time your class is depends on how long the lesson actually goes for or how interested the students are in listening. The later afternoon classes are usually the ones were not a lot of teaching takes place.
School finishes around 3.45pm although the teachers are not allowed to scan out until 4.30pm. We usually sit in the office counting down the minutes until we are allowed to go home. On Fridays the teachers are supposed to participate in sport at the end of the day therefore we are not allowed to scan out until 5pm.
In a week I teach 18 classes. I teach six classes of primary six twice a week and three classes of primary five twice a week. The class size is around 45 therefore in a week I teach 405 students. I have been teaching now for over eight weeks and I know less than six students names.
On many occasions I have turned up to teach and the class is not there, they either have a meeting or playing games. It can become difficult to plan lessons when you are not sure if the students will be there or not. It’s all fun though and I try to fit my teaching around the relaxed Thai schedules.

50 minutes in a Thai classroom

At the beginning of every lesson the students all stand to collectively say “Good morning Teacher and Master,” or “Good afternoon teacher and master,” Depending on the class this make take place as soon as I walk in, some lessons it will take the students up to ten minutes to find their seats and stand ready for class.
If there is ever writing on the board at the start of a class the students argue over who gets to clean the board.
I always have a Thai teacher in the classroom who is there to translate to the students when they cannot understand. The students often cannot understand when I give them an activity to do even when I think I am making the instructions very clear. I am quite luckily because my partner teachers can speak good English and are therefore able to translate easily.
The Thai teachers are also there to discipline the students. In Thailand it is not uncommon for teachers to hit the students and although I have not really seen it happen I know it takes place. The students know I will not do this to them therefore if the teacher walks out of the room or is not there for the whole lesson the students decide it is their time to have fun and muck around. It is difficult to keep 45 students interested and listening without some discipline.
The other week I was teaching a lesson on feelings and getting the students to tell me something they are happy about. One of the students wanted to answer the question although they were unable to so they translated through the teacher. “The student would like to say she is happy about having a handsome teacher.” I had to write it on the board and the students thought it was quite funny.
Thai students are often embarrassed to speak in front of their peers in case they get the answer wrong. Therefore if I ask the class collectively a question nobody will answer. To eliminate this I take a ball to class every lesson and throw the bal
l at a student make them stand up and answer the questions. The students are actually excited when I use the ball in class and they are more involved.
A couple of times I have been doing spelling tests on the board and will write a word on the board such as ‘join,’ and the whole class will start laughing. It turned out Join was the nickname of one the boys in the class. The students each have a name, a nickname and a number at the moment I call the students by their number because I do not know any of their names or nicknames.
In one of my spelling tests the student did not know how to spell the word so instead wrote a load of random letters with ‘KFC’ in the middle. I had to laugh.
At the end of every lesson all the students stand again and collectively say ‘Thank you teacher.’

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Chachoengsao Day Tour

There are many interesting places to visit in and around Chachoengsao the only difficulty is to get to many of them you need your own transport. As I do not have a car or bike I have not seem many of these sights until yesterday when I went touring with some friends in there car.
We stopped first at bat temple. It's not really called that just got the name from all the bats which hang in the trees around the temple. There were thousands of them and they were all fanning themselves to try and keep cool. We also stopped at a couple of other temples and visited a floating market where we took a ride on a small boat for about a hour. Almost the minute we stepped off the boat the rain started and it absolutely poured for well over an hour and we were unable to get back to the car. We sat eating on a floating platform at the market watching all the stall holders continuning to cook in the heavy rain.

A couple of the boats without covers were full of water and sinking by the time we left. As we left only a few minutes down the road and there was no more rain. Where we live did not get a drop all day. It was a good day out and quite an experience to see the heavy rain. I had not seen such an amount of rain since my very first night in Thailand.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Teachers Day long weekend

The teachers in Thailand every year get a day of celebrations. Instead of organizing activities my school St Louis instead gave all the teachers the day off.  We did not have to teach on the Monday and therefore I decided I would use the time to visit some fellow teachers I met in Bangkok while training and have not seen since.
I travelled to Nang Rong a town in the Buriram Province with the knowledge there is not a lot to do there. I was warned although I still wanted to visit to experience the different conditions each of the interns were placed in.
They were correct there is not a lot to do in Nang Rong. I did visit the ruins of a small temple not far from where my friends were living. I also spent an afternoon celebrating one of the teachers birthday which was quite ok.
I am not disappointed a went the bus journey lasted more than six hours each way and took my through some quite spectacular areas of Thailand. It was also great to see my friends and listen to their very different experience of teaching in Thailand.
At the end of the weekend I was happy I was placed at a school in Chachoengsao and went back to school appreciating how lucky I was.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Childrens Day


The children of Thailand get their own special day where they get to play games, eat loads of snack food and basically have fun. The nation celebrates the day this year on Saturday, January 10.


The school decided the students were too busy on the day before Children’s Day so they instead moved the celebrations forward a week and set up a couple of big jumping castles, many food vendors and games and activities for the students.

The activities were quite similar to the Christmas Days at school, although this time everything was free. I wasn’t missing out on the fun so I too had a go on the jumping castles and spent the day wandering the school eating all the free food.

The teachers do not miss out either, they too get a national day of celebration on the 16th of January we all get the day off. Another three day weekend.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

My living conditions

A room with no windows, a cold shower and a television with over 200 channels and not one of them English is what I call home in Chachoengsao. Although I am not complaining it is some of the best living conditions in the city I live.
When I first few weeks I was living in Chachoengsao I was living at the school until one day we were moved into a brand new apartment just a few minutes walk from the school. The other Australian Tim, who I met in Bangkok and is teaching at the same school, have adjoining rooms. For Tim to leave his room he must walk through mine, I decided this was better for me as I have the freedom to come and go whenever I wish. He instead got a window and a balcony.
For the few months I have lived here it has been fine Tim and I get along well enough that we are not in each others way and even sharing the one bathroom has been fine. A cold shower early in the morning is not the most pleasant wake up but the living conditions are some of the best in the city.
In the few minutes I take to walk to school I walk down an laneway past a few houses, some of who I have made friends with and been to dinner at their house. In the alley I pass rabbits, ducks and have to dodge the motorbikes which speed through the narrow path. In the morning I will usually say hello to at least ten people. In the afternoon the street vendors line the laneway and I will usually stop and say hello to a few more of the students as I leave the school.

Bangkok Day Tour

Since arriving in Thailand I had heard a lot about the Chatachuk Market in Bangkok which is only open on weekends. I was intrigued to see what it was all about so when one of the Thai teachers invited me to go with her to the market I accepted the offer.
I met her in the morning at the bus station and she told me she changed her mind and instead wanted to show me some of the temples in Bangkok. The first place she wanted to show me was the Wat Phra Kaew. I was fairly sure it was the same temple next to the Grand Palace I had already visited although I did not know for sure and the teacher I was with could not speak a lot of English.
We boarded a local bus in Bangkok to get to the temple. Then on the way the bus crashed into a car and we all had to get off and wait for another bus and again get on the bus. We reached the entry to the temple and it was the same very famous temple in Bangkok I visited when I was in Bangkok in the first week. The temple was too busy and they would not let me in with shorts on so I told my friend I did not want to go in.
Instead we walked to the Chao Phraya River and organised a boat to take us to a floating market. The floating market was much smaller than I anticipated and all they were selling was food. The food was very good though and we spent over an hour eating fresh seafood.
After the boat ride we visited a few of the smaller temples on the less touristy side of the Chao Phraya River. The temples were quite spectacular only I was a little uncomfortable as the teacher I was was Buddhist she was making me go through the whole Buddhist regime at every temple.
By late afternoon I was exhausted and hot and wanted to just get out of Bangkok so we headed back for the bus station and back to Chachoengsao.
I still have to get to the Chatachuk Market. Maybe I will go alone one day.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

New Years Eve Camodian style


The Sydney New Years Eve fireworks were showing on television and I took a quick moment to reflect on the year as I was standing beside the Harbour watching the fireworks last year. I was able to have a shower and get ready and the fireworks were still going. When they finished I walked outside to see how the party was going.
To my surprise the music on Pub Street had not started, instead everybody was watching the Manchester United game on a big screen television. They love the Premier League in this part of Asia. As soon as the game finished they showed a quick Cambodia travel advertisement which definitely inspired me to see more of the country before the music started and the party began.
The streets began to get very busy all the Koreans who usually spend their nights in their fancy hotels were all on the streets partying. At one point a crew of them started dancing well rehearsed dances and everybody on the street stopped to watch. Koreans are the most popular tourists in Cambodia and although I had seen them a lot at Angkor Wat and in the markets it was the first time I had seen them on Pub Street.
At 10pm there was no room to move, Pub Street was one big mosh pit and so I got out of there. I wandered the streets to see what else was going on. There were people everywhere and they were still piling off the big buses.
With only ten minutes to midnight I decided I would try again to join the party on Pub Street. It took close to ten minutes to push through crowds. The music stopped for a ten second countdown followed by a quick firework display and the music started again and the party continued. The Cambodians seemed to be enjoying the night as much as the Westerners.
Later in the night I ate at a street vendor which during the day converts to a kindergarten. Or the Kindergarten converts into food vendors. It was quite strange to see during the day all the students playing in the playground while around the school huge speakers and beer taps were being set up.
I had spent the night alone which was different to previous New Years Eves but I quite enjoyed it. People watching in Siam Reap is never boring.