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| ASU's Palm Walk has met it's match |
Classes
started this week. It’s a relief, really, you know? Shucks, we were just so tired of relaxing in hot springs, cruising the boardwalk on the north shore, getting massages from blind people, taking leisurely tours of culture-rich museums, and late night shopping adventures eating endless amounts of snacks and delicacies at crowded night markets. Thank goodness we've got a decent 9-5. Our troubles are over. It's a good thing that the typhoon predictions were way off for Taipei. To think...having to miss a day of classes being trapped with my roommate up here with nothing more than 100 cable channels...I perish at the thought.
It’s an interesting set up we have for our classes. Most of us in the
International Chinese Language Program (ICLP) are here just for the summer and,
as newbies here we don’t get to choose our selection of courses. Instead, we’re assigned
three different one-hour class blocks during the day. One of the classes is a
one-on-one tutorial. The other are full sized classes...
...of four
students a class.
That’s
right: four students in a class. 1-2-3-4-5, oops I counted too high because no
class ever is that small and I didn’t expect to be able to stop counting at
four. The format is more discussion group than lecture, and it works
like a charm. Tiny class sizes allows for near constant dialogue and
participation among teacher and students. Everyone gets a chance to practice
the new grammar point or answer a question about a new word or concept. The rhythm is therefore fast paced, and, at least this week, class periods fly by. There’s no time for idle chatter or texting. In fact, we’re not allowed to
use a dictionary or even open our textbook during class. We are to come prepared--ready to not miss a beat.
I’m enjoying
my classes so far. Apart from the almost unbearably unrealistic conversation
dialogues we have to stomach in our Talks on Chinese Culture class, the rest of
the material is fairly interesting like listening to and discussing old-timey
Chinese radio plays in my morning class.
The brightest moment of every day so far,
though, has been my one-on-one class. As fate would have it, I have been
fortunate to have landed yet another on-point tutor. Like my tutor last year in
Sichuan, Ms. Tu here at ICLP is keen to adapt her teaching method and content
to the student (ME!) she keeps things interesting and fun and somehow manages to force
me to use new sentence structures and vocabulary even though I hate nothing in
this world more than being forced to use new sentence structures and vocabulary. She does it naturally, conversationally, making
relevant connections between classroom content and content in my personal
life. I’m impressed, I'm excited to go to class.
So far, so good, ICLP. LM
Today's post is brought to you by Boo, the World's Cutest Dog.


I comment and then it disappears. "Teach the four," I always say. Keep those posts comin'.
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