Below you will find a breakdown of what life is like during the average week at CEV. TL;DR? I'll try to sum it up at the bottom.
* CEV is a
government school, which means it's a little different than the average school
in Korea.
* We work a midday
shift, usually from 12:30pm-9pm, with 6-7 for dinner.
Are you following so far? Good. It's gonna get a little more complicated.
* CEV is an
English camp. Think of it as summer
camp, but it runs all year, and it's also kind of school.
* All of the
teachers come from English-speaking countries.
* It's a full
English immersion program. All of the teachers only speak English. We only use
Korean (very basic) when absolutely necessary, which is not often.
* Every week, we
teach students from a different school in the province.
* On
most weeks, we teach a different grade level than we did the previous
week. The grade range is usually 4th-8th.
* We split the
children into six groups, 1 being the lowest proficiency, 6 being the highest.
Every week, we teach a different (descending) fluency level. If I teach
Level 6 this week, I will teach Level 5 next week, Level 4 the following week,
and so on.
* We use textbooks
and materials created by the teachers at CEV. The textbooks are made up of
Basic English, and activities related to our many simulation rooms.
Still with me? If so,
congratulations! You've made it through the most complicated part. If not,
rinse and repeat. Simulation rooms, you ask? Yes! This is the coolest part
about CEV. Basically the school's goal is to create the experience of traveling
to an English-speaking country. We teach the students vocabulary associated
with each room, and then go to the rooms to play games, perform role-plays,
have scavenger hunts, and more. What we do depends on the level of the students.
I've had days where we just walked around and talked about what was in the
rooms in simple English, and days where students have come up with their own
full-scale role-plays on the spot. Wanna see?The register in the Market. The wall is pretty cool; it's basically a duty free store at the airport (but we use the room as a regular shop. Kind of like our own mini-Walmart?) The kids love it.
The clothing store in the Market. Students love to buy the clothes and put on fashion shows.
The hodgepodge part of the Market. Students can go shopping for anything here and practice purchase role-plays with anything in the room.
The grocery store section of the Market.
Great for helping students practice their foods!
Science. Students can do experiments, learn
about their 5 senses, or (a popular new activity) test their heart rate using
different exercises.
Language Lab. This is a great place for
various review games, or to introduce students to each room via various videos
(Mr. Bean is most popular).
This place is creepy at night. He gets me
every time. My gift to you.
The Airport. Students learn various travel
vocabulary words, role-play a travel experience, or have a question scavenger
hunt here. They can even make passports to get stamped by a "customs
officer."
The Hotel. Students can role-play here, or
play games on the map or with international landmarks.
The doctor's office in the Hospital, where
students can perform role-plays using lab coats, a stethoscope, and a toy
needle, otoscope, pager, and thermometer.
The optometrist corner of the Hospital.
There is a pharmacy in the Hospital that is
used in a scavenger hunt activity.
The Bank. Students practice exchanging
money, withdrawing money from an ATM, and counting.The Post Office. After going to the Bank (same room), students can use their "money" to pay for shipments. There's a fun packing contest that we do in here that students like a lot.
Art Room, full of various crafts. Students
usually make masks or paper crafts, or draw whatever.
Our (small but hopefully growing)
Restaurant. Right now it's in the travel room, but maybe one day in its own
room? :D
Restaurant menus made by an awesome teacher
(Lauren S.) We have all of the food on the menu for role-playing.
My (Amanda) classroom!
From the other side.
So that's pretty much CEV. We use
simulation rooms to teach English to elementary and middle school students in a
week-long, camp-like immersion program. It's pretty cool.