Monday was my first day of school. I'm going to a school called, no lie, Touhoku Seikatsu Bunka Daigaku Koutougakkou. It has about 1000 kids, making it quite big for a Japanese school.
It takes about 15 minutes to ride my bike to school, and, despite the killer hills, it's a nice ride. The first day, however, my host mom took me in the car. Upon arriving, we talked for a bit with the principal and vice principal. They introduced me and the other exchange YFU exchange student at my school, Rebecca, to a year exchange student from Lithuania whose name is Eva. Being European and all, she's fluent in English. Next, I went to my class, 2-9. I walked in to a lot of stares, whispering, and giggling. I gave a self-introduction in front of the class, which induced a few head explosions (what I call how Japanese people react when a gaijin speaks Japanese at a level above beginner). They had a desk prepared for me in the back of the classroom. I sat down, and classes started. Learned some biology words and a bit about ancient Japanese poetry.
We had gym before lunch, so everyone started changing into their gym clothes...in the classroom. This kind of surprised me, but changing into gym clothes just entails putting a different shirt over the undershirt of the school uniform, so nothing explicit. You also have to change shoes. This brings me to the interesting topic of shoes in Japan. You need a lot of them: shoes to go to school in, shoes to wear in school, shoes to wear outside for gym, shoes to wear inside for gym, slippers to walk around the house in, different slippers to put on when in the bathroom in the house, etc. Never in my life have I taken of my shoes so many times a day. But, I digress.
No connection with anything else: my host mom just had a phone conversation that consisted of her saying "hai" 19 times in a row. True story.
Anyway, there were tests the rest of the week, so we three exchange students spent those days in the library. Here's how pretty much every day went: we went to the library first thing in the morning, worked on this art project they gave us, talked, ate lunch at 12:30, and left school. A couple of the days we watched American movies in Japanese thanks to the English teacher from Montreal, Bouchard-sensei. He is such an awesome guy. He is incredibly helpful and fun to talk to. On top of that, he speaks excellent Japanese. Khatz would be proud.
There's so much I left out in this post, but it's a pretty good overview. This post brings us up to Friday, June 19. Today is Wednesday, June 24. Eh, not bad.
Probably lots of girls in the class becaue of the arts emphasis. thanks for the update. And the pictures. Are you supposed to untie your shoes when you take them off :)
ReplyDeleteheeehhhh let's make him wear the foreigner apron
ReplyDeleteTAIYAKI
ReplyDeleteIS
INCREDIBLE
@ Pat - most people don't untie their shoes most of the time.
You lucky bastard, getting so much Karaoke for so cheap...