I went slightly deaf while working in Pavlos’ school. The classrooms
were, as I have said, echoing and the children were, as I have implied,
enthusiastic. And I was, as you know, learning. That’s not a good combination
for someone with sensitive ears. Once I had got the hang of the tenses (and
their uses) I would make up Tense Games (that is quite a good name for them),
which might involve students running to the board and marking something or
groups of children waving collective hands or cards in the air. And, of course,
despite instructions to the contrary and much to the annoyance of the teachers
in the adjoining classrooms, everyone would also be calling out their answers.
My makeshift games were always well intentioned; I wanted the children
to learn some grammar, as their parents expected, but I also wanted them to be
able to use the grammar, to see it as a living, vital part of language. But
when you have twenty five kids yelling out ‘Miss! Miss!’ followed by a medley
of right and wrong answers, it’s easy to get confused, lose control of the
class and damage your hearing into the bargain. My ears have never fully
recovered and, if you ever run into me, please look at me while you’re
speaking.
I worked at Pavlos’ school on Tuesdays and Thursdays. On Mondays and
Wednesdays I was at Vasso’s neat school in a small suburb of Lamia. Vasso would
pick me up in her car after lunch and we would kangaroo out of the town as she
battled with the clutch, questioned me about my love life and put up with me
trying out all my newly learnt Greek phrases. For a language teacher I have to
say that she wasn’t very encouraging. ‘You remind me,’ she said as she stalled
at yet another traffic light, ‘of my father.’
Sounds good, I thought, thinking
that maybe she saw me as dependable.
‘Oh F Harry Stowe’ I said, meaning of
course ‘Thank you’ in Greek.
‘No, no,’ said she, ‘I mean that you remind me of
him when he had had a stroke. He spoke just like you when you’re speaking
Greek.’
Vasso had a lot of equipment. She had chairs with swivelling, individual
desk tops attached, a television, cassette players, headphones for each child,
a roll down screen, a projector and reams of film. She had files for each child
with marks and comments neatly penned in by her diligent secretary and detailed
lesson plans.
‘The first five minutes is the dictation they were set for homework
yesterday, then do the reading passage on page 17 followed by exercise one on
page 18. Set exercises two and three for homework and revise spellings from
page 16.’
Vasso wanted an ordered, disciplined lesson from me. Of course what she
got was near chaos as the kids, sensing a floundering, amiable teacher would
shower me with notes, drawings, tiny damp bunches of wild flowers and sticks of
chewing gum and demand games, puzzles and quizzes; anything in fact which
didn’t involve dictation, reading passages, exercises and spelling revision.
Every so often Vasso would come into my noisy classroom to ‘observe’.
Then of course we would all be stricken with nerves. The children would sit in
semi-paralysis at their green desk chairs, looking up at me seriously and I
would attempt some sort of round the class drill of the verb To Be or something
equally imaginative. Vasso would make notes, take me aside afterwards and tell
me that I had been totally useless. She did have a point.
On Fridays I was up at Despina’s school on a hill leading out of the town.
There I was to do composition writing with the children and Despina equipped me
with all I apparently needed for this lesson; a slim volume of model
compositions which we were to go through, one by one throughout the year. The
essays had titles such as ‘A letter to my pen friend’, ‘An afternoon in the
country,’ ‘My bedroom’ and ‘An invitation to a party.’ We were to read them
aloud around the class, she explained, then go through the comprehension
questions provided with each student taking a turn to answer starting with the
girl in the first desk in the front row on the left and continuing around the
class in a clockwise direction. I was to remember which student had been the
last to answer at the end of each lesson so that the following Friday I could
continue the answering circle. I was then to provide them with a short list of
useful words which I would find supplied in the teacher’s notes; they would
copy these, neatly please, into their notebooks and for homework they would
write their own compositions on the same subject.
I could do that! We could all do that! And that is exactly what we did.
Well, at least that is partly what we did. Despina had planned this perfectly
apart from one thing; we would always finish reading, answering and copying
neatly ten minutes earlier than the allotted 50-minute lesson time. And then I
would be back on my own resources again with a class full of
lively children. So there would be quizzes and games and calling out and
singing and even occasionally dancing; everything in fact that was not what
Despina had in mind.
And so I continued from October to May; trying to live up to my
employers’ fairly reasonable expectations and failing most of the time while
amassing a wall full of notes declaring adoration from the little girls and
drawings of space ships, cars and footballers from the little boys.
2 comments:
I love your stories and reminiscences, Jeanne! Makes me wonder (again) how anyone ever learnt any English at Greek frontisteria - but they did!
Thanks, Sue :) Yes, I know-a miracle really!! Just shows the resilience of children!
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