Monday, November 19, 2007

A Cautionary Tale for Achievers.

I was going to name this post "How to go to a job with no concept of it's content and put in a passable effort," but I think that title is too long. Also, you would then be disinclined to continue reading if you planned on always being prepared and giving 110% effort. Go away, over achiever.

This morning when my alarm clock went off (I wish I could download a clip of what it sounds like and insert it here.) I rolled myself into the shower so I could be bright and awake for my first teaching job in Japan since my last teaching job in Japan! Woot. Choosing an outfit was particularly important this morning. I was to be teaching two classes and hopefully making some important business connections among my students. I put on my black business pants-suit.

On the train ride over, I reviewed the schedule I had inherited from the last teacher, a so-called "Justin."
Hello Song - 5 minutes
ABC game - 5 minutes
running game - 5 minutes
clock game - 5 minutes
number pronunciation - 5 minutes
number song - 5 minutes
animal and fruit pronunciation - 10 minutes
color game - 8 minutes
goodbye song - 2 minutes

I could tell they ran a tight ship, but I'm no sailor.

When met at the train station by a lovely young woman I'm going to code name Mrs. Robinson, I asked how old these students were. I could tell by the itinerary they weren't the average middle-aged house wives. It turns out they weren't even the unaverage middle-aged house wives. They were one, two, and three year olds. Two things immediately came to mind:
1. These business connections were going to be very difficult to relate to.
2. I'm glad I wore my purple shirt. Maybe that will help them relate to me.

It turned out, they hadn't learned the word "purple" yet. So I didn't make any important business connections, but I did learn quite a bit:

- These two groups of toddlers were very well behaved.
- I learned the "Hello song," "1234567 song," and the "Goodbye song" (sung to the tune of the international hit "London Bridge").
- The trains are crowded in the morning outside Tokyo, but still not rush-hour-in-London crowded.
- The pants from my black business pants-suit sit too low (my undershirt kept popping out), I need knee-highs that will stay up, and a black business pants-suit is much too hot to play the running game in.
- When teaching a group of babies English, you cannot expect them to learn a lot. Trying to get them to repeat after you is as pointless as shovelling snow in a thunderstorm. You can however expect their mothers to learn a lot and teach their children later through repetition.

In conclusion, this day has taught me a lot about me. Mostly that I somehow always hop into this job thing without a parachute. Or proper jumping shoes. On the plus side, this has worked for me so far, if I count this time and last time. Now that I'm somewhat prepared, the thrill may not be there next week, but I think that this is the sort of chance all of us "Job People" have to face. Maybe I'll wear my green pants and purple shirt next time...

6 comments:

TallE said...

"Also, you would then be disinclined to continue reading if you planned on always being prepared and giving 110% effort. Go away, over achiever."

I think you are mistaken here for several reasons.

1. Overachievers are never disinclined to continue reading.

2. Since I am the only person who reads this blog (according to you, I make no claim to this distinction myself), there are obviously no overachievers here.

Also, since you want overachievers to "go away" wouldn't it make sense to entitle the post in a way to make overachieves disinclined to continue reading?

I can only hope that commenting on ever post does not constitute over achievement. In my opinion it is under achievement, if anything.

Thank you for your time.

TallE said...

Is proofreading over achieving? Not if it is done postpost.

TallE said...

Wouldn't want to leave three comments. It's unwholesome. Four are much better.

genny w/ a "g" said...

Acheivers: Beware! Always use caution!

"1. These business connections were going to be very difficult to relate to."
You know what, they're not. We run around, sing songs, and there is always an excessive amount of giggling. It is awesome and we totally relate.

"2. I'm glad I wore my purple shirt. Maybe that will help them relate to me."
Alright, the clothing really had no connection with the relatedness that I know of. What does affect my relatability however is this wonderfully non-regional dialect I seem to have picked up. That's right, I'm the next Veronica Corningstone.

TallE said...

Non-regional dialect? For shame. You should teach these impressionable 2 year-olds Pittsburghese.

TallE said...

slipping