Thursday, September 30, 2010
Passing Notes
L.O.L. is used, but more of in a mocking way
M.D.R. (Mort de Rire) is the French lol (I already knew this)
HiHii is the French heehee
HaHa is used, but not as often
^^ makes reference to happiness (I've seen this in the US, but I never knew what it meant)
A Completely Uneducational School Day
Of course, the bus did come while she was in the store. Thankfully, there were three other people standing in front of me to get on the bus, so I ran and deposited her bags in the salon and ran back quickly to get onto the bus. Once I was on, it started rolling, but the bus driver saw my bus-stop-buddy and put on the breaks. She was only half-way across the parking lot, so I told the driver to wait, jumped off the bus, ran back to the salon to the confused hair dresser with the bags in her hands, and back to the bus, where I gave the shopping bags to the old lady, who, by this time, had arrived at the bus.
English class was cancelled, so guess what? I had an hour of Perm! Yay! It wasn't too bad, though. I passed notes with Florine and her friend Cloe the whole time.
I can't believe that I actually got up to go to school for two hours of table tennis. That's the most rediculous thing in the world!
I've come to the conclusion that I like riding the bus. You know how a few weeks ago when I was having my bad day, I tried to sit in the back of the bus, but the seats were "reserved"? Earlier this week, in the front of the bus, Yamina and I sat across from two middle-schoolers. Yamina just so happened to ask them to maybe save us some seats every day. The following day, Heloise and her friend saved us seats across from them. Today, the two girls from the first day actually did save us seats! I was so excited! How nice of them, and how convenient for us! Unfortunately, Yamina was really late getting on the bus, so her seat went to a girl named Gloria.
Word One
yippy skippy
pencil sharpener
trash can
trash/rubbish
pony tail
pony tail holder/scrunchie
bun
braid
XYZ (examine your zipper)
eww!
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Eww
In TPE yesterday morning before beginning research, we decided that the question that we would answer for our project is "The economical house: dream or reality?"
I learned that the noise/word "eww!" does not exist here and that I get strange looks when I say it, even when something is disgusting.
After Francais and Maths, I really wanted to just take the noon bus and go home because I was feeling so poorly, but I didn't. I even think that there is a possibility that I got a twenty on my first quiz in Italiano. We were quizzed on personal presentations, present-tense conjugations, and reflexive -arsi present-tense conjugations.
Walking to the bus after class, I decided that I did not want to sit and wait for an hour for the bus to pick me up at 4h15. Instead, I walked so incredibly slowly that it took me a full hour to walk the two blocks to the bus stop that it usually takes me five minutes to walk. MLIA
Half of a Good Thing is Still a Whole Good Thing..
After doing a quick happy dance, I went back to bed and dreamed in English the rest of the night.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Yippy Skippy
Marie loved it and thought it was hilarious. So after going home and telling her parents, she went around most of today skipping randomly and saying "yippy skippy"!
I love the French!
The Delinquents
We also partnered in Espagnol to write a dialogue about what servant women discuss when the men are not at home. In addition to giving us the dialogues to write, Mme. Holbecq also gave us back a DM piece that we had written. She gave me a fifteen out of twenty. I looked at the corrections on my paper and then corrected her on some of my corrections. She took my paper and changed the grade to a seventeen. I'm a little happier about that, but I still think that one of the other two errors that she marked is correct and that I should have received at least an eighteen or nineteen.
Mme. Blondel never showed up for Francais. For some reason, though, the door to her classroom was open, so instead of going to Perm like we were supposed to, we stayed in the classroom and talked. (We're not allowed to talk in Perm.) Half way through the "class" someone changed his mind and decided that we should go to Perm. The supervisor was furious when we all showed up thirty minutes late.
Our teacher for Economie had warned us that she had a doctor's appointment, so she might be a little late, but we didn't wait for her as long as we had waited for Mme. Blondel. I don't exactly know why, but we did not have to go to Perm for this hour. Instead, I moseyed about with Marie. In the foyer Constant came up to me and made me speak in French so his friend could hear my accent.
I'm glad that Marie is smart and a high-achiever because she made a study sheet for something in Maths, and it helped me so much when I copied it! On the other hand, this means that I didn't pay attention to the lesson since I was preocupied, but it was just a review of the homework for the most part, and I had gotten almost all of the questions right anyways.
In Histoire-Geo the Mme. DeGroote got semi-off-topic to discuss WASPs. No, not the bee but White Anglo-Saxon Protestants. It's always amusing when a teacher apologizes for her accent. She really can speak English quite well, though.
In SVT (Sciences) Maximilien sitting behind me answered almost all of the questions asked by Mme. Castelain. Eventhough I didn't say anything, I can proudly reflect that I knew the answer to every single one.
Monday, September 27, 2010
Oh the Weather Outside is Frightful...
If it's that hard to guess, we are having our first fire of the year on the twenty-seventh of September!
The Potentially Bad Very Good Day
Wanna know a secret? We're going to be studying the song Papa Don't Preach by Madonna in English soon! No one else in my class is supposed to know, but the teacher gave me the heads up! Shhhh!
I did not understand anything at all that went on in French or Math. I was really excited because I totally got what we were doing in Math at the beginning of class, but then the teacher added so many wierd letters and numbers and symbols that she confused everything that I already knew.
Apparently there is a button to translate my blog into French! How cool! Nawel told me today at lunch. She also told me that she had showed my Facebook page to her mom who said that I was smiley! (That's my best translation for souriante!) Nawel also told me that she thinks I have a Colgate smile! She was very happy and bubbly today! I have no idea why, but I'm so glad that positivity is contagious! (At least it is for me!)
After lunch, Economy filled my head with confusing technical terms that made absolutely no sense whatsoever. By that time, I figured that today would be one of those days where all my classes would befuddle me, and I just had to take the bad with the good.
Mme. DeGroote began History by announcing that among the evaluations she had given (remember the test thing from last Monday morning), the lowest grade was a seven and the highest was a sixteen. (This is all out of twenty.) She came over to me first (I knew I had gotten the seven) and told me that she had graded me as she would any other French student. She then announced my grade in front of the entire class. I got a THIRTEEN!!!! I have never been so excited! I was sort of annoyed that she said my grade out loud (she said everybody's grade out loud), but I got over that quickly. I, the American student, did not have the lowest grade in a class that is not English! Yay! Yay! Yay! Yay! Yay! :)
The last hour Marie attempted to explain to me the math that we had done today, and I partially understood. Oh well, it's not like I'm going to use anything but basic Algebra later in life.
At home I showed Sabine my History evaluation, and even she said that it could have been the work of a French student!
I think I might know what my favorite subject this year will be.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
L'Arc-en-Ciel
Unfortunately, rain comes with rainbows, and it disappeared quickly onces the clouds rolled in over it.
Friday, September 24, 2010
Three hour perm
There was no class after Francais, so everyone went in to Perm. After that we had double hour Economie! The quiz consumed the first hour, and I learned upon entering the classroom that I didn't have to take it. (So much for studying...)
After lunch was Espagnol. Then I was supposed to have double-hour Histoire-Geo, but after waiting for ten minutes for the teacher, we decided that she was a no-show. Instead, Histoire-Geo was replaced with Perm! I had not brought anything from home to occupy my time since I had only expected one hour of Perm (during which I studied for Economie). So, for the first hour, I created the first paper-airplane that I have made since elementary school. I even drew passengers and named the company Ennui Airlines. It was pretty legit. During recreation, I gave it to Marie, and she gave me something that she had folded, too. Boredom bonding! We still had one more hour of Perm, but we went into a different room where we could talk, and Marie and Yamina worked on the DM for Maths (I had already done it) while we all talked and listened to the random guys from Terminale play guitar.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
La Chaleur
The first one is the French use of the word "funny". I get the feeling that my classmates have been taught the word "funny" in place of the word "fun".
The second thing is that today in EPS (P.E.), while playing table-tennis, mind you, every single person I encountered complained how hot it was. I can assure you that the gym was barely eighty degrees, if even that! I was the only one, for the first time in my life, not sweating! I guess it's a good thing that nobody here likes the heat since we do live in the north.
I'm still waiting for my winter coat to grow. Until then, I think I might curl up in a ball and hibernate, trying to soak up as much French using hypnopaedia. (Brave New World reference! Thanks, Mr. Glass!) I'm just kidding, by the way...
The Sous-Prefecture
I missed my stop. I don't know how it happened. One minute I looked out the window and the sign said, "Bibliotheque" (which is what I thought the stop before mine was) and the next minute, we were pulling into the train station. Thankfully, I stayed on the bus and fifteen minutes later, on the route back, the bus driver dropped me off in the correct location in front of the Sous-Prefecture.
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Merry Christmas to you, too?
Walking to the bus after Italian, I saw a man wearing either an army uniform or a really spiffy suit and a Santa Clause Christmas hat! He made me laugh.
Intelligence
It made me very happy.
Always the New Experience
The reason M. Polveche had picked me up from school was to take me to a Rotary dinner that we attended at seven. There were probably around twenty to thirty members attending (three of whom were women). I'm not really sure what was the subject of the evening, but I think it had something to do with notaries and a scholarship. At the end the former Director (Principal) of Lycee Saint Paul told a joke.
Here is the basic summary: Three grandchildren spent the night at their grandmother's house. When telling her goodnight, they were all naked. When she asked why they wore no clothes, they responded that nudity was the new pajamas. The grandmother showed her husband her "new pajamas" and he asked why she hadn't ironed them.
I am almost 100 percent sure that that has nothing what so ever to do with notaries.
Even though the Rotary meeting did not end late at night, I still spent the night at Hugues's in his daughter Sara's room again.
Monday, September 20, 2010
The Evaluation
Next, in English, there was a quiz. Apparently, I don't have to take the quizzes in English class since I'm an exchange student. This seemed a little odd to me, seeing that I had just come from taking a test. Hey, who am I to complain? It was just as well because I hadn't studied, and when I saw the quiz, there would have been two words that I would not have been able to translate. (I knew what they meant, I just didn't know the corresponding vocabulary words.) Oopse!
Amazingly, I understood Math today! Then Economy and History passed as usual.
Since I don't have class the last hour on Mondays, I sat outside in front of a pharmacy (the benches were taken) with Yamina and we did the majority of our homework. She definately helped shorten two hours into thirty minutes (without giving me the answers). Thank you!
Saturday, September 18, 2010
LV2 en Terminale
I learned in Sciences-Po this morning that cheesecake does not exist in France! I do not know how the people here can survive without cheesecake! In Economie my teacher asked me a question, and I answered it correctly! Today was my first day of my Terminale (Senior)Espagnol class! Thankfully, I saw a girl that I already knew in the hallway in front of the classroom named Sara and sat next to her. When I sat down, the teacher looked at me funnily, then smiled and made me stand up to present myself to the class. I asked whether they wanted it in French or Spanish. I endend up having to explain in both. I really hope I get better at switching between the two! I like this class so much better than the other! The environment is much more energized, and the students participate a lot more. They are also more inquisitive and friendlier. We also studied a text, like I did yesterday, but I retained much more information from today. I think I'm going to ask to see if I can skip Anglais (every other Saturday at the same time as Espagnol) since I already speak it to take this class every week!
Sabine, Christophe, and I went on a walk in the marais (swamp) today. It's beautiful but happily not very swamp-like since it has not rained excessively recently.
Histoires & Reves d'Artois
Friday, September 17, 2010
Are there Christians in the US?
Highlight number one of today: Nawel came up to me at lunch and said, "I recognized you by your ear." (She was referring to the one without the eartag.)
Highlight number two: While inspecting Nawel's ruler (it had cool circle designs on it), Pauline told me, "This is what we use to hit people," to which Nawel responded, "Have you ever seen a ruler before?"
Highlight number three: I realized the classroom in which I take French has lilac colored walls.
Highlight number four: My Spanish teacher asked me if Spanish was my second language or if I spoke it at home.
Highlight number five: Talking about Pastorale with Marie and her friends, Marie asked, "Are there Christians in America?" I said that there were and that I was a Protestant (no one knows any thing about Protestants other than the fact that they're not Catholic) and she then asked, "Are Protestants Christian?"
Thursday, September 16, 2010
My Mid-Day Thursday Bus-Stop Buddy
On the bus I saw some sketchy-looking guy roll a cigarette and throw it in the lap of the lady sitting across the asile from him. Off of the bus, I saw that she was actually smoking it. She also walked like a gorilla. I had to do a double-take to make sure she wasn't making fun of anybody near her, but she was alone and completely serious.
In English class we have moved on from Bend it Like Beckham to Bridget Jones's Diary. It's too bad that I haven't seen either of those movies. Oh, well!
I was hanging out with Marie during the end of the lunch period and one of her friends who I hadn't met yet came up to us. She kissed everyone in the circle, and then she held out her hand for me to shake. She was kidding but I thought she was serious because she knew that we don't really kiss that much in America. Apparently not because six minutes later I learned that she had had no clue that I was American. According to another friend of Marie, she's a fan of the US.
Double-hour P.E. was next. At least it was just ping-pong (I mean table-tennis because there's such a big difference). I started off at the third (out of eleven) table, got to the second, and ended at the fifth. It was so loud in there and the rules kept changing every five minutes, so I was lost and probably looking like a deer in the headlights most of the two hours. The P.E. class is comprised of my class and at least two others. I was surpised at how many people knew my name. I was not surprised that everyone knew that I was the exchange student who didn't know what was going on...
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Anybody want Thinmints?
I had two hours of TPE this morning. I asked Mme. DeGroote yesterday and she told me that I didn't need to take this class, but I went today to see what it was because I had nothing else to do. It is exactly what I thought DS was in the beginning. It's the year long project on any random subject that any student chooses. It actually sounds like fun (if I were an actual French student). DS, on the other hand, includes all of the tests and quizzes that I do NOT want to take. I guess that means I don't get any grades for this year! So much for having classes transfer... Anyways, in TPE (Travaux Personnels Encadres) the teachers, Mme. Blondel from French and Mme. Castelain from Science, gave us categories and we had to write any words that came to mind relating to the subject. I sort of enjoyed myself, but at the same time, I'm just as glad to be able to sleep in another day!
After that were French and Math. I hate it when I dislike a subject and/or teacher from the beginning of the year, but it's hard to like a class in which you're drowning. I'm most definitely drowning in Math. We got back the homework that Mme. Chanteloube gave us a week to do and that Marie had helped me complete and I still got a 7 out of 20! I wanted to cry. No one is supposed to fail the very first piece of work! It's supposed to be all review! Anyway, I didn't cry; instead, I decided that I would focus my energy on the language since that is the reason I came here anyway and not worry about Math. That will be the least stressful...I think.
Italian was better today. I think that I feel like I'm learning at least something if we learn a verb conjugation, which we did! Pauline and Nawel (Pauline's friend) even taught me a French phrase. "Hier, j'ai achete un grille pain," means "Yesterday, I bought a toaster." According to them, I should say this whenever someone tells me something that I don't really care anything about. How funny!
I had to wait an hour for the bus since Sabine can't pick me up Wednesday and Italian isn't on the regular school (bus) schedule. The old woman sitting next to me on the bench kept trying to tell me that it was only one Euro for the entire day to travel on the bus and kept going on even after I told her that I had a bus card and it was free for me anyways. I felt sort of badly for not paying particular attention to her, but I got over that when she left five minutes later.
It hasn't rained during the day all week! Today was a pretty good day!
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The Law of Attraction
The Bus Situation
Shattered
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Coques and Foques
Our next stop was to see coques (cockes/ the shell that's all over the US beaches). These coques were still alive, and I learned how to open the shells and eat one. It was not that bad actually; it was very salty, but that could have just been the saltwater. That was our last stop. Someone told me that there are foques (seals) at the beach, but we didn't see any. We went back to an area before the dunes and ate lunch and bonded over hugs. We all agree (save the Asians) that hugs are what we miss most from our home country.
Of course, after lunch I needed to go to the bathroom, and of course we were at the beach and there were no toilets to be seen. So, of course, I had to go in the woods. And, of course, I fell in a briar patch and cut myself everywhere. Lovely, just lovely.
You mean you actually WENT to school?
At one thirty Sabine dropped me off at M. Polveche's house and Hugues (M. Polveche), Ingrid Neumann (my counselor), Michael (the other American who goes to my school), and Asaki (a girl from Japan who speaks neither French nor English except for maybe ten words in each), and I piled into Hugues's car and headed to Baie de Somme. I took about two hours to get to the beach. We were the first to arrive, but soon after other exchangers and rebounds came. There must have been fifty of us; there were SIXTEEN different nationalities! There were: Argeninian, Ecuadorian, Venezuelan, Brazilian, Mexican, American, Canadian, German, Japanese, Indonesian, Taiwanese, Australian, Finland, South Korean, Malaysian, and Indian students. One of my goals for this year is to become a good name remberer. Almost nobody spoke any French once the first word of English was uttered. Everyone was astonished that I actually attended school today because they had all (including Michael) had permission to skip. Oh well! We completed a ropes course after two hours of explication as to how to do it, ate moules (mussles), and sang our national anthems. The trip was called a "camping" trip, but thankfully we slept in a gymnasium on the floor. Sabine and Christophe had provided me with a cot type thing that looked like a flat beach chair on which to sleep along with a sleeping bag. They had told me before that I could get a guy to help me set it up because it was hard to do. They told me that if Michael (Sabine and Christophe are his fourth host parents) didn't help me, they wouldn't feed him. Three guys had to help me set it up, all while the girl sitting next to me was asking me "What the heck is that, a tent?" Another guy said, "Those are freakin' curtins." The girl could not get over the fact that there were sailboats on them. "Look! She has sailboats on that tent!" We had a ball! French people cry when they laugh! It's called, "PLEURER DE RIRE!"
Saturday, September 11, 2010
The Aquarium
In Histoire-Geo we watched a clip of Charlie Chaplin because he appeared in a film that included aspects regarding the Industrial Revolution. In Histoire-Geo I learned that there is no Nobel Peace Prize for Math because Nobel's wife cheated on him and left him for a mathematitian. I think I had a sixth sense about that. I mean, why would I want to work hard at doing something when I can't even win a Nobel prize for it?
At seven o'clock tonight, Sabine dropped me of at M. Polveche's dentist office. We went to the Aquarium in Arras. I was so incredibly pumped because I LOVE fish and aquariums! Guess what? The Aquarium is the name of a hotel. How disappointing! On the brighter side, I met a lot of exchangers and rebounds (Frenchies returning from their year abroad). We had loads of fun and spoke mainly English. All I can say is that I'm so glad that I don't have to wear the French neon blue Rotary jacket! (not that mine is that much better) :)
Thursday, September 9, 2010
DM
"Failure is unimportant. It takes courage to make a fool of yourself."
~Charlie Chaplin
Grasse-Matinee Thursdays
In English class we read a small dialogue from Friends, the tv show! I was so excited! Sadly, the classroom tv didn't work, so we couldn't watch the episode. We wrote down synonyms and antonyms to English words, filling in the blanks and such. I at least felt helpful to Soumaya, who sat next to me and Pauline, Ophelie, Caroline, and Matine sitting around me. Someone (I haven't learned everyone's name yet) sitting across the classroom shouted that I had to sit next to him next class. Someone else asked Soumaya if she had just cheated off of me (which she didn't!) because that's what he would do. Following French, I had EPS (P.E.) for two hours. We did not actually go outside or do anything athletic, though; we just chose what we wanted to do for EPS and wrote out the introduction sheet. On the intro that we wrote, the EPS coaches asked us to write a paragraph about the difference between sports and EPS. The girls sitting next to me seemingly read what I had written and were astounded that I had not made any mistakes in my French. I, too, was astounded. For EPS the teachers gave us three choices. There were four sports in each choice. I ended up choosing the second choice of table-tennis (it's apparently the more athletic version of ping-pong), step (yes, like the stairmaster), accro (I think that's like acrobatics/gymnastics), and basket (basketball). I'm not completely sure because I wasn't paying attention the whole time, but I think that everyone also has to do a unit of swimming.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
My Not-So-Half Half Day
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
"J'ai une Grande Question Pour Toi..."
Some of the responses included:
- Drawing graffiti on the walls and denying it when the firefighters came.
- Dancing.
- Singing la Marseillaise.
- Sleeping.
- Pressing all of the buttons in hopes that the elevator would move.
Then I had Economie and Math. In Math class Mme. Chanteloube called on me second to go write a problem from our homework on the board. Uh, oh! I had understood the problem and had answered it correctly, but Americans answer math problems differently from the French, and my work was (not necessarily wrong) not 100% satisfactory. I felt like shouting, "I'm the exchange student from America! You're NOT SUPPOSED to call on me!" It wasn't so bad when a few students after me took thirty minutes to answer their problems, which were simple. In Histoire-Geo we discussed the Industrial Revolution. Whenever Mme. DeGroote started talking about the US, she would ask me a question or have me pronounce something in English.
During recreation, I asked Mme.Pruvost (the foreign exchange student coordinator) about my Spanish class. She said that the teacher was the one to change my class, and once she did, all I had to do was let her know. I also asked her to add an additional class to my list. I am now taking Italian on Wednesday afternoons after school!
My last period class was SVT (Sciences de la Vie et de la Terre) Earth Science. Mme. Castelain is nice, and I don't think the class will be too difficult. She is pregnant, and her baby is due in January. In part, I am happy that she is pregnant (because I love babies), but I'm also sad because she might potentially be my favorite teacher.
On the bus a girl from my class named Caroline came up to me and asked, (in French, or course) "I have a big question for you...do you watch Gossip Girl?" It made me laugh. Unfortunately, I had to answer in the negative, but she offered to lend me some episodes, so I'll catch up!
Tonight, I went with Sabine to what she called gimnastique. It really was just a beginner work out class for adults. Again, I was the only one under thirty, but I had fun nonetheless. At the end, all of the adults complained how hard it was. (It wasn't)