Due to upcoming holidays (the First of May and Victory Day on the 9th) and other end-of-the-semester full study schedules, this is my last full week of classes as I'm used to this semester. I can't believe it! But, I've never described my weekly class schedule to you, so you probably don't know what I'm talking about.
Here's the basic frame of my week of classes, listed in a fairly uninteresting format:
Monday: evening with some translators
Tuesday: morning with the International Management Studies group; evening with some other translators
Wednesday: morning with the first-year БТП students (with a major called "technological safety in the processes and production of the oil and gas industries"); then a hop over to the lyceum for some sort of class followed by English club with the lyceum students.
(Russian class for me with a tutor in the evening)
Thursday: morning to lunch with two groups of Public Relations students--I've had these students consistently for the entire year; evening with the university English club.
Friday: afternoon with the business students at MIBI, a business school.
Sunday: reserved evening for some students working on their language skills before heading to America on the Work and Travel program this summer.
With that frame in place, I also scout for some other classes to go to at the university or at Rostok, the elementary school. But, that's the basic, that's the routine, that's the schedule that gives my time here in Ukhta some sort of comfort in its order and consistency and familiarity. I like these weekly groups that I go to because I've been able to create a relationship with them (as groups or with some students, as individuals). I get to make more jokes and references with them and have a chance to see some progress in their speech, or at least in their willingness to talk to me. I mean, other groups that I go to can be good, too--they invariably ask me a bunch of interesting and sometimes very forward questions--but then I leave and possibly don't meet with them again.
So, thinking that this is my last week of this sort of time I've created for myself in Ukhta is not the smallest deal. It took me a while (I guess about 5 months) to finally get a hold of a schedule I am pretty comfortable with in a town that I feel fairly comfortable maneuvering in. Before this schedule, I was sometimes super busy and felt that I had no time to myself and sometimes I hung around, swimming in time. Basically, I couldn't find a balance. It's been easier for the last two months, being able to find more comfort in my time and space and place. Now it's time for a little more change (in the next few weeks) and then a lot-a more (in the next few months), but hopefully I'll be able to hang onto that comfort of consistency that I'm holding onto now.
Okay, time to get some color on the blog:
Here's the basic frame of my week of classes, listed in a fairly uninteresting format:
Monday: evening with some translators
Tuesday: morning with the International Management Studies group; evening with some other translators
Wednesday: morning with the first-year БТП students (with a major called "technological safety in the processes and production of the oil and gas industries"); then a hop over to the lyceum for some sort of class followed by English club with the lyceum students.
(Russian class for me with a tutor in the evening)
Thursday: morning to lunch with two groups of Public Relations students--I've had these students consistently for the entire year; evening with the university English club.
Friday: afternoon with the business students at MIBI, a business school.
Sunday: reserved evening for some students working on their language skills before heading to America on the Work and Travel program this summer.
With that frame in place, I also scout for some other classes to go to at the university or at Rostok, the elementary school. But, that's the basic, that's the routine, that's the schedule that gives my time here in Ukhta some sort of comfort in its order and consistency and familiarity. I like these weekly groups that I go to because I've been able to create a relationship with them (as groups or with some students, as individuals). I get to make more jokes and references with them and have a chance to see some progress in their speech, or at least in their willingness to talk to me. I mean, other groups that I go to can be good, too--they invariably ask me a bunch of interesting and sometimes very forward questions--but then I leave and possibly don't meet with them again.
So, thinking that this is my last week of this sort of time I've created for myself in Ukhta is not the smallest deal. It took me a while (I guess about 5 months) to finally get a hold of a schedule I am pretty comfortable with in a town that I feel fairly comfortable maneuvering in. Before this schedule, I was sometimes super busy and felt that I had no time to myself and sometimes I hung around, swimming in time. Basically, I couldn't find a balance. It's been easier for the last two months, being able to find more comfort in my time and space and place. Now it's time for a little more change (in the next few weeks) and then a lot-a more (in the next few months), but hopefully I'll be able to hang onto that comfort of consistency that I'm holding onto now.
Okay, time to get some color on the blog:
MIBI class and me on a field trip to the regional museum. Here we stopped at the Eternal Flame in town. |