Friday, August 21, 2009

cómo estai?

Hey there...Mom told me to blog and I'm not doing anything and it's raining outside so I guess I will blog. Not much has happened since I last wrote except that I've just been going to school. I've got all my classes and I'm registered. I have all my academic classes on Tuesday and Thursday and Mon, Wed, and Friday I have soccer from 10-11.20. I could have taken the class that started at 11.30 but I figured that having class at 10 was motivation to get up. I can get up at 9 anyway, so it's still like being able to sleep in, yah. Then on tuesday and thursday I have four class for 1 hour 20 minutes each. eek, long day. start at 10 and I finish at 7. I have fonética y fonología, la prosa de borges, my spanish grammar class (I was placed in advanced, the level between beginning reinforcement and superior, but I feel like the teacher is teaching us things that are a wee lower than what I jut did in my language prep program. oh well, it counts toward my major), then for two hours my culture of chile class that's 2 hours long. It's supposed to cover all types of aspects of chile including the governemnt, history, politics, economy, ethnic groups (indigenous groups), etc. Should be itneresting, it starts this next tuesday. Then in September my salsa class starts which is just one day a week for 1 hour 20 minutes. I'm exciteeddddd for that. It's through the school.

Hmm as far as school goes, it's been good. It's kind of annoying though, in my fonetics class, which by the way, the teacher has softened up big time. She's much nicer now and not so intense. Anyway, she speaks super fast so it's hard to understand her but I can still get the gist of the material and with the readings its ok. And in my borges class, I understand the teacher quite well, but the material, that is, the stories by Borges, are so hard to interpret, since that's what you do with them. They aren't meant to be taken literally and they are even hard to understand in the english versions. AND, we have our first exam on tuesday. Oh, great. woohoo, excited to see how that goes.

Chile has been, on average, a bit colder these last few weeks than when I first arrived. It's been raining on and off for the last week, thank goodness. It makes the air fresh, clean, and clear. Also makes for a nice clear and mostly smog-free view of the Andes the day after a rain provided it's clear outside. Last friday and saturday it pretty much rained all day and night, but sunday morning it was really nice outside. There is this big hill in the middle of the city that's called Cerro San Cristobal and there is a massive virgen mary statue on top of it. One of Maritza's roommates walked up it with me on sunday, it was pretty cool. Also am starting to understand my SLR camera. yea. I was a little preocupied with that camera so I forgot to take pictures of the view of the mountains with my digital camera, oops. I will go again though. It was a good wakl too, about an hour and 20 minutes to walk from my apartment to the talk. We took the cable-car/gondola thing down though, I don't know what it would be called in English. USed for sleep inclines to move people up, with a cable.

I also attended an orientation for the English Opens Doors volunteer program through the chilean ministry of education. I will be volunteering in a district called La Florida, which is in the far southwest portion of Santiago. They accidentally placed me on a day I can't go because I have class, but I already emailed the teacher that I will be working with and she just got back to me and said she is going to talk to other teachers at the school to see if they will need any volunteers on other days so I can go at least 2 days a week for about 3-4 hours every time. Basically we go to just assist the teachers in the english lessons, to public shcools only because they are at significantly lower levels than the private schools. That means that the kids in public schools are mosly lower-middle to lower class students and a lot of the teachers that teach english dont have proper ways of practicing their english or getting to attend conferences and so-on. So the volunteering is as much for the students as it is the teachers. Apparently the kids love it though, to have a university student from another country hanging out with them. I don't know what grade I will be with, but I think it's high school. It's rather convenient, the school is on the same metro line I take to and from school so I won't have to transfer, yeah. I hate transfering.

My spanish roommate Goizane moved out last friday and we got a new girl from France named Sarah. She is super nice and talks (yah! the other french guy never says anything). Pierre, one of the two french guys, is moving tomorrow to go back to Francia and then after that I dont know...there is no one lined up to move in because my landlord is doing her best to find someone who is not a native french speaker or english speaker. Nice of her.

As far as Chile and spanish goes, my understanding it getting rather good. Makes me happy. I'm also improving in conversing, lately I've been trying to tackle harder verb tenses...like, for example, saying something like this in spanish "I would have gone to eat with you had I known where the cafe was." This is the stuff that takes teh most practice with all the prefixes: he, había, habría....balh blah blah. Every day it seems like I learn a new Chilenismo, that is, chilean slang. It's crazy, the spanish they speak here. Granted, in school the teachers, especially our grammar teacher, tries to speak the most normal spanish, but it still gets out. They eat their "s"
's and often change verb endings in the 2nd person singular. example : estás=estai, vas=vai, andar=andai. Or tienes=tenís, conoces=conocís. hahah yeah, this is for you, Aunt Kathy. jajaja. And then there is the word "cachai." it's very casual, but chilean youth use it in the way that ditzy girls say "like" or "I was all..." It kinda means, " you got it" or "you read me" or " understand" but it gets thrown in there also in ways that people say right like in the sentence "so, i was going to the store, right, and then this man hits my car, right." Oh, and the word huevon or hueón. The most easy and common translation is "dude" but it can also be an insult like call someone an a-hole, depending on tone of voice and context. And for girls it's hueona, haha. And there is a verb for heuon, hueonar. Something on the lines of meaning that something is happening, going, moving, i ahvent really mastered the use of the verb yet. But, for example, i was using the microwave at school once and this guy came up and said "todavía está hueonando?" which kinda translates to, "it's still on/going?" I feel like I've been tackling the accent and trying to speak more like a chilean, because it makes me feel less foreign. Example, people always ask me what im studying and so i say "estudio español y biología" but when it's pronounced, i strive to say it like this: "ehtudio ehpañol y biología" there you go, i ate my S's. Therefore, "cómo estai" is pronounced, "cómo ehtai?" more or less, má o meno. (más o menos). There is a very very very tiny bit of S in there, hard to explain in wrtitin. But basically they disappear if there is a consonant following the S. If there is a vowel following the s, it's usually still prnounced. I spent a good amount of time deciding on this theory one day before going to sleep.

Okee dokee, I guess that is sufficient for now. Hope everyone is doing well!! Chau!

2 comments:

Mrs. M. said...

I have been telling your mom about this program in Chile that I have wanted to do since I found out about when I was in Mexico from another student who had done it and it is the same exact program your volunteering with. What a small world!
English Open Doors has variety of programs and it is the only one I have ever found where I wouldn't have to pay to participate, they actually pay a small stipend! Every year I think I will pursue it but so far I am always in school!!
You will have to let me know how it goes! The gal I met in Mexico that did it said it was incredible experience!
Thanks for all the school info, I really liked it!! Good luck on Borges, all he did was confuse me!!
I got the software yesterday and I will mail it Monday but I will send you a email to confirm it.
Keep posting!
love you
ak
ps-Mel moves to Austin today!

mom said...

Wow, I can hardly wait to hear your tutoring/teaching experience/ stories. Maybe I should send you teaching with Love and LOgic??? Haha