26.2.11

Santa Marta Here I Am

So – a month later….in my site.



I live in Santa Marta, a mid-sized (400,000) city on the Caribbean Coast of Colombia. It is famous for a variety of things: the oldest city in Colombia and second in South America, where Simon Bolivar died and amazing beaches Parque Tayrona, Rodadero and Taganga. I live in a neighborhood, about 15 blocks from downtown – a half a block from where my school is. I live with a family; my ‘mom’ is a pre-school teacher, ‘dad’ works for the national parks and two kids, both of whom do not live at home. It’s a nice house – two floors and a small porch – in front of a football field that constantly blows dust into our faces.

The wind is very strong currently and the temperature is at about 5 degrees above comfortable.




In school, I work with 8 English teachers in two cycles – there are three school days for students, morning, afternoon and then night classes, and I work with the morning and afternoon teachers. There are varying levels of English proficiency – obviously with this most obvious in pronunciation and speaking abilities. For the past month, I have been observing classes of 6th-11th grade in the morning and afternoon (school ends at 11th grade.) It has been intermittently broken up by teacher labour issues, the Ministry/District of Education is a bit disorganized so still resolving those issues even though school started the last week of January. Also my school is resolving some of their issues due to a dramatic change in administration (principal/secretaries etc…)




In my free time, I have been to the beach a couple times, going out with my host sister’s friends, and teachers – seeing a bit of the other volunteers, there are 7 in Santa Marta and seeing more movies then I have for the past two and a half years (sadly this is true on both points, I saw maybe like three movies in the past two years and yes, I’ve seen three movies in the past month.



Another note – though no one in Colombia can explain their postal system and how their mail arrives to their house if it is sent from the US Postal Service, things have arrive in twenty days so that’s exciting. I still don’t know how I can send things back…without using DHL or a package service, which cost about $7 for a postcard, so don’t expect anything soon.


Overall – everything is just peachy and I am starting to teach with the sixth grade next week!!!

Miss you and come and visit – Marcy


For some reason I can't put the pictures where I want them....

11.1.11

WELCOME TO COLOMBIA

Welcome to Barranquilla – the home of Shakira…and 1.1 million other people. No, to be more serious, Barranquilla is the capital of the department/state Atlantico and the port city of Colombia, the birthplace of Colombian aviation, and the major tourist area of the Caribbean Coast.

I arrived January 3rd after a two and a half hour flight from Miami and a long trip from Missoula. The flight was uneventful and Avianca, the national Colombia airline, was just great. We, 13 other volunteers and I, were picked up at the airport by the Peace Corps staff and some Colombia 1 volunteers. It was a muggy 80 degrees and quite rapidly the sun began to set, 6ish. We are staying in Buenavista, a nicer area of Barranquilla in hotel for the next three weeks. Monday-Fridays 8-5 and Saturday 8-12

are spent in a room doing training. We can walk pretty freely around the neighborhood in our free time and there is a nice park nearby for exercise with even Colombians running there, very different from my experience in Paraguay.


Some background -

In 2009 former President Uribe invited Peace Corps Colombia back to the country after leaving in 1981, so a 29- year hiatus, with a specifc goal of English assistance and the hope of expanding to other areas as soon as we got established. Peace Corps is based out of Barranquilla in the Northeast Caribbean Coast, one of the four regions that were deemed: One, safe for volunteers and two, had population and support for the programs, ie Ministry of Education and s

chools. The initial group in September of 2010, was 9 Peace Corps Response Volunteers and we are the second of 14.


What am I doing?

Our training consists of preparing us with Teaching English for Livelihood (TEFL) workshops, and brief program, medical and security talks. The actual positions that

we are preparing for primary, secondary and teaching college positions – where we work with English teachers. The slight background is that Colombia, in 1994, nationally mandated that schools have bilingual education by 2019. What that actually means, in the case of what bilingual schools is that it can be any language where they teach in two languages more then the ‘language class’ but also math, science etc… The reality is that school started receiving support to begin this process in the 2000s and more achievable goal might be to teach a second language, encouraged to be English, in that language…so speaking only English class. Another aspect of the reality, as told to us as we have not been to a class yet, is that most English teachers do not speak English well or are still stuck in a grammer-translation style of teacher. That would be, dictation, reading and translating sentences/words without expanding on creation or production. I’m learning all sorts of new terminology.


The 14 Volunteers are from varied backgrounds, ages and Peace Corps experience. I am the most recent Volunteer since I completed my service a month ago and we have several from the 70s but most are in the past five years. Country-wise we have South America to Africa to Eastern Europe and teaching experience of 30s in ESL to me…ie little experience. Though my lack of exposure is making me a bit nervous, I will have great support from the Peace Corps Office and the other Volunteers.

Currently, we are just trying to survive the workshops and get out a bit to actually see a bit of Barranquilla. We will find out our sites (Santa Marta, Barranquilla or Cartagena) tomorrow but it is expected to be in the poorer areas of these towns, estrato 1-3 (economic levels 1-6, 1 being the poorest) with under funded public schools but with motivated and excited teachers! All of us will have host families either in the school community or one nearby and nearby other volunteers.


I am sure my reality will change a great deal once we finish training because we are in the protective Peace Corps bubble currently. But I am excited to find out what my site will be and what really Colombia is like.


Marcy


The photos are - a view of flying into Barranquilla, and the map on the airplane; A group photo from when we just arrived; A street view from the hotel; and our group swearing-in as official volunteers (we will do it again in a ceremony with our contacts.)