Mood:
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This is a traditional Japanese card game. It is called Hyaku-nin-ishu. There are probably other names for this as well. The main idea is that there are one hundred poems written by famous classical Japanese poets. Each poem is written on a card. The meter is 5-7-5-7-7-7 I think.
This is the kids version that i watched yesterday afternoon. I've seen a similar game played on tv with only two adults at opposite ends of a tatami mat. There are 100 cards spread out on a tatami mat (25 in each of 4 rows). The kids kneel around the mat. A teacher at the front "sings" a verse from one poem. The cards in front of the kids only contain the last 7 words, letters, or something. The kids have a lot of the poems memorized and before the first few lines of the poem are sung/recited the kids have identified the last lines. The concentration is intense as they scan the cards looking for that last verse. The first person to slap the card gets it and of course the one with the most cars at the end wins.
Friday, Jan. 30th
Friday night dinner at Poppies, a Balinese restaurant
My friend, Didik, whom i met at Japanese language classes is a waiter at this restaurant. Didik-san met his Japanese girlfriend in Bali while they were both working at a hotel there. Didik really wants to learn Japanese because so many of his guests in Bali are Japanese. It is very difficult to land a job in Japan if you can't speak Japanese. There are plenty of job openings for native English speakers, but English is NOT his first language. I think that he is very lucky to get a great job at a very nice Balinese restaurant in Osaka. This is a bit difficult for him though because he lives in Kobe and has to commute quite a distance for only about 4 hours of work. Well, the experience is really good for honing his Japanese. He is sailing past me in ability. Ah, well. He's younger and my old brain seems so slow at picking this language up. He has to speak Japanese at work while i am supposed to be speaking English at my work.
Anyway. I meet David and Connie and hop on a train after work to meet Didik in front of the "Biggu Manu" again. Hey, i've done this before! Didik meets us and shows us to the subway and to my surprise we end up at the same place as last Friday - right next to the Sony tower in downtown Osaka - another easy landmark. The Balinese food is so incredible. Everything on the menu is about 350 yen. It's all small servings but we order many different items. The spring rolls, deep fried prawns, curry, and Bali Hi beer are great. Fried bananas and ice cream top off the night. Ms. Hase joined us a bit late because of after-school meetings. It is great to visit with her. She is so good about filling us in with all sorts of cultural facts and she is such a dynamic, energetic person. The only sad part was that Didik didn't get to join us. He was busy working!
Thursday, Jan. 29th
Demonstration Lesson and Dinner Party with Masago staff
Every trimester it seems that there are two "Demonstration Lessons" at each junior high. This time my first grade teacher, Ms. Hase, had the privilege of doing this. Silly me, i volunteered to help out. We normally have 6 periods every day and on "Demonstration Lesson" day classes end after 4th period. The whole student body is sent home except for the two classes who will be involved in the demonstration. We have been planning this and practicing on other classes for a week. We've fine tuned it and are ready, i think. All the teachers and administrators observe these lessons. Parents are invited and teachers from other schools come to observe. My head teacher at Hamako is coming. My supervisor at the main office will be observing me. Oh, dear, i'm a tad bit nervous and so are the students. Ms. Hase, too, has a few butterflies in her stomach, i'm sure.
All goes well after we get the students to relax and forget that there are tons of adults staring at their backs and looking in the windows. Plus there is a video camera on us to make things a little more tense. I think the lesson goes very well and we are releived when it's all over.
While we were doing our lesson, one of our science teachers was performing his "Demonstration Lesson" as well. After the lesson, there is a meeting for us all to sit down and critique the whole thing. We get lots of positive comments and some constructive criticism as well. I can't imagine this happening in the states, but oh how I think it is needed. Blow open those closed classroom doors and truly evaluate in front of the whole world how well a teacher can teach. What a novel idea!
So it's time to celebrate. I'm allowed off a bit early to go home and change. Then i cycle to a train station close to my apartment and easily find the restaurant we're meeting at. This may be a repeat but... the dinners here (with a group at least) consist of quite an assortment of dishes. We enjoy some delicious sushi and sashimi (raw octopus, salmon, shrimp...). Along with the wonderful food comes 2 hours of unlimited drinks. We pay 2,500 yen (our principal has graciously contributed some money to lower our individual bills, how nice). Beer, saki (warm and sweet), and whiskey are flowing here. I have to be careful because it's a week night for goodness sake and i'm riding my bicycle home. What fun to relax and celebrate after such a tense week. I truly enjoy the camaraderie with this friendly, open staff.
Posted by maryinjapan
at 12:56 PM
Updated: Friday, 30 April 2004 10:05 PM