The eightyfifth åsic- ”HALF&HALF” or Completely Wrong!

I don’t drink regular milk since I have a lactose intolerance. For my visit here in the US I had to make sure there would be something to replace my usual products with and today it was time to fill the fridge again. After we got back home I wanted to comment on ”milk” in general and since ”my” family here drink something that they call ”HALF&HALF” (a mixture of milk and cream as I understand it). I wanted to know what that was. So I asked…and they both laughed. I didn’t quite get what’s wrong, but i found out soon enough. They repeated what I said and I still couldn’t get it. I said it again, ”HALF&HALF”. Then they said: ”We don’t say that!” I couldn’t understand, because on the box it clearly says ”HALF&HALF” and that was what I said, over and over again. Finally I ASKED them what THEY said then… They said, too: ”HALF&HALF”, but their sound of the ”A” was as far from mine as the distance from here to Buckingham Palace! We all laughed and made fun of the different pronunciations and what would happen if you loudly would shout out in the store HERE, but with my pronunciation: ”Dear, please go and get some ”HALF&HALF”!!

My reflection is that if my friends hadn’t pointed out that we in fact used different pronunciations for the expression, I wouldn’t have noticed. I know that may seem weird to some of you, but different accents don’t ”bother” me anymore and I know my own accent is a strange mixture of different accents. A few people in school last week suggested I’ve got an Irish accent, which I enjoyed, since I have never been there… 😀

The eightyfourth åsic- Fika as an ice-breaker is never wrong!

There are many times I have marvelled over the word fika and how it doesn’t seem to have any translation in many other languages. Today was another of those times! 

This morning at the ”Sweden Day” at the school I visit I shared the concept of FIKA and explained what it is to the members of the staff. I was surprised that so many seemed to like the idea of FIKA and that made me think of a completely different situation some years ago. I talked to an American woman, who was married to a Swedish man.

This woman had learned by being in Sweden what fika was, and her idea of it was pretty much like the one I wrote on the whiteboard today (which I share above). As we talked we realized that the two of us had talked to Americans about the concept of fika, but in different parts of the country. I have only met people on the East Coast and she had just talked to people in California about it. Both her friends and mine had to some extent started to USE the word fika in the American English. What I now hope for, is for both the actual WORD and also the CONCEPT to spread across the continent. That would be amazing!

One of the teachers who had fika with me this morning, came back to the classroom after a while and asked me how to use the word in a sentence if he wanted to invite someone for a fika. So now, let’s spread it! There are different ways to invite, depending of the situation, but in English you can say like this if you like:

  • Do you want some fika?
  • How about some fika?
  • Are you up to some fika?

Fika can mean just a cup of coffee or tea, or it can mean coffee+ a sandwich, or it can mean coffee+a bun, or it can mean, coffee+ bun+ cake+cookies+ tårta, which is a Swedish kind of cake with no frosting/icing, but more likely whipped cream. The funny part is that fika also can mean ALL of the mentioned categories… There are really SO many different connections to the word in Swedish that it is very difficult to explain. Instead it is necessary to see the phenomenon as something ELSE, but ”having coffee”. It is a chance to SHARE with friends. What do we share then? It is not just the COFFEE, but thoughts, ideas, gossip, memories, jokes… Having a fika with someone is paying attention to that person, having a good time together with someone for a while. That is why I want the word to spread… So please, help me ”spread the word”… 😀

TILL MINA ELEVER är här en liten ”språkruta”:

Ska vi ta en fika? Hänger du med och fikar? Kom så fikar vi! Nu skulle det sitta fint med en fika! En slät kopp (= kaffe utan något fikabröd till) fika räcker! Vi ses på fiket! Vi hinner kanske med en språngfika om vi skyndar oss? Jag har fikarast mellan nio och tio varje morgon. Men jag brukar kvällsfika vid TV:n också. Stina kör långtradare och hinner inte med så långa raster, men ibland stannar hon på ett långtradarfik. 

 

The eightythird åsic- Uppe med tuppen!- Being an early bird!

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I have noticed that one good thing with travelling across time zones is that there is a good chance to change bad habits! 😀

I agree completely with the Swedish saying ”Morgonstund har guld i mund”

Generally I do get up in the morning and start my day, but I’m not really awake…Here, six hours after my regular time zone, I have decided to get up whenever I feel alert, although it’s not ”six o’clock” as usual… Today the hour I woke up was 5.30 and I didn’t mind!

 

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Yesterday night when I accidently woke up in the middle of the night, I got a snapchat from one of my daughters. I replied…although I was tired, saying ”it’s in the middle of the night!” HER snapchat was a very alert and neat pic of herself and her friend singing and playing the guitar at school and I thought: ”Oh, NO! Not NOW! I’m TIRED!” …but it also made me aware of the wonder of TIME.

I’d say TIME is a phenomenon human beings invented. My host HERE would say ”We (the AMERICANS) invented time!” … And honestly, since time flies, I don’t have time to do my homework and find out for real who ”invented” what we all refer to as time.

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I do however enjoy the many aspects of time that make a life worth living. What if we never had any sunsets? What if you couldn’t wake up an early morning in late May in Sweden go and get your Dalademokraten, and have a cup of coffee outdoors while letting the sun warm your face. What if you couldn’t catch a flight to the USA and try to leave the sunrise behind you? There is however one thing I don’t appreciate about the way WE adjust to time. I understand why we all need to do the daylights saving change of time but having said that, I must admit I’m probably the most tired person on earth when we change all our clocks in the spring. I am probably also the luckiest person next weekend when I get my reward for struggling every morning for several months. Kronblom might be TOO lazy, but he is for sure the caracter I think of, connected to the words ”lazy” or ”relax”.

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Here, during my visit in NJ, I have noticed that I do have a serious chance to give myself the treat of feeling alert at five in the morning! That’s amazing and I love the calm and relaxed morning I get in return for getting up early.

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The lunch break in Sweden is up, but here we haven’t yet started our day. When I get back from school this evening, my Swedish friends will be on their way to bed… I can now see why there is a slight problem finding decent hours to chat online with a person from another part of the world. Being here is being ”right in the middle of things” when it’s a decent hour on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean… I’d better keep that in mind when I get back home to Sweden again! It has been said many times in Latin, not quite as many in Swedish, but it is an important thing to remember:

Fånga dagen! 

The eightysecond åsic- Second Day in an American Teacher’s Hectic World

At home I don’t teach English, but Swedish as a Second Language. This evening I had the great opportunity to visit an adult learner’s group in Spanish at a College not far from where I am. The students were all taking lessons in Spanish, but volunteered to talk to me about what the conditions are for adult learners at this level in the school system. I found our conversation most interesting and will share their viewpoint with both my students and my teaching friend at basic level of English.

Earlier today I first met with a few children with special needs. I shared with them a few thoughts on what it is like to live in a country where we have monopoly money and a” fairy-tale-like” reality with a king…

I also had a chance to contribute with Swedish words in grade six while they were taking a Spanish lesson about furniture in different rooms of a house. Then I discussed with a group of eightgraders why so many Swedes left Sweden a hundred years ago.

I then had a nice and long chat with one of the teachers who has been a resident of Pitman almost all her life, apart from a short period down south. She told me all there is to know about the little town and I was happy to learn all that first hand, rather than read about it.

On Friday a few of the teachers have planned for a Sweden day, where the students will be getting a whole lot of information about Sweden, but also try some typical Swedish activities. I will contribute with a slideshow about Sweden and explain why the Dala horse is a symbol for  Sweden. The collaboration with an art teacher at this school also led to an idea where we let the kids know a little about how one can paint a typical ”kurbits”.

Tomorrow we’re off to Atlantic City, my teaching friend and I. We will study ESL as the NJ authorities wants it to be. I look forward to that very much. I don’t need anyone to rock my cradle! I am exhausted, but I’m having so much fun! Teaching is my life! ❤

The eightyfirst åsic- Learning Among Friends

My first minute at school in Pitman

 

Yesterday when I took a walk to the school where I will spend the coming two weeks, I was surprised to find a welcoming greeting outside school. This morning when I arrived for my first day there, I was even more surprised to find another sign welcoming me to my school visit. As if this wasn’t enough, I have felt overwhelmingly welcomed by each and every one of the people I have met in Pitman Middle School. Both students and teachers met me with warmth and generosity.

There are plenty of things I noticed that are different from what I am used to. Even if I now teach adult students, I can miss teaching younger students especially if I meet such nice kids as the ones I met today! Many of them were making impact just by being themselves in their regular surrounding. 

Both students and teachers I met today seemed eager to know more about Sweden and that made me happy. I had anticipated a more anonymous role in this school, but I am very, very happy that it turned out to be so interactive, because it makes it really interesting. I will thus have multiple chances to explore the very soul of this particular school and get a chance to understand the nature of the school system in NJ.  The many opportunities to share thoughts and reflections from my experience of teaching with my new friends in this school will be like a treasure to get back to later when there is more time. Now I merely need a good night’s sleep in order to be fit for what tomorrow may bring of new experiences.

Last time I visited a school in NJ I marvelled at the dress code. I then wrote in Swedish, but I have summoned up that text in English as well:

Miniåaseri – A slingback would kill me!

 

The eightieth åsic- Sharing teaching experience with friends abroad or from abroad

The coming two weeks I have the opportunity to join an American teacher in her everyday teaching routines.  I look forward to my two weeks in the NJ schools. I learn a lot by sharing experiences, note what is similar and what is different. Teaching is not at all the same if compared between different countries, not even if compared between different classrooms!

Several of my adult students are teachers from the start and when they meet me in the classroom they notice that a lot of things in my classroom differs from what they are used to in their own countries. When that happens, I always listen eagerly to what differences the students have noticed and then the student and I discuss what the different school systems have in common, too. Usually we  find that just getting a glimpse of something is not enough to draw conclusions from .

By speaking to teachers from Finland, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, China, Iraq, Somalia, Ukraine, Latvia, Kirgizistan, Russia, UK and the USA, I have been trying to get a picture of in what way there might be a difference from the Swedish school system on one hand and that of those mentioned countries on the other hand. By experiencing a school system first hand I learn more than by speaking. I hope during my stay here in NJ, that I will not only get a chance for comparison between the two school systems in general, but also a chance to talk to teachers and administrators. Hopefully we will all share good examples of teaching and instruction.I look forward to meeting new teaching friends.   If you like to learn more, please learn more in following ”åsics”! You are of course also welcome to read some of the already published texts.

The seventyninth åsic- Three different perspectives

Yesterday I spent eight hours between a young Indian woman and a middle-aged American man. The three of us were seated in the same row during a flight between London Heathrow and Newark, NJ, USA. We had very little in common, but made friends during the flight and talked about different aspects of life. Since we came from three different continents, three different societies, it was very interesting to share viewpoints and thoughts. We all had three different reasons to travel to the USA.

The young Indian woman was going to reunite with her husband after two months apart. The young couple were newly wed and had planned to start their life in the USA. Since they were both engineers and he already had a position in a company the three of us started to talk about HER options in her new country. The American man currently works as a lawyer in a big national bank on Manhattan and he travels frequently abroad to make agreements with other banks, companies or financial departments in countries worldwide. Me, the Swedish teacher, between the two of them, found it most interesting to learn more about possible futures for engineers in NJ or what bank lawyers think of life, at the same time as I was comparing their English accents. We were all three genuinly interested in each other’s stories, so it seemed anyway. Meeting people like that, sharing thoughts and ideas, is very rewarding, I think. It is a perfect way of learning, since you are doing it for fun and you are motivated, since you very much like to understand that other person. Sharing moments like that is important to me.

Det hundrade åseriet/The hundredth åsic- A Moment 22 for many teachers

In 1992, I started off as a class teacher of twelve-year-olds in grade six. My exam covered Swedish, English and the four different subjects that are called ”SO” in Swedish, i.e, Geography, Social Science, History, and Religion. I was supposed to teach grades 1-7 in the Swedish Compulsory School System.  In 1992, it wasn’t unusual for teachers to teach both subjects they were skilled for as well as subjects where they didn’t have any exams. In my case my first job as a teacher was a position as a ”class teacher” with both Math, Science and Art. You may think:

”So what? If you have graduated, it doesn’t matter what subject you teach!”

I strongly object to that point of view. It DOES matter! First of all you need more time to prepare lessons properly in subjects where you have no academical skills or grades. Secondly you may not find suitable examples for students to understand complex structures or important details. Students who need extra attention from the teacher in order to ”get it”, would be better off with a skilled teacher in Math, rather than a teacher in Swedish, who tries her very best.

A Moment 22

The subjects you love most of all, will be neglected since you need to make an effort and focus on subjects you didn’t even want to teach in the first place. The estimated time for planning of lessons will be up when you start planning for your own favourite subjects.

An ordinary day when you have planned all for today’s lessons and come to school early enough to have a cup of coffee with your teaching friends, you notice that your dear friend in the classroom next to yours is on sick-leave. You hope for her (it’s often a she!) soon being back, but you also realize that you will be the one to fill her position in class, ALTHOUGH you have a classroom filled with students, too… What can you do about it? Not much, really. Hmmmm… 55 kids instead of 27? What is my options for today’s teaching…? As I said, I had planned it all from the start, right? But NOW, I will have to just dump my own plan, and also probably dump my teaching friend’s plan, because I am ONE teacher with TWO classes… I HOPE that is history by now!!!

I taught in a school where our policy was to be our own ”subteachers” in a flexible system. Quality??? Excuse me… We didn’t discuss that topic much. It was more about money. But why wasn’t it just possible to find a teacher who would be in our regular staff as an extra resource? Money… Again… OK… Then if there is no way to hire a TEACHER…can’t we just find SOMEONE????

For way too long it has been possible for principals in Swedish schools to hire ”teachers” who lack the required qualifications for teaching. Qualified teachers have also for way too long been responsible for ”helping” those subteachers in their job, instead of  teaching their own students with high quality. But why complain? It can’t be that difficult to help a friend who know nothing about teaching, right? No, not if it would be ONCE or maybe TWICE, but if it’s the rule rather than an exception, then it’s not fair at all. It is unfair to the students, both in my class and in the class where the subteacher works. We are all losing focus from our ongoing learning proccess.

A possible scenario

You rush into your own classroom, inform the students that  you will have to start a lesson together with a subteacher in the nextdoor classroom and will be back soon. Then you help the subteacher to find books or material, tell the students to help the subteacher as much as possible, also inform the subteacher about students with special needs, such as diabetes or epilepsy. You also try to write a short list of important details, such as at what hour you take a break, when students leave for PE, or when lunch is served. In some schools there is a binder filled with ”all a subteacher needs to know”, but despite the binder, many subteachers may either not have time to read the information, or are completely new to teaching and have never been in this particular school. Sometimes they are 18 years old and lack every experience there is to ask for. You help this person the best you can anyway, because you know it will turn out for the worse if you do nothing at all. Luckily, many subteachers have been teaching for a long time and also know the students in a few schools in their local community quite well. Then the options for a win-win-situation is a lot better. OK…It’s time to rush back to your own class and start off what you had planned for! Guess what? The students haven’t started doing what you asked them to… Instead you need to re-start the activity and sometimes you will have a hard time getting every student’s attention again. When you finally think, ”Yes!” and your class seems to be focused again, you hear a knock on your classroom door… The subteacher needs more help…

The results for Swedish school children in PISA and other international tests have never been as poor as the last few years. In my opinion it is possible to explain the failure as a misuse of resources and a slow motion in change or maybe blame the many changes in our school system. When will there be time to focus on learning again?

I am happy to say that I rarely hear about problems like these nowadays. I am also happy to say that some of the subteachers I have been teaching side-by-side with were really nice persons who did a wonderful job. A certain blonde whom I tried to persuade to become a teacher, instead decided to become a nurse. The lucky patients know who I mean! 

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Etthundrasextiosjunde åseriet- Att finna sin gräns är att hitta en skatt! Del 1

Ur programmet PostkodmiljonärenSkrivet den 19/8 2015:

I efterhand vet man sällan hur man tänkte innan…

Jag vet att mina kunskaper om olika saker skulle uppfattas som tillräckliga i många andra situationer. Jag tror att dessa kunskaper tillsammans utgör det som kännetecknar en person som är ”allmänbildad”.

I det här fallet, när det gäller en tävling, så tror jag att jag redan har avverkat det jobbigaste momentet, åtminstone så som jag själv tänker…

I maj deltog jag i en casting i Stockholm. Man skulle under tidspress på tio minuter klara av att besvara 40 frågor med ett korrekt svar, för att därigenom komma i fråga för en eventuell uttagning till Postkodmiljonären. De 40 frågorna var verkligen av vitt skilda slag och skulle präntas ner för hand utan att man hade några svarsalternativ att välja bland. När jag satt där och hade besvarat de 40 frågorna kände jag att mina kunskaper skulle räcka tillräckligt långt för att åtminstone ta mig vidare till nästa steg som var en intervju. Dessutom var jag nöjd med att jag trotsat mina inre nejsägare och gett mig in i det här spektaklet.

Att jag gick vidare var en bonus och att bli följd följd av en kameraman hela tiden var också ganska roligt, även om det hela kändes surrealistiskt. När de 25 personer som gått vidare hade ropats upp och det stod klart att endast två av dem var kvinnor kände jag för första gången att det var speciellt att vara en av dem, med tanke på att flera hundra människor hade köat utanför ingången till Eyeworks lokaler.

Jag bestämde mig för, medan jag strosade genom ett soligt Stockholm i kvällsljus, att jag skulle unna mig något udda denna sommar. Jag bestämde mig för att besöka muséer, utställningar och andra kulturella evenemang och låta mina tankar resa i tid och rum, mer än annars. Jag bestämde mig även för att repetera en del av de gamla papegojkunskaperna vi alla har samlat på oss under skoltiden.

När sommarlovet började hade jag samlat på mig olika böcker, texter och googlesidor att läsa och sedan reste  jag en vecka i början av sommarlovet på egen hand till Stockholm för en museibesöksorige jag nog aldrig kommer att orka upprepa igen… Sammantaget, med facit i hand, så här långt (19/8) så tänker jag att jag har lärt mig mycket och att mina nya kunskaper dessutom är av sådan art att jag kommer att ha stor glädje av dem även efter denna TV-inspelning.

Efter inspelningen av den första delen av Postkodmiljonären:

http://www.tv4.se/postkodmiljon%C3%A4ren

så tänkte jag så här när jag kom ut ur studion:

”Nu har jag 150 000kr och jag har bränt alla mina livlinor i programmet, men jag har också lärt mig väldigt mycket om mig själv och att jag kan en hel del som jag inte trodde att jag kunde”

Efter den sista inspelningen, den som ännu inte sänts, har jag lärt mig ännu mer om mig själv! Nu vet jag att kunskap är lätt att bära och att det för min del har varit allra mest intressant att delta i min egen inre kunskapsprocess under tiden från maj och framåt. Till alla mina vuxna elever som ibland tvekar om lärande i allmänhet och lärande när man inte längre är purung, så kan jag ärligt säga att man lär sig saker lätt som en plätt bara man använder de metoder som passar en själv.

Deltagandet i Postkodmiljonären har berikat mig med insikter om vem jag egentligen är och vilken som är min egen inre gräns. Det har också gett mig en tro på kunskapen som problemlösare på ett mer generellt plan. Sir Francis  Bacon sa redan på 1600-talet att ”Kunskap är makt”

Kunskap är för min del åtminstone en alldeles utmärkt livlina för mig i just mitt liv. Att veta att något förhåller sig på ett visst sätt är väldigt belönande för själen. Att på samma sätt känna sin inre gräns och veta när man inte kan något, skänker också ett visst mått av tillfredsställelse. Dessutom kan man ju åtgärda just det senare problemet genom att lära sig det man ännu inte kunde!

 

Läs om mitt deltagande i Vem Vet Mest?

Etthundrasextiofemte åseriet- Jag har stoppat bomull uti örat!

Medgitarren

Nej, inte vet jag om det hjälper att försöka stoppa bomull uti örat, för att… ta bort nyheten om att Robert Broberg har dött. Han är en sådan artist som man saknar, som om man hade någon personlig relation till honom. Det har jag inte. Man förstår att tiden har sin gång och att vi alla ska dö en gång.

Jag var verkligen LITEN när jag fascinerades av hans robot i det barnprogram jag såg då… Sångerna satt som en smäck nästan omgående och de fyndiga texterna är förstås skälet till det. Han kunde få till det så att även det banalaste innehåll blev roligt eller intressant eller bara helt otroligt träffande:

Jag har en väninna som ofta tvinga vid bommarna här i staden och vänta och VÄNTA och VÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄNTAAAAAAAAAA… Till henne skickade jag en gång denna favorit:

Det är lätt att bli nostalgisk när någon går bort. I nostalgins namn plockar man fram det vackra och stämningsfulla och kanske vågar man sig på att lyfta något av det fyndigare slaget också. I den uppsjö av texter som Robert Broberg är pappa till, är det svårt att vara säker på att man väljer det ”bästa” eller ”finaste” eller ”roligaste”. Därför är det meningslöst att ens försöka. I stället vill jag lyfta tre musikstycken som betytt mycket för mig genom åren, men på helt olika sätt:

Vatten!

Att skriva en sång om Stockholms alla vattendrag, är inte alls på något sätt unikt. Det finns många i Brobergs sällskap som lyckats väl med detta. Sångligt är den inte helt enkel att sjunga, med sitt stora omfång och flera stora språng, men jag minns när ”Vatten” kom att det var en av mina favoriter när den kom på radion och att det kändes väldigt nytt med det där plasket som avslutar sången. Dessutom är det väldigt mycket bilder som förmedlas och för den som känner sin huvudstad är bilderna källor till egna minnesbilder och kopplingar till händelser man varit med om i de miljöer som sången beskriver.

En ganska stillsam sång som också anknyter till vatten är annars den fantastiska Båtlåt, som ju i sin briljans lyckas med att både handla om kärlek och om båtar…

Men utan att nämna alla brudarna, har man ju inte kommenterat Robert Brobergs speciella egenskaper och egenheter… Han var ju lite egen…men på ett ytterst positivt sätt…med sina tjejer… Underbara uppblåsbara Barbara eller ska vi kanske vråååååååååååla Carola? Jag tror att jag i raden av damer vill avsluta min hyllning till Roberg Broberg med Maria-Therese… Tack för de många musikaliska minnen jag kan knyta till det du skapat under ditt långa musikaliska liv!