Friday, February 20, 2009

Feb. 20: Kwassui High School

After spending the night at the homestays, the Wilcox students made their way to Kwassui High School to experience a normal Japanese high school day.  Arriving at 8:00 AM, we took off our shoes and slipped on the plastic slippers that we encountered everywhere in Japan.  Then we headed towards chapel, the first event of the day.

Chapel was short -- three hymns and a prayer or two -- and halfway through the speaker introduced our group to the school.  As the chapel full of young Japanese high school girls giggled at us, we bowed, and then sat down and finished the service.  When the Kwassui students filed out of the chapel, we moved to the front, where Hirao Sensei had set up a large projector screen and projector.  We watched a cheerful video depicting the various components of a Kwassui High School education: English classes as well as the usual math, social studies, science, and literature; sports; dancing; camping; music; study abroad.  It was impressive.  Then we were off to classes.


The first class was English with Hirao Sensei, where we played some icebreaker games that had us laughing with his class in seconds.  In one game, we all sat together in a circle, with one person standing in the middle.  This person would say, "People who ..." and would add a qualifier, like "People who ate rice with breakfast" or "People who like chocolate."  Then everyone with that characteristic would have to switch seats, and because the circle was one seat too short, someone new would end up standing.



In another game, one student would read a sentence to the other students, who would look at the array of cards in the middle of the circle and try to find the card with the hiragana letter that starts the sentence.  Our Wilcox students and the Kwassui students were all diving across the circle in attempts to reach the right card.


Next was math class, where we followed a geometry lesson about the angles in triangles inscribed in circles.  Although the lesson was given in Japanese, one of our Wilcox students was able to solve one of the sample problems that the math teacher wrote on the board.


Then lunch, where we joined a huge crowd of Kwassui students eating curry with rice, udon, or hamburger meals.  Following lunch we were off to social studies class, a lecture on economics with a quick-talking teacher who managed to explain the demand-supply curves, the Meiji era, the effects of media, and the Wealth of Nations all in one lecture.  When he stopped once to ask students to solve a problem, three of our Wilcox students stood up to answer it -- two incorrectly before the third wrote the correct answer and bowed to the lecture hall with a flourish.


A third-year junior high school English class followed, with the youngest students we had met thus far.  We made origami again, this time with more complex patterns, and practiced speaking Japanese and English in conversation.


Finally our day was over.  You can read Kwassui High School's PDF report about our fantastic day here.  

We returned to Hirao Sensei's classroom to meet up with our homestay families, many of whom were in the same high school class that we had followed throughout the day.  Going home with our homestay families, we spent the afternoon with them, ate dinner together, and again spent the night at their houses.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Feb. 19: Nagasaki and Kwassui University

Finally a day of relative restfulness after our sightseeing in Osaka and Kyoto.  We woke early enough for a long train ride from Osaka to Hakata, again enjoying "konbini" convenience store onigiri (rice balls) along the way.


At Hakata, we found an udon stall that would sell us steaming bowls of udon on the cold platform -- we bought tickets from the vending machine next to the stand, handed the tickets to the women working in it, and they handed us a bowl of udon noodles in hot soup.  Since there were no seats, we ate next to the Japanese salarymen, standing at the counter around the stall.


After another long train ride from Hakata to Nagasaki, we arrived around 2:00 PM.  At the station was Sergio Mazzarelli, an English instructor at Kwassui University.  Hurley Sensei and Dr. Mazzarelli had run an online video and messaging exchange program, in which these Wilcox students and the Kwassui University students described aspects of their hometown or Santa Clara culture.  You can see Dr. Mazzarelli's webpage for this project here.  After this exchange, we were excited to meet our online foreign exchange friends in person.

By this time rain was falling through the cold Nagasaki air, so we brought out our umbrellas and sprinted from the train station to the Kwassui University bus waiting a block or so away.


The trip up to Kwassui University showed Nagasaki to be another Japanese modern, vibrant city.  Kwassui was founded 130 years ago by an American Protestant woman who wanted to provide Japanese women with an opportunity to receive an education.  Thus, the school looks similar to a university that might be on the east coast of the United States -- lovely, decorated cream-colored exterior walls with lots of old trees around it.  The students were all fashionable young Japanese women, who turned to look at this big group of American kids as we hung out in their common room.


Dr. Mazzarelli took us on a tour around the Kwassui University campus, a beautiful place with the highlight a lovely wooden chapel with an organ from Europe and an elegant, dark-wood lecturn carved by students a hundred years ago.

Our tour ended in Dr. Mazzarelli's classroom, where his college-level English students had set out some hospitable refreshments and were playing soft, lively pop music from a small stereo.


We spent some time speaking with these students, whose English was quite good, talking about the Nagasaki area and getting recommendations for restaurants and site-seeing locations.



You can view Kwassui University's news page about our meeting here.  Around 6:00, we said goodbye to our new friends and headed across town to Kwassui High School, where we would meet our homestay families.  When we arrived, Hirao Sensei, the Kwassui High School teacher managing the homestays on the Japanese side, called out lists of paired names.  With some squeals of delight, the students excitedly introduced themselves to their homestay families, and headed off for the evening.