1.29.2007

Little lies...

Every Monday, the kindergarten teachers at The Hagwon are required to write a "weekly diary" for each student as sort of a progress report for the parents (most of whom can't speak English anyway). We are not allowed to be negative in the least with our comments, so what I actually write corresponds with something far different in my head...

Speaking skills are coming along. Your child continues to sound as if he hasn't used an f, th or short i in his entire life, despite the fact that it's his third year of English kindergarten.

Speaking will continue to improve as she gains confidence. Your kid refuses to say a word of English. Ever.

Enthusiastic speaker! Your little monster won't shut the hell up in Korean.

Initiating conversations in English. Asked me if she could go to the bathroom.

Improving understanding. Understands three English words: "playroom," "sketchbook" and "bathroom"

Good at picking out key words. Tells me every day is Tuesday.

A leader in the class. Your evil daughter controls the classroom with an iron fist and is without a doubt the biggest bully I have ever encountered.

Vibrant and enthusiastic. Finds staying in his seat akin to riding a bucking bronco. Eight seconds is about the limit.

No behavioral problems. Is only quiet when forced to stand in the corner with her hands in the air.

No major behavioral problems. Hasn't killed anyone yet.

Reads class materials with minimal prompting. Needs prompting on every word longer than three letters.

Beginning to pick up sight words! Can now read "I" and "a."

Understands the sound and usage of the letter p. Can tell a p from a w.

Able to add two-digit numbers. ...but still uses his fingers for 1 + 1

Solid critical thinking skills. Able to copy the answers off the board or her neighbor very effectively.

This goes along with the weekly spelling test grading scale. They aren't actually allowed to have any wrong answers on the test; we have to erase things until they get every word right.

6/6! -- 0 correct
Nice! -- 1 correct
Good! -- 2 correct
Very good! -- 3 correct
Great! -- 4 correct
Outstanding! -- 5 correct
Excellent! -- 6 correct

The kids are wise to that one, though. They're always disappointed if I don't start scrawling an "Excellent."

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very enjoyable reading. I was actually laughing at loud at your comment translations!

Anonymous said...

in previous comment: at = out

Elissa - Show & Tell Reviewer said...

I have similar thoughts on my report card comments. A few years ago we had a program that would let us type in our own comments regarding each student - now we have to use the "pre-packaged" ones. The result - "Pleasure to have in class" translates to "I can't think of anything else to say about your kid". "Participates well" means "talks too much", and "Is original and creative" means "will argue every last point and loophole on a test until she's blue in the face". The funny thing is that teachers everywhere know the code - at my niece's birthday party, I referred to her as "bossy" and her other aunt, a kindergarten teacher, immediately piped up with "Let's just say she has excellent leadership potential!"