Monday, October 31, 2011

Special Important Message

To my absolutely LOVELY, FABULOUS, BEAUTIFUL American friends and family, 
Tomorrow (Tuesday) morning it is your mission to mail all excess Halloween candy (particularly Milky Ways, Butterfingers, Tootsie Rolls, Skittles, Milk Duds, etc., - but none of that nasty stuff - i.e. Twizzlers - nobody eats) to the following address:

CH 105
Cité Universitaire Bourgonnier
19 rue Lainé Laroche
49000 ANGERS
FRANCE
MERCI BEAUCOUP. Je vous aime. :)
 

Quick, boring update

Lately I’ve been bogged down mentally with concerns about the future, but I’ll spare you the details. It doesn't make much of a difference in anyone else's life but mine, really.

Just suffice it to say that things are going well enough, except for the fact there's a raging storm inside my head...again. Only this time, it's of veritable importance and legitimate concern - probably more so than ever before.

Still doesn't matter much to you, though.

Anywho - 'til next time, I suppose...

Sunday, October 23, 2011

This is how I spent my Sunday afternoon...

At Domaine de Pignerolle!
It's okay to be jealous. 

Musée de la Communication at Domaine de Pignerolle
Ta da!
The 'Château' de Pignerolle was constructed in the style of Petit Trianon at Versailles,
which is also known as the Domaine de Marie-Antoinette.





All the captions I considered for this picture simply don't do it justice.
We're taking the train. To where, I have no idea.

How I did NOT get to spend my childhood...
So I'm making up for lost time.
This is a very awkward picture of me. Oh well.
You get the point. :)
I wouldn't have pictures at all if it weren't for Lilian, so YAY LILIAN! :D

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

*coughsniffsniffcough*

La vie est toujours belle...

Except the fact that I've now got a cold.

There's your update.

(Yes. That's all you're getting after two and a half weeks of being MIA.)

Sunday, October 2, 2011

A la campagne d'Anjou

Today I went on an adventure that I had no idea was going to happen!

It started with lunch at the Caféteria at Espace Anjou (the big shopping mall in Angers). Nora, her husband Michel,and their son Sébastien picked up Lilian and me at the Cité at 12h30 and took us to lunch there. After eating, we went for a drive à la campagne (in the country) near Angers, where all of the MANY vineyards are. We drove through several small villages and I don't remember pretty much any of their names, except what I captured in photos on road signs. :) Between the small villages is where the Domaines usually are. One of my favorite white wines is from the Val de la Loire (which is the region where Angers is located) and it's called Coteaux du Layon. Well - that's one of the many vineyards we saw today, but there was actually a place to pull over and park there, so I got to take a look around and take a bunch of pictures!!!

I'm using a friend's SFR Wifi hotspot account, but the connection isn't very good right now, so I'll have to upload the pictures tomorrow or something. (For those of you friends with me on Facebook, I have already uploaded them there when I was connected earlier to the internet via the ethernet cable in Lilian's room.)

Here's one picture just to show you how beautiful it is. More to come!

Mootivational Cow aime beaucoup la campagne, bien sûr.
(Mootivational Cow likes the country a lot, of course.)




Saturday, October 1, 2011

A few pictures

Mootivational Cow in front of the Catho
rue Lainé Laroche, where the Cité Universitaire Bourgonnier is (that´s where I live)

Walking on rue de la Madeleine, on the way to the samedi marché

Part of the rail for the Tramway

A building that I should probably know the name of that is in Place du Ralliement, in centre ville

the Tramway! Pretty rainbow - me likey!

fountain in Place du Ralliement

random rue in centre ville

another random rue in centre ville

finding this condom machine right out on the street was...very unexpected.

Carousel in centre ville. I don´t think it normally goes there, just sayin´...

street in centre ville

Jardin du Mail, near the samedi marché

fountain in the Jardin du Mail

Jardin du Mail

Jardin du Mail

rue Bressigny, where there are LOTS of restaurants and hangouts for the jeunes. :)

busy busy busy busy busy

So now I have a bit of time to tell you about my first week. It was INSANE, but so very amazing.

I arrived in Angers on Monday afternoon. Mr Picot, who is from the International Relations office, and Mr Melin, who is the director (!!!!!!) of the CIDEF, picked me up from Angers St Laud about 15h45. I was quite surprised because I had only expected Mr Picot to be there. They took me to the Cité Bourgonnier, where I am living, but the acceuil was closed, so I had to hang out in the lobby for awhile until the woman returned. I signed some papers and moved in right away!

I had to go to Brigitte Le Bihan´s office around 17h30 to meet with her because she is my ¨Guardian Angel,¨ as Mr Atkinson put it, and coordinates classes and stuff with the lectrice d´anglais. She is REALLY, REALLY nice and I love working with her. We talked for a little bit about various things and she gave me a large bag with lots of necessities - a frying pan, silverware, a pot, a toaster!, and various other knick knacks of the sort. Then she drove me to the Cité to drop that stuff off and took me down to Carrefour City in Place de la Madeleine, which is the closest section of stores (boulangers, banks, etc.), to buy some groceries. After she dropped me off at the Cité, I pretty much just made dinner, unpacked a little, and crashed.

Tuesday, I had to start teaching already, but my first class wasn´t until 13h30. I had another class at 16h45. I went to the Catho early (about 9h30) to meet with Mr Atkinson, but I never was able to catch him in his office. I met with Brigitte again, where she told me more about my classes and took me around to introduce me to people within the IPLV. I ate lunch with Nora, one of the Spanish professors, and a bunch of other people from the Catho (many of whom are also professors in the IPLV, but some just work for other offices). I don´t remember what I ate for lunch though...

Anyway, during both my classes, I passed around the sign-up sheet for everybody to find their name and put their signature beside it so I knew they were in class. Then I told them only a little about myself because I wanted to make them ask me questions later (to force them to talk). After all, these are oral communication courses, so they have to get used to speaking a lot. I then asked each student to introduce her/himself and tell me a few things. Most of my students are between 17 and 19 years old. After everyone introduced themselves, I made them ask me questions to get to know me. At the end of each class, I asked them to tell me 5 or 6 topics they would like to discuss for the semester. Their answers were pretty expected - movies/TV, different American ways of life, etc.

Wednesday I don´t have any classes to teach, so I just kinda of went around the Catho running various errands, including talking to Sue, the AHA International site coordinator, whom I met the last time I was in Angers. Lilian and I went during the afternoon to walk a little in centre ville because I needed to buy a mobicarte from Orange so I would have a cellphone for people to contact me.

Thursday, I had to fill in for Mr Lewis, one of the English professors, because he was in the process of moving and couldn´t cancel things. His classes were all in the lab, so normally the students work on the computer, but since I didn´t do anything with that normally, I just made them talk the entire time. I decided the easiest way to get the students to talk would be to ask a general question and have them toss around Mootivational Cow to each other so everyone would have to answer it. IT WORKED LIKE A CHARM. I didn´t have nearly as much trouble getting all the students to talk to me. I taught his classes at 9h, 13h30, 14h30, and 15h45, and just asked them pretty much the same questions over and over. It didn´t get boring, however, because they were obviously all different students. I taught my own classes at 10h15 and 16h45, but didn´t use Mootivational Cow as much with them because I did the same routine I had done with my classes on Tuesday.

The classes (that are actually mine) that I taught this week don´t meet until the following week (so I will see each of my classes every other week). The classes that I will teach this coming week will meet again in 2 weeks. I hope that makes sense. So all together, I teach 8 of these same level classes (L1s, which are first years), but they alternate weeks. I teach 3 L2 courses (2nd years) on Monday afternoon (13h30, 14h30, and 15h45, I think), and I teach 1 L3 (3rd years) course on Tuesday afternoons (either 13h30 or 14h30 - I forget and I don´t have my planner directly in front of me). I don´t know if the L2 and L3 courses meet every week or every other week yet though. I also have an extraneous L1 course Monday mornings at 9h, but there are only 3 students who´ve signed up for the class, so I might end up trying to move it or have the students go into the same class offered at a different time.

I already have gotten my carte d´étudiant from the CIDEF. I have already spoken with Mr Melin about the placement tests and I don´t have to take the first one, and actually maybe not even the 2nd one because I won´t be taking the main language course, just electives. French-English translation fits quite neatly into my schedule (Monday evenings starting at 18h and Wednesday mornings from 8h-10h) and Melin is the professor!! :) The CIDEF secretariat wouldn´t give me a schedule for the courses though, because one of the ladies said I had to take the placement exam. I might end up taking another course, perhaps Histoire de France (because during the fall semester, it´s prehistory up until the Révolution, which I haven´t ever really studied) if it fits into my schedule. We shall see!

I feel like I´ve written a novel now, so I´m going to stop. I have SO MANY THINGS I could tell you though. Perhaps tomorrow I will tell you about lunch on Thursday, which was the day for Saint Michel and the little party-like thing we had, as well as going to the samedi marché (Saturday market) and walking around in centre ville.