I have now had three days of school.
Here are my observations:
1) French people have a much different
concept of time than we do. School is usually from 8:30 to 6:00,
which sounds like a super long time. Additionally, individual classes
are between an hour and 2 hours long – 2 hours is really long to be
doing anything, in my opinion. But here, in the lackadaisical
countryside, a 2 hour gym class (which I had yesterday) might contain
an hour or so of listening to the teacher talk about not terribly
relevant stuff and taking forever to explain things (not that I, the
stupid American, am complaining), half an hour of running, and half
an hour of changing clothes/chilling. So, while it is completely and
utterly exhausting to be at school that many hours a day, I highly
doubt that they do more things in the day than I did at Homestead,
especially with a decent loads of AP classes.
In France they also have lots of empty
periods where you just happen not to have class, not to mention an
hour and a half lunch. If this were at home, my studious friends and
I would spend our copious spare time doing homework. I know that a)
we're only just getting started and haven't done much yet, and b)
they have less homework in general because they get out of school at
6:00 pm, but still. I never would've imagined that people would spend
their two hour break just chilling with their friends, not even
talking very much. Just chilling. Boggles the mind. The busy Silicon
Valley girl that I am feels unproductive.
2) French people are bad at math. This
is, of course, blatantly false, as I don't believe different
ethnicities are significantly better or worse than each other (okay,
except maybe the Ashkenazim and Chinese, but there have been studies
to support that!). A better way of putting this sentence would be:
the junior year math class at Truffaut is approximately equivalent to
what I studied in 7th and 9th grade in
Cupertino. Algebra. At once it's kind of a relief because I could
skip all the classes I wanted to, not understand a word the teacher
said, and still ace all the tests just so long as I remember to
switch my commas and periods around. (In Europe, 5.2 = 5,2 and 1,000
= 1.000.)
Similarly, the other classes (which are
mostly science) don't seem too difficult either. In Life and Earth
Science we did mitosis, the classic looking at an onion under a
microscope and finding the different phases. In physics we did a lab
with projecting images onto a screen and measuring the distances
between light and lens and lens and image. The only class that really
scared me was French class, predictably.
3) French teachers, or perhaps just my
own, are predominantly male. I didn't even realize this until my
French teacher turned out to be female, and then realized how
surprising it was that all my other teachers had been male. Perhaps
it's because I'm in the science track, but I've never seen such a
high concentration of guys in teaching before. I don't even think any
of them are gay.
That's about it for the observations.
I've been following around a really nice girl in my class named Julia
(I'm changing all the names just in case they mind, because I haven't
asked). I don't know how much of a bother I'm being to her, because I
think I would probably mind if I were at Homestead and some exchange
student who didn't speak English very well tagged on to me for the
entire school day. But then again, she seems like a much nicer person
than I am. Also, French people think America is cool. On Wednesday we
came home for lunch, on Thursday I ate with my host sister's friends
who I don't like because they act very awkwardly around me and mostly
just try not to address me, and so on Friday I invited myself over to
Julia's table. Her friends are far more open and friendly. I knew one
of them already from hanging out on Thursday during our open periods,
and then there were a bunch of other small, cute girls with lots of
questions about the existence of cheerleaders, prom, etc. Of course
we cannot forget the swishy gay friend who talks too fast for me to
understand, but also has decent English. The first thing he said upon
meeting me was “I'm from New Jersey!” and I believed him. It was
only with the second sentence he said that I heard the French accent
and the groping for words. So they were all very nice and let me hang
out with them. One of them is acting as a guide for the other
American exchange student, who I met on Thursday. She's here with
Rotary, her name is Sarah which is next to impossible to say with a
French accent, and she doesn't speak a word of French. Eek!
Fortunately, most of the girls guiding her said that they like her
and like the opportunity to practice their English. Personally, I
can't imagine doing that in a million years. It would be like me
going to Russia, right now. How would I survive in school? How would
I bond with my host family, or express my gratitude? I am just too
independent to do that – it already grates that I am more dependent
on others now than I was before. So I feel bad for her, but it sounds
like she's having fun anyway.
On Friday, I missed the bus. I didn't
even do anything after class, it just goes really early apparently.
Seeing as I didn't yet have a cell phone (I do now!), Maman and I
were especially freaked out. Fortunately, my curly-haired guide for
the bus who was supposed to show me how it works convinced the bus
driver to circle around again for me. What a gentleman. So in the end
I got home, but it had already been a really long day and the only
thing I felt like was curling up in bed and sleeping. Then we went to
the faire.
I hate faires. I hate the noise and the
people and the smell of burned grease. I like roller coasters, but I
hate circular rides that make me sick. I hate not being able to
understand a word people are saying because it's French and there's
too much noise. I also hate being a spoilsport, so I tend to grit my
teeth and follow everyone else around. Let's just say that was really
not my favorite part of the France experience and move on.
It is now Saturday morning, which is a
mixed bag. Saturday is great, because it means no school. I like
school, but it's stressful. Morning is less good. It tends to be
morning and evenings when I feel the most homesick. I try to remember
that it's not really because I'm homesick, but rather because this
follows my normal emotional patterns – at home I tended to feel the
lowest about my life, school, etc., when I was about to sleep or when
I'd just woken up, especially for school. So when my dreams slowly
coalesce into an awareness of myself and I remember where I am, and
the homesickness hits me like a full-speed BART train, I just tell
myself the same thing I did in Sunnyvale. One day at a time. It'll go
faster than you can even imagine, if you just take one day at a time.
One of the things I miss the most is
being clever and knowing what to do. A lot of my identity is tied up
in that, and the fact that I really can't be that way here hurts. I
sound so stupid in French. Blech.
And that note was really not how I
meant to end this blog post. I'm having a great time and I really
like my family, the school, and the people I've been meeting. It's
all going fantastically. It's just hard, and very different. But
that's part of why I came here, too! I wanted challenge, I wanted not
to be bored, and I wanted to give myself a hard time so I could learn
and grow and change, since I didn't feel that I was growing enough in
my home environment anymore. Well, here it is. I got what I wanted.
And now I'm going to make the best of it.
Your complimentary French song for the
day is a French camp favorite that I was tickled to hear at the faire
last night: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHoT4N43jK8
Also, anyone who wants to help edit
college essays, shoot me an email or comment below. Thanks!
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