Friday, April 27, 2012

How have your perceptions of disability and inclusion changed since completing the independent study on inclusive education and the field experience in Belize?

I dont think that my perceptions have changed, I feel that I am able to handle students with disabilities in my classroom better.  I feel that I have more tricks in my toolbox that will allow me to better help students.  I have learned during this experience that if students with disabilities are left alone and not helped they can become a distraction to others, and they can even develop anger issues from their frustration.  
I have a student in one of my classes that does not do very well, and I believe it is because he can not read.  When I walk around the room checking work and answering questions when I get to him he just asks if I will do his work for him.  He has asked me to do his work a handful of times and I wonder if that works in his other classes.  Are some of these students who do have some time of disability in the classroom being pushed through because they are having other people, even possibly teachers, do their work for them? 
I have always believed that if you push students to their full potential they will be successful, but I have really seen that here.  There are so many students here that dont have disabilities but they still need differentiated instruction and they will show what they can do if we just push them to do so.  

What strategies have you used to support children with special needs in your classroom?

Something that I have found to be very interesting in the high school is that there are very few students with learning disabilities because parents dont feel the need to pay for their students to go to school if they are not going to "get anything out of it".  The biggest issue I have noticed is that lack of focus with a lot of the students.  My strategy with those students is to constantly walk to room and tap their shoulder or have them work in pairs with students who are more focused.  I also try to mix up the activities so that students dont have the chance to get bored.  It is much easier to do that here because they only have 45 minutes classes. 
I have also noticed that there are students in my classes who still dont know how to read or they are not very comfortable with reading.  When I notice this I try to use pictures a lot to help represent any word problems and to circle the parts that we are focusing on.  
Another issue in the schools here is that some of the students dont speak English, and that is something that I dont know how to help especially since Spanish is spoken in most of the homes and even sometimes in the classroom by the teachers.  The teachers very rarely speak Spanish in the classrooms, but sometime they have to with certain students because they would not understand otherwise.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

April 16 - April 20

This was my second full week in the schools, and I love it.  I have finally gotten to meet the rest of my students because they were gone on a field trip the first week I was there.  I am working with a freshman class who are in prep classes because they didnt do well on their entrance exams.  I am also working with 3 senior classes who I have absolutely fallen in love with.  These kids are awesome! I am just helping with the senior classes because my teacher is pressed for time and she is really worried that she is not going to be able to finish the curriculum.  So I walk around and help students one on one and really get to know them.  I have been teaching in the freshmen class though! Since they are a prep class they are going at a much slower pace than the other freshman, and we are covering one topic in a 45 minute class that would take about 10-15 minutes in the other classes.  Something else that is really interesting here is that they separate the classes by grade, not by topic.  So in freshman math class you learn that basics of algebra, geometry, statistics, etc, and then in your sophomore year you learn the next level of the same topics.  My teacher, Mrs. Iris was joking that her students would be so bored if there was a whole class dedicated to just algebra!  The teachers complain that the students have no motivation to learn and they just dont care like they used to, but from my experience I feel like these students are way more enthusiastic than the students back home.  But one thing that I have learned is that teenagers are the exact same no matter what country you are in. 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Now that you have experienced the cultural heritage of Belize, what have you learned that gives you insight into the children and families you are working with?

Some that stuck out from the cultural heritage that we learned about on our inland trip what that Belizeans come from a culture where religion is everything.  In the ATM Cave we saw a skeleton of a young woman that was sacrificed by volunteered.  This lets me know that the students I am working with and their families are very proud and most likely religious people, and I need to be sensitive when making references in the classroom and when I make examples.  It also explains the crucifixes in the classrooms.  In one of the senior classes, there is a crucifix that is about 2 feet tall in the middle of the board.  Something that has to be noted is that these are the students classroom, and they decorate and they are responsible for what is in there.  So the crucifixes are not something that the school is putting there, it is something that the students are bringing into the classroom.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

April 9 - April 13, 2012

Last week we went inland to San Ignacio and it was great! We traveled all day Monday to get there and our methods of traveling were a serious culture shock for me. First we left San Pedro by water taxi which is a boast PACKED with people, and we rode that for about 2 hours.  We arrived in Belize City were we ate lunch and waited for a taxi.  We found a van that we can all fit in and it look extremely sketchy.  The van took us to to the bus station.  This is where it go crazy! The bus station was full of old school buses, and they are known as "chicken buses".  We had to wait in the station for about an hour until our bus was ready to leave.  When it was time to get on the bus one of the Grad Students Mike that is with us told us to RUN to the back that way we could trick the crowd and get on from the back.  We were squished up against the door and they opened it and there was a mad rush to the bus.  I sprinted to the back but so did half of the other people.  They were having to lift us into the bus where we had to fight for seats.  There was about 100 people on the bus.  I was really worried about it being stinky, but all the windows were open and it was fine.  We rode that bus for another 2 hours stopping every 100 yards to let people off and on.  That was exhausting.  
We finally made it to San Ignacio and we stayed at Rosa's.  San Ignacio looked more like what I was expecting a Central American town to look like. We were in the mountains and it was gorgeous.  You could see the houses going up the hills and there were little shops and houses everywhere. 
Monday was a very tiring day but it was totally worth it!  When will I ever get to say again the I rode a chicken bus through Central America again!?
For the rest of this entry I am going to just talk about the different excursions we did instead of going by days.

Caracol

Caracol is a Mayan ruin that was a huge city.  It was really cool to walk around and see all the different ruins and temples that had pasted the test of time.  Our guide Diego was awesome and very passionate about Mayan history.  I learned a lot about the meaning behind a lot of their temples.  The Ruler was the "meteorologist" and would  predict when the rain was coming.  He was able to do this because of the was they built one of the temples.  Depending on where the sun rose over this temple was similar to a calendar and would let him know when summer and winter solstice was coming. We also learned about their different beliefs.  When a child was born into a royal family they would tie a board to the child's forehead so the child would have a tall, flat forehead.  They would also tie a jewel to this bored that would hang in front of the child's eyes and would make the child be cross-eyed. Something else that I found really interesting was that the archeologists didnt uncover all the temples.  They left a lot of them covered with grass, trees, flowers and all sorts of wildlife because they didnt want to disturb the nature that was there.
After this LONG day at Caracol we went to the most gorgeous waterfall ever and went swimming!  We were able to jump off different ledges into the water.  I was too big of a chicken to do any of the super high ones because you had to climb up really slippery rocks and I was not about to do that.  I did jump off a medium one that was not as intimidating.  The water was really refreshing and was a nice change to go to fresh water after being in salt water for so long.

 

ATM Tour

This tour was through an underwater cave where many of the Mayan rituals were performed.  It was the second coolest thing I have ever done.  It was pitch black and we had head lamps on but for a long period of that the guide had us turn them off and walk through holding on to each others shoulders.  He was carrying mint leaves and it was amazing how strong the smell was in the huge cave.  There were some parts of the caves where you had to squeeze your neck through this really skinny part, and that was really scarey.  After about an hour of walking, climbing and crawling we make it to the main room where things were happening.  We learned about blood letting and that is where men and women would cut themselves and bleed on a piece of paper and then the Ruler would burn the paper in the cave, this apparently was a very popular method of giving back to the Gods.  The part that got me the most was this fully intact skeleton was laying in the back, and she was a human sacrifice.  I asked if this would be something that people volunteered for or was it a decision the Ruler made.  Martin, our guide, told me that it was always a volunteer and it was an honor for those volunteers. He also said that she was left in a way that made her look like she was dancing so she was not only giving herself but her talents.  That gave me goose bumps.  We hung out for about an hour looking at all the cool stuff and then traveled back for an hour.  The water in the cave was freezing!! I was ready to get dried off.

Crystal Cave


This was by far the coolest thing I have ever done! It was only Colin, Tony, Elizabeth, Diego and myself.  We had to hike through the jungle for about an hour to get to the entrance of the cave.  Then once we got there we had to REPEL down into the cave! Never in my life did I ever think I would do anything like this!  We went straight down for about 10 feet and then stayed on the line and walked backwards for another 15 feet.  People rarely take this tour because it is so intense.  Once in the cave we were in there for four hours.  The Crystal Cave is a dry cave so there was no walking through water but there was slick clay all over and some unsteady rocks.  We crawling up and down to get to the back of the cave which is a place called "Wonderland".  This cave was truly amazing.  Everything was pure white and sparkly.  There was stalagmites hanging everywhere and the walls were covered in minerals.  We could only touch what had been touched before and that was the brown spots because the oils from our hands would kill the minerals and keep them from growing.  It was the most physically challenging activity I have ever done!  Ok, back to Wonderland!  This place was the farthest back in the cave you can go, and the air was much thinner and that was what made it so beautiful.  I wish I could tell you more about this cave but until you see it in person you will never understand how beautiful it was. 
After the Crystal Cave we went to a Blue Hole which is a really, really deep hole that people can go swimming in.  It was really nice but we were all too tired to enjoy it haha.  Lets just say that it was a very quiet ride home that day.

The Belize Zoo 

The zoo was more like the wild than the zoo!  There are animals behind chicken wire basically, and some you were allowed to pet.  I think my favorite animal was the tapir.  That is the national animal, and it is really ugly but really sweet.  Another cool thing about the zoo was that we got to go inside a cage inside the jaguar's cage and feed him!  His name was Jr. and he could do tricks like doing a somersault.  He was really cool.  I got to see some really awesome animals.
  

Sunday, April 8, 2012

As you participate in the service projects, identify something you learned during your service week about the Belizean culture that you didn't know and that is important for you to know as a teacher.  As you start to recognize how cultural difference impact education and teaching, you can bring that awareness into your classroom next year.

The service projects that I have worked on this week have been working at a Easter Camp at the library, walking dogs at the Humane Society, and writing a child's book.  I feel like I learned the most from working at the camp, and had a great time while doing it.  Something that I learned during this week is how touchy and loving the children are here.  That is something that I had been told, but it wasnt until I witnessed it was it that I really understood.  As a teacher it is important to know that here it is allowed and even encouraged to physically interact with the children.  These kids want to hug, they want to ride on your back, they want to hold your hand walking down the street, and they really want to you to meet their parents.  I know that this will be different when working with high school students, but it is important for me to know how my students grew up and the relationship they had with their teachers in previous years.  
 

Friday, April 6, 2012

Day Sixteen: April 5, 2012

Today was by far the best day of my life! I know I have said that before in some of my blogs but today was a day I will never forget. 
We went to Rocky Point, which is where the land meets the reef, on golf carts.  It is only 14 miles, but because we were alternating between driving on the beach and driving through the jungle, it took about 2 hours to get there.  About a fourth of the way there one of the golf carts blew a fuse and we were stuck for a while.  We finally reorganized people on the golf carts and we continued on while one of the guides stayed behind.  On the ride we stopped and say Cuban “refugee” boats is the best way I can think to describe them.  People wanted to leave Cuba made these boats out of time and rubber and an engine made of pipes, car rims and tons of other things you find around the house.  If these people found their way to Belize and were discovered Belize had to send them home to an unknown fate.
Once we go to our location we threw on our snorkel gear and jumped in! It was a different experience than Hol Chan because the water was much shallower.  We saw a 4(ish) foot barracuda, a really big lobster and beautiful angelfish.  We also found conch that we would be eating later in the day.  I thought that I would a lot of conchs but I didn’t know what it looked like if it was alive or not and my guide quickly let me know that all of them I found were dead haha! Finally one of the guides took my over and was helping me decide if the conchs were alive or not.  (I finally found one and I got to keep the shell after we ate it but I am getting ahead of myself).  I did cut my leg on the reef and that doesn’t feel good but nothing could ruin this day. 
After we were done snorkeling and collecting conch we went to go bbq.  The guide made FRESH conch ceviche with tomatoes, onions, cilantro and tons of lime juice. (Remind me to tell you the story of what I ate when the guide was cleaning my conch… lets just say they wouldn’t tell me what it was until after I ate it.)   After that he grilled grouper and we had fish tacos.  I have never had better seafood in my life.  It was amazing to eat food you had just taken out of the ocean. 
At lunch I met Santiago.  Santiago was a local man that looks like he was been on the island his entire life and doesn’t intend on leaving… well until he met me.  He told me I was the most beautiful girl he has every seen in Belize, he liked the way I move, and that he wants to go home with me to Canada.  I told him multiple times that I am from North Carolina, which is in America, not Canada, but after a while I gave in.  Everyone was picking on me that I was never going home and Santiago and I would stay in my jungle of Belize forever.  He didn’t smell like someone that I could spend forever with haha!
After lunch we went fishing on the reef.  It was really scary because we had to wear our flip flops to keep from our feet from being torn apart by the reef. At that point I was too scared that I was going to be knocked over and stung by a ray so I couldn’t focus on fishing.  I did catch one snapper though!
The sun was going down so we finally had to head home and I am exhausted. I cant think of a time that I have been this happy and relaxed.  Today was truly the best day ever (just ask Jessica, I said that phrase about a million times!!)

Monday, April 2, 2012

Day Thirteen: April 2, 2012

Luis is the sweetest child ever!
This the first day of our service project week.  The library is having a three day Easter "Camp" where kids can go for four hours a day and do different Easter activities.  I worked the morning shift with Parker, Jessica, Kristen, and Elizabeth.  It was so much fun! There was 20 kids and they are between the ages of 7 and 10.  I felt out of my element at the beginning because we dont do these kind of activities at the high school level! I was really grateful for my elementary education majors today.  We started the day with reading the Easter Story.  The kids really love story time.  We then moved on to making "stained glass" crosses out of construction paper.  That took the most amount of time, and then it was snack time.  The librarian brought sandwiches and juice boxes for the students.  We ate outside and then had an egg race.  That was really funny to watch because the kids were running all over the place.  Then it was time to go back inside and we made Easter egg baskets out of paper plates.  After we finished up with the baskets it was time for us to leave.  
It was great to spend the morning with some local children, outside of the school environment.  These kids are at such a great age.  It was awesome to get hugs and to read books like "The Monster ABC's". 
 

What were you unprepared to handle in your assigned classroom and how did you respond? What strategies did you use to figure out what you needed to do?

The main thing that I was unprepared for was the amount of noise that was in the classroom.  The students are constantly talking, and that is not something that I am used to back home in the States.  Whats crazy about that is that the students and the teachers are able to still be productive in that environment.  At first I felt very anxious about how was I going to be able to teach if the students were not paying attention, but what I soon realized was that just because the noise level is high, that doesnt mean the students arent paying attention.  Once I realized that, my anxiety level dropped and I knew that I could use that to my advantage.  My main strategy for responding to this action is do lots of group activities to give the students things to talk about.  When I taught last week, there was group work during each part of the lesson. In the beginning of the lesson the students had to work out problems in pairs and then switch with another group and check each others work, during the lesson I was constantly asking question in a call and response form to let the students answer and feel like they are part of the class.  As a wrap up activity, I had a chart that had a bunch of blanks that the students had to fill out, and they could talk to each other and fill out the whole chart.  I think that is going to be the outline for most of my classes, have group work in the beginning and end, and have lots of call and response during the notes/lecture time so that way the students will talk like they usually do, but keep them focused on the math at the same time.
 

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Day Eleven: March 31, 2012

Excursion One: Snorkeling at Hol Chan and Shark & Ray Alley.
Thanks Dr. C for your great underwater camera!

Today was AMAZING!! We got at a catamaran named "SEAduced" and rode about 35 minutes out to Hol Chan.  The boat was really fun, they had bean bags, fresh fruit and drink for us.  Once we arrived to Hol Chan, we put our snorkel gear on and jumped in! Hol Chan is the break in the reef where boats can go in and out.  There was so many fish and SEA TURTLES! We had a guide that would swim deep down and grab different animals and fish to show us.  One time he went down and grabbed a green eel but it slithered away.  He pointed out a lot of plants and the coolest one was coral that was purple or brown depending on if it was sleeping or was awake and eating.  I tried to swim deep down but after four feet you and to be able to pop your ears underwater and mine were not cooperating.  It was the coolest thing to be so close to the reef and all types of sea life.  
After Hol Chan we went to Shark and Ray Alley.  We got back in the water and they threw lots of dead sardines in the water to attract the rays and the sharks.  I was kind of scarey but then they told us that they were nurse sharks and they didnt bite.  I was still nervous about the sting rays because I didnt know if you get hurt if you get hit by the tail or if they have to decide to sting you.  Our guide held a shark upside down to put him to sleep so we could pet him, and then he got a sting ray for us to pet.  The shark felt different that I expected, I was expecting it to be smooth but it felt more like a finger nail file.  The sting ray was smooth and kind of slimy.  It was really cool to swim with the sharks and sting rays.
After we were done snorkeling we sailed to Caye Caulker which is just a little island with a few restaurants and shops.  I bought a couple of prints that I cant wait to frame and put up and the wall back home. 
We finally got back to San Pedro around 5 pm.  We hurried upstairs and changed for the Miss. Isla Bonita beauty pageant.  This is a  beauty pageant/talent show where students of Isla Bonita Primary school can participate in the show and if they win, they get a scholarship for the following school year.  This show lasted from 8:30 (it was suppose to start at 6:30 haha) until around 11:30/11:45.  These little girls dance, sing, do fashion shows, question and answer sessions, and there is even a bathing suit session.  I didnt stay the whole time, but it was very very interesting.
After that we came home and passed out.  Today was slam packed but a lot of fun!

Day Ten: March 30, 2011

Lazy day :) We dont have school today so we are just hanging by the pool.  It is a really hot day so I have spent my afternoon in and out of the pool and playing spades.
Jessica and I are on a mission to find a coconut that we can drink out of, and we found it! It was not as good as I wanted it to be.  The coconut water was not very sweet and was kind of tart.  The meat of coconut was pretty bland too, but it was still fun to finally find a place to drink out of one. 
Tonight we are having dinner at Pedro's, they cooked spaghetti and lasagna for everyone.  It was sooo yummy!  After we ate the group of us got together and did a little team bonding by sharing our most embarrassing stories, and naturally Colin and I had the most stories to tell.  We asked Walter to share his story, and lets just say it is not blog friendly haha. We spent a little more time just hanging out together and slowly everyone headed to bed but Jessica, Parker and myself.  
We are the lucky few that got a photo shoot with Walter.  He likes to share his dreads and make it look like you also have dreads. 

Day Nine: March 29, 2012

Today was CRAZY!!! It was the last day before the two week Easter Break.  There was hardly any students in school today because there are now two field trips going on, and because a lot of students wanted to start their break a day early.  Today was also casual day if the students paid a dollar, and that just put fuel on the fire.  But, out of all this craziness it was an awesome day.  I was able to talk to a lot of the students more than I would have normally.  We played pictonary and charades in one of the classes and that was a lot of fun.  I got to pick what the students had to act out and draw.  As part of charades I said they had to be their teacher, Mrs. Arcs, and that was the funniest thing I have ever seen.  They were up at the board being goofy and putting their hands under their shirts to give themselves a belly. 
Pencil toppers my teacher made for her
students.
I also got to spend a lot of time talking with my teacher, Mrs. Iris.  She is great! She likes to have my opinion on things and likes for us to think of new ideas together.  She asked me to grade the test from 1E, and we made the key together and decided on the point distribution.  She has been teaching for 15 years, but still likes to have suggestions and fresh ideas.  
We ended school early to have an assembly to wish the track team luck on their meet this coming up weekend.  They called the members of the track team one by one to the stage and the whole school cheered, these students are very supportive of each other.
Tonight was a great time!  We ate dinner at Caroline's Cookin' and I had the Seafood Ceviche.  That was my first time with ceviche, and it was delicious.  It was full of conch, shrimp, fish and fresh chopped veggies including tomatoes, cucumbers and carrots. We then went to Thursday night trivia at the Road Kill Bar.  It was such a good time!  Our team didn't win, but we only lost to the professors team by a half a point.  Its always a good time when all twelve of us get together.

Day Eight: March 28, 2012

Second day in the schools, and this was a little smoother.  I knew more of what to expect, and I think the students are already getting used to me being around.  I taught my first lesson today and I think it went pretty well.  I taught the 1E math class.  What that means is that the students are in Form 1 (freshman) and they are group 5.  Each class is separated by Form, and by a letter so that there are more than four classes.   I taught students how to change percentages into fractions, and then we reviewed going back and forth from fractions, percents and decimals.  I found that the students seem to be comfortable with new material, but then when it is time for them to combine topics they get confused.  It was really exciting to be in this class because when I asked a question to the class I had almost all 16 shouting out answers, both right and wrong.  The students wanted to come to the board and show their work and they wanted to help their classmates.  I wish I could bottle up all the enthusiasm in these classrooms and bring it back to the States.  If we could mix the focus of the students in the States with the enthusiasm of the students here in San Pedro the educational system would be unstoppable. 
 I also was able to obverse Mrs. Iris in a Form 2 class.  They were reviewing for a geometry test for tomorrow.  She did an awesome activity where she put diagrams up on the board and gave the students the matching vocabulary words but all cut into little pieces.  The students had to not only make the vocabulary words would the strips they were given, but they also had to match them with the corresponding diagrams.  She also made it a race to see which groups could do it the fastest.  I really liked this activity because it really made the students think about the meaning of the vocabulary words. 
I have only been in the classroom for two days and I have already realized that sometimes technology isn’t the best tool in the classroom.  I feel like I spent so much time using technology during my 10 weeks in the States, when I could have done it without the technology and the students might have done better.  Technology for the sake of technology is a complete and total waste.  These classrooms only have chalk and craft supplies, and that is literally the extent of their supplies, but their students are still getting an education.  It has really made me think about the role of a teacher in the classroom.  The teacher is the GPS but the students are the drivers, and it doesn’t matter how snazzy the tools you use to get to your destination, all that matters is that you get there.
**Random story of the day: So the 1E class is the prep class that didn’t score very high on their entrance exams and they have a lot of character and even more class clowns.  Today a boy in class looked and me and told me that he was probably going to behave badly.  I asked him if he was acting badly now or if he was just warning me that it was coming.  He told me that he was going to try really hard to behave but he could make any promises.  Well he did his work and participated in class and never acted out until I was trying to learn names.  He made sure that he told me all the wrong names haha.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Day Seven: March 27, 2012

Culture Shock! Today was my first day in the classroom and it was everything I expected it to be and everything I could even imagine! My partnership teacher is amazing! She has a tough exterior but once you talk to her she is the biggest sweetheart! I got to observe her freshman class and this particular class is an experimental class.  They gave the incoming freshman a placement exam for math and English and the students who didnt do that well went into this particular class.  This class is the only class who gets math twice a day, but they seem to be a great groups of kids, they just need more attention than others.  Something else that is interesting about this class is that she shares it with another teacher.  One will have the class the first session and introduce a topic and then the other will spend the 45 minutes practicing what the other teacher introduced. It takes co-teaching to a whole new level.  I am with another class and they are the juniors.  That class is HUGE! I didnt get to get to know this class very well because they are so big and 45 minutes isnt that much time.
I am teaching two classes tomorrow and I am very nervous! The classroom management is so different that I feel like I am going to spend the whole time trying to get the students to quiet down and pay attention instead of teaching.  The classrooms can best be described as controlled chaos.  The teacher does their thing and the students do their thing and somehow in the end it all works out.  I am also nervous because even though this is a English speaking country there is still a lot of Spanish on the island and the students speak Spanish to each other and the teachers and I am afraid that I will not know what is going on. Even with all these concerns I am still excited to get back tomorrow.

Side note: Some differences between US schools and San Pedro High
  • the students stay in one classroom all day.  The teachers are the ones that change rooms, and there is one large staff room and that is where they keep their desks and all their materials.  The students are assigned a desk and that is their desk for the whole year and they are responsible for it so if they do group work they move their desks around they wont switch in fear that something will happen to their desk. 
  • When the students have detention or have in-school-suspension they clean the school.  They will sweep and mop floors! I really like how that holds the students accountable for their school.

Days Six: March 26 2012

Today was the first day in the schools.  It was a pretty uneventful day because the high school was being used as a testing site for the primary schools.  The test is used for the secondary schools to determine which students can go to that school.  On the island of San Pedro, there is only one high school so that test doesnt do that much for them, but it means a lot on the main land.  A high school can say that they will only admit students who get an 80% or better on their exam, so that pushes students on the main land to do as well as they need to in order to attend the high school they want.  Since the high schoolers are already attend their high school of choice, they didnt have class today.  Colin, Tony, Jessica and myself hung out at the school today to be there to help in anyway we could.  There wasnt too much for us to do but we still met some great teachers and students. 
After  we left school, we came back to Pedro's and had a meeting to discuss our days.  It was really interesting to talk to the primary interns to hear how their days were.  I can already tell that classroom management is the main issue in the classroom here.  That leaves me with a little anxiety about what tomorrow will bring.  Our meeting lasted about an hour and then we went to dinner.  We went to a place called Narry's, and that is probably the cheapest place to eat on the island.  I had two chicken empanadas and a tostada for one US dollar! Tasty and cheap... cant beat that! After dinner went to get ice cream and I got the coconut again :) So yummy! We met two little boys who were around the age of eight who go there to play at the arcade.  They were so cute and their favorite subject in school was MATH! Colin bought them ice cream and he has friends for life! 
I am off to bed but I am looking forward to my first real day tomorrow!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Day Five: March 25, 2012



Pretty quiet day on the island of San Pedro.  A few of us got up and went to breakfast at George's again, and it was just as yummy as before. Then we decided to go up north again which I really think is going to be a usual for this group.  The boys and I went on a bike ride to try to find some run-down resort thing, needless to say we did find it haha! Then we went back to Palapa's where we sat in some inner-tubes and relaxed.  Such a beautiful day, but not too much to report on.  We are going to Hurricanes for our official group dinner and I am excited about that. 

Day Four: March 24, 2012

Another laid back day in San Pedro, Belize.  Started the morning off with a delicious breakfast at Ms. Sara's Kitchen which has the best coffee on the island, or so I had been told.  Breakfast was a lot of fun, and we sat there and talked for about 2 hours.  It was a great time for us to share stories and get to know each other even better.  
After breakfast a few of us went out to Ramon's pier again.  That is quickly becoming a common hang out for us.  We snorkeled around the pier for a little while and then came back to Pedro's.  I learned how to play Spades and lost a couple of rounds to the boys haha, but I have gotten really good through out the day.  
We had a nice little break from the sun while playing cards and then we went on a awesome bike ride.  We rode about 40 minutes north to a resort and hung out there for a while.  They had great food and an even better view.  I could live on that pier for the view itself.  We swam out there for a while and I even saw a sting ray! It was about 3 feet across which apparently is small in sting ray world but was huge in my book haha :)  I even got to ride Walter's jet ski. Oh you dont know who Walter is, ok I will introduce him for you.  He is a permanent resident of Pedro's who does most of the handy work around the inn.  He is awesome!! The coolest thing about Walter is that he has been growing his dreads out for 21 years, so the are longer than I am tall haha.  He is so nice and will do anything in the world for you.  So when he pulled up on that jet ski and offered up a ride I knew I couldnt pass that up.  It was so fun! He was twisting and turning all over the place and he even let me drive! Dont worry mom, I was too chicken to go too fast.  
We had to leave one piece of paradise to come back to another, but we stopped and had homemade ice cream.  I had the coconut which was out of this world.  If I could pack that up and ship it home I would, it tasted like Belize.  Then we finished our bike ride and have been relaxing for the evening.  Being in the sun and riding bikes all day will really take it out of you.
So Im off to shower and to bed, love all of you! 

Friday, March 23, 2012

Day Three: March 23, 2012

I would rank today as being one of the most amazing days of my life.  I am never been so inspired and exhilarated before!!  
Yummy!!
 We started the day at George's having breakfast.  I have the "Belizean Breakfast" which included eggs with tomatoes, peppers, and onions, fresh sausage, toast, and watermelon, along with the most delicious coffee I have ever had.  We had a great conversation during breakfast about our educational beliefs and how different our experience over the next five weeks will be different than our past ten weeks.  The more we talked the more excited I got.
We left breakfast, and traveled through town and dropped off children's books to be donated to the local library.  She was very appreciative and I hope we get a chance to interact with the students who are going to benefit from the books.  After that we continued our LONG walk to San Pedro High School, the only high school on the island. Today was an "open day", meaning the school was open to the community and the students presented all sorts of projects and presentations filled with everything they have learned.  We were able to go in and out of classrooms playing the games and watching the presentations.  The students were so excited and proud of themselves, and that was so overwhelming but in the best way possible.  I feel that I needed to see students excited about their education, because you don't see that very often in the schools back home.  
Number game :)
Each room was a different subject and the math room was awesome!! We started with an activity that a young man showing us a cool number game where if you start with one number you can get back to a 3 digit number that was the number you started with and the other two is your age.  I would love to take this activity back home.  The next activity was "get the scoop on percentages" where you have to match the cone (fractions) with the ice-cream scoop (percentages).  The best part about the day is that the students explained each part of their activity to you and it really showed that the students knew their material.  I wish that I could put into words how awesome of an experience it was to be in that environment.  
After the high school, we visited one of the elementary schools. It was really cute, but the high school interns stayed back to keep the crowd down.  
Then we went to lunch which was another hole in the wall.  The food was amazing again, and I have decided that the burritos are so good because the shells are all homemade and fluffy.  If I knew how to make those I would eat it for every meal haha!
Tonight we are hanging out at Pedro's because there is going to be live music and seafood paella!
 

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Day Two: March 22, 2012

Breakfast :)
I slept so well last night, and I am ready to start the day.  Jessica and I went to breakfast at Island Buzz around the corner from the inn, and I had a breakfast burrito.  It was the best thing I have had so far.  The salsa was so fresh and spicy! We sat there and drank coffee and ate our burritos while we watched the local children ride their bikes back and forth to school.  

Looking forward to this!

The big thing on our to-do list today was to get a water jug to keep in our room so we always have something to drink.  The biggest problem with that is that we had to rent the jug from a grocery store and carry it back and up to the third floor, this is a problem because it is a 5 gallon jug and those get heavy!!  Since I bought the first one Jessica offered to carry it back.  That was a struggle, but we had a great laugh over it.  

View off the pier.  The water is so clear
and beautiful. 
Once back to Pedro's we met up with the group and we decided to go to the beach.  We went to Ramon's Resort and laid out on their pier and went swimming in the beautiful blue water.  It was chillier than I expected but it was still so refreshing.  There were fish all under the pier that you could watch.  We laid out there for about 2 hours and then decided it was time to get our bikes.  Peter was nice enough to get bikes for us to ride while we are in town, and trust me after all the walking we did, I am really grateful.  We decided we were a hungry for lunch and we wanted something from a cheap food vender.  We found a place out of the touristy side of the island and got great cheap food.  I got rice, beans, and stewed chicken and watermelon juice.  Yes ladies and gentlemen watermelon juice and it was AMAZING!  It was so refreshing in this hot weather.  After lunch we explored the island a little and then came back to relax.  This is our last "free" day for a while and we have not actually relaxed in ten weeks since the beginning of our internship... Time for a break!
Tonight we experienced the most outrageous thing ever.  We went to the chicken drop.
Rule of the chicken drop:

And the winner is... 96!!
1. Make a bet on one of a 100 square grid.
2. Bring in a live chicken.

3. Spin the chicken around 3 times.
4. Wave the chicken up and down 3 times.
5. BLOW IN THE CHICKENS BUTT!
6. Set the chicken on the grid.
7. Wait for it to poop and hope it is on the number you bet on.


Yes this is a real event, and they do it nine times (to nine different chickens, one would not be enough haha).
After the chicken drop we came back to Pedro's and went to trivia night at the bar.  We didn't win, but we had a great time and met some awesome people.


Good night everyone!

Day 0ne: March 21, 2012

So beautiful!
View from local plane, the ocean is so blue!.
WOW! What a crazy day!! I have been on an domestic flight, international flight, and a local puddle jumper.  On the flight from Atlanta to Belize Jessica and I met an awesome lady flying back home to Belize from New York, and she told us all about Belize, from a local's perspective.  She told us that "if we didnt go to Wet Willies we didnt go anywhere", but I am pretty sure Wet Willies is not somewhere I need to be haha!  We talked to her for the full 3 hour flight, and that got us so pumped to get here.  We landed and got off the plane from stairs letting us feel the Belizean sun immediately.  The weather is HOT but the breeze off the ocean makes it bearable.  Once we got to the island of San Pedro, we were put on taxis and our driver was so funny.  He looked at us and said "rock and roll" and took off like a lightening bolt.  I quickly realized that the main mode of transportation is golf cart, and that everyone has the right of way... pedestrians,golf carts, cars, taxis, bikers and even the stray dogs, so you have to be really aware of the road.
We pulled up to Pedro's Inn and was greeted by Peter, the owner, and got our keys.  Jessica and I took our bags to our room and got settled in.  We were all STARVING so Dr. C took us to a local restaurant called Estel's where I had a fish burrito.  It was so good! Everything about it was fresh and authentic.  With full bellies we walked back to Pedro's and put on our bathing suits and hit the pool.  We were too exhausted to travel much further. We finally were able to sit and relax and spend some time getting to know each other. 
Pedro's Inn aka Home Sweet Home


Our stomachs started growling again so we got dressed and headed to town.  We went to a place that the Consulate suggested and had the most delicious shrimp burritos.  We also tried papusas (spelling is questionable) which I would describe as corn pancakes that were filled with all sorts of goodies, we had one with beans and cheese.  The local food is AMAZING! 
Yummy! Shrimp burrito with coconut milk
After dinner we all came back to Pedro's and took showers and passed out.  What a great start to the most amazing experience of my life.