I remember my elementary school days being full of creative
projects and hands-on experiments. We watched butterflies emerge from cocoons,
constructed geometric kites, listened to stories read in character voices. We
turned the room into a paper Amazon jungle (surely a fire hazard), held silent
auctions of our old toys, feasted as Robin Hood and his Merry Men, made our own
story books. Of course, we also memorized multiplication tables, practiced
writing in cursive, learned all those basics. But it wasn’t only sitting and
listening to the teacher; it was learning through discovery and experience.
As an elementary and kindergarten teacher in a foreign country, I am witnessing firsthand just how varied the approaches to education
can be from culture to culture. As young as first grade, Thai students are expected
to spend a great portion of their school day sitting in a desk and being taught
lecture-style. From the age of three up through high school graduation, copying
and repeating are the standard methods for information transfer. Math, science,
English, students copy the answers off the board. It is assumed that they have
then learned said information. There will be a test. I hope you were listening.
Of course, the enjoyable part of school for most students is
all the extras – art, dance, gym, swimming – and the Thai school system has
those in spades. In this department, the Thais go far beyond, holding special
events, activities, camps, and holiday celebrations on a regular basis.
Over the course of the past semester, the classroom sitting
has been interspersed with more holidays than you would think could fit into
four months. Before Christmas, not a single week passed without some special
event or activity to prepare for a special event; since Christmas, we have had
two undisrupted weeks of class (though I, personally, have had at least three
classes per week cancelled to rehearse for a play for next week’s special
event); through the remainder of the school year, only one week has nothing
special or cancelled.
Between Thai holidays, American holidays, and school events,
the activities list is pretty impressive. So far we have had:
- A Halloween party -- a wonderful way to have first graders come up, hold out their hand, and say “Teacher, candy” or “Trick-or-treat” for months to come
- Sports Days – from football to chair ball to tug of war, plus a fairly impressive parade
- Three weeks of shortened days to prep for the Sports Days
- A field trip to the local science discovery center, complete with a busload of students dancing to Thai pop songs
- Loy Kratong
- The King’s birthday, which doubles as Father's Day
- Constitution Day – tinted with irony this year, as parliament was dissolved just days prior
- An open house for the kindergarten
- Christmas – literally weeks of activities and parties
- New Year’s Eve/Day – huge holiday in Thai culture
- Midterms – okay, not really an event, but definitely an interruption to regular classes
- Children’s Day – let’s dance, eat free ice cream, and drink free Fanta
- Boy and Girl Scout Camp – walking field trip, camping at school (for the 6th grade), lessons in knot-tying, first aid, crawling through tunnels, and generally getting prepared
- Teachers’ Day – One of multiple days to honor teachers, for this one school is closed. Best way to reward teachers for their hard work
Which brings us to this week, during which time everyone is
preparing for next week’s Open House. My January has been packed with
rehearsals of Snow White and Little Red Riding Hood, which my 63
first graders will perform for the evening portion of the Open House.
The only remaining activities are:
- The aforementioned Open House and evening Khantoke dinner for parents (traditional Northern Thai Lanna dishes in endless portions, shared among the table, while watching performances)
- Promotional Drive for CVK – literally a drive, as we foreign teachers join other faculty members in driving to other districts to hand out pamphlets and try to increase enrollment
- Valentine’s Day – the Thais love love. And they love giving gifts. It’s the perfect storm of a holiday
- Makha Bucha (Magha Puja) – Theravada Buddhist holiday celebrating the arrival of 1250 monks to listen to the teachings of the Buddha.
- Final Exams – the end.
Between all of the reasons to cancel class and the fact that
class is mostly spent zoning out while the teacher talks (even the best student
can only listen for so long), the difference between Thai school and American
school is stark.
Through the activities they learn how to become members of a team, how to dance, how to do craft projects, how to be a member of Thai society, but they do not necessarily learn how to be good students. After all, we were all, in some manner, taught how to learn and how to work hard. I have greatly enjoyed being a part of the Thai school system, but I think they could bring some of that spice and variety, seen so heavily in their activities, into the classroom.
That being said, fault them for what you will, but the Thais sure do know how to throw one helluva party.
That being said, fault them for what you will, but the Thais sure do know how to throw one helluva party.