Em in Asia!

My Experiences Living and Teaching in South Korea

January19

Walking to lunch a student (male) stopped to say “hi” to me, then pointed at his hair and said “Emily-style.”

Also, after class a student stopped to tell me, in English mind you, that he preferred my old hairstyle and with longer hair I was “a pretty girl.”

I don’t know if it’s because of my haircut or because they know me better, if this is what it takes to get students to willingly talk to me and say more than “hi” or “I’mfinethankyouandyou” or “TEACHER I LOVE YOU” then I’m going to start changing my appearance every week.

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 안녕하세요! My name is Emily Potosky and when I started this blog I had received a 2010 – 2011 F*lbright grant to teach English in South Korea.  I then decided to apply to renew my grant, so I am now staying in Korea until July 2012. This blog is not an official F*lbright Program blog, and the views expressed are my own and not those of the F*lbright Program, the U.S. Department of State or any of its partner organizations.

I graduated from the University of Mary Washington with a degree in Philosophy Pre-Law and Classical Civilizations, and found myself 3 months later teaching English at Sapgyo High School.  The town that I taught in, Sapgyo, is a small town of 12,000 people, an ”읍” (eup) rather than a “시” (shi – city), and though it was sometimes hard teaching in such a small town I really enjoyed the unique experience of being the first foreign teacher Sapgyo had ever had. I lived in Yesan county (예산군) which is significantly bigger (40,000 people) but is also considered rural by Korean standards.

During my second grant period (2011-2012) I decided to chang schools and I currently teach at Changpyeong High School which is located in Changpyeong-ri, Damyang County (담양군), Jeollanamdo. Changpyeong-ri, by the way, is much smaller than even Sapgyo was.

This blog is meant to serve as a reflection not only of being a Foreign English teacher in Korea, but also of living as a foreigner in rural Korea.