The cooking session happened about 2 weeks ago on a Saturday. The kids would be going to Australia (I believe it's somewhere in Victoria) for a year-long exchange program so they are learning how to make Japanese dishes in order to demo to the Aussies when they get there. The food was okay but I think the fact that there's this "home-made" feel to them makes them special. Let the photos speak for themselves...
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Interacting with the Japanese students
Because I don't formal teach any class, I don't often get the chance to interact with the Japanese students. The most frequent interaction is when they come over to our office during the cleaning sessions which happens almost everyday. Hence it's quite exciting to hang out with them when I have the chance like the 2 recent events, Cooking practice session for the 1st year students that are leaving for Australia next year and Walk-Day where the entire school takes a day off to walk 25km.
The cooking session happened about 2 weeks ago on a Saturday. The kids would be going to Australia (I believe it's somewhere in Victoria) for a year-long exchange program so they are learning how to make Japanese dishes in order to demo to the Aussies when they get there. The food was okay but I think the fact that there's this "home-made" feel to them makes them special. Let the photos speak for themselves...





Walk-Day happened last friday. It was a cold gloomy Friday. I was originally assigned to take care of 1H but all of them are so quiet and I wasn't in the mood to strike up a conversation so I pang seh them. I walked by myself for a while then I met the usual 1L girls. Lucky I had 3 lively girls to keep me company, if not I think I would have died of boredom and emo-ness. You'd find the 3 girls familiar. They're the same girls whom I took the プリクラ with.






It's 4:14 am I need to wake up in like 2.5 hours time. I have no idea how am I going to survive tomorrow.
The cooking session happened about 2 weeks ago on a Saturday. The kids would be going to Australia (I believe it's somewhere in Victoria) for a year-long exchange program so they are learning how to make Japanese dishes in order to demo to the Aussies when they get there. The food was okay but I think the fact that there's this "home-made" feel to them makes them special. Let the photos speak for themselves...
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