Tuesday, December 14, 2010

funnY Time

There have been many unique and humorous experiences while living cross-culturally here in Mongolia. In fact, it is kind of hard to think of them all and to narrow the list down to five. As sure as we post these we will think of something else funnier, but we hope that you get a kick out of these stories.


 At number five, this story doesn’t have much to do with living cross-culturally, but it was a funny part of our life last year. When we arrived in Mongolia, we expected to be living is a small and non-fancy apartment. We were pleasantly surprised to find an apartment larger than our last one in the States. It was also clean and very nice. However, the bed was another story. After walking into our apartment for the first time and taking stock of things, Joshua sat down on the bed. A rock would have been softer than it. We were blessed to have a bed with a Chinese mattress! Suffice it to say that we didn’t get a lot of sleep until we got a foam mattress to go on it. While that story in and of itself is pretty funny, what happened next was great! One night, after lying down, the bed collapsed under us. We got up and removed the mattress to find that the bed was nothing more than a frame of wood, wood that had dry rotted so bad that the hardware wouldn’t stay in the holes. We pieced the thing back together for the night only to have it break again the following morning. Then we got serious; we pulled out the duct tape! You would think MacGyver had gotten a hold of that bed after we were done! Sadly, our tape job didn’t do as well as we would have liked. After another collapse, we pulled the bed apart, put the rock mattress and foam on the floor, and slept that way for the rest of our time in that apartment. The real fun thing was trying to piece the thing back together before moving out this past spring. We got it together the day before moving and tried to sleep on it, but after reclining and hearing it pop, we quickly got up and slept on the floor one last time!

Number four also occurred shortly after we arrived last year. Within our first month, we took a car trip into the country to visit a very popular and important religious monument called Mother Rock. If you remember, we wrote a post about this event last year. After getting a ways out of the city, the roads stopped, and there were no buildings except for the occasional ger. The biggest event, aside from cows and horses in the road a few times, was meeting another vehicle. Since there were so few other people “out and about,” having the opportunity to chat with another passing vehicle was apparently an important social event. It was reminiscent of the time before cars when people would stop along their path in order to “shoot the breeze.” However, chatting was not the only order of business! Along with the absence of buildings was the absence of bathrooms. Not a big deal for those adventurous outdoorsy types! Not even all that big of a deal for us except for the fact that the social gatherings were the pit stops as well. In Mongolian thought, it is not the responsibility of the person taking care of business to get far out of sight but the responsibility of the other folks not to look. We were still new, this had not yet sunk in. Needless to say, it was a little unusual to look up and see several people taking care of things just a few yards away. It is also important to note that there was a serious lack of hide-behind material such as trees, and the wind was blowing very frigidly. I got one word, Burr!!

This was a purely innocent picture. I had no idea it included what it does until I picked it for this post!

Number three was one of our first interactions with a Mongolian individual. We, along with our teammates, were walking to the home of another country teammate and his family. We happened to veer off course and walk through a gas station. After turning into the gas station, we heard and saw a car zoom in behind us. We thought the usual, the guy needed gas; however, the car stopped behind us, and a young man jumped out and ran up to us. At this point in our time here, we did not know any Mongolian which was okay because he came up speaking English to us. Feeling a little accosted, we heard him saying, “You help me. I help you. We be friends!” He repeated this several times, and we could get little else out of him. I called the friend that we were going to meet and had him speak to the man. Come to find out, he saw Americans (we stand out) and wanted us to help him learn more English. In return for our language, he was willing to help us in any way we needed. This is very Mongolian. If I do something for you, you owe me. Free gifts are not usual. We said we would help him, so he gave us a ride to our friend’s house and stuck around for an English book study. Before it started, he left to get his girlfriend and brought her back, but for about half of the book study, he left her in the car while he was visiting with all of us. Jennifer and I met with him a couple times, but the relationship was short lived. He changed his phone number and stopped trying to contact us.

Number two happened less than a week ago. It was Saturday, and we were hanging out at the school where we teach our lessons. We had a little bit of time before the lesson needed to begin. Several students had arrived and were getting settled. I (Joshua) sat in a chair at the front of the class waiting to begin. In the moments of boredom before beginning, I was scanning the room. I stopped at a large sign hanging on the back wall. I had seen the sign before while in there for other lessons but could not understand the Mongolian on it. Out of pure curiosity, a desire to expand my Mongolian database, and to break the pre-class silence, I asked the students what it meant. I didn’t point it out though. I just asked “Could someone tell me what (insert Mongolian here) means?” I should have suspected that something was amiss when the students turned a light shade of red and started giggling. By the way, all but one of the students there at that time were female. I was oblivious, and Jennifer was otherwise occupied, unaware of my question. After a few tense moments, one of the students said something about the Red Cross. Believing that it was difficult for them to translate the few words I said, I took this response to mean that it was the motto of the Red Cross. That was wrong. Turns out, the four words on the poster on the back wall of the classroom say something akin to “Be safe and healthy, use condoms!” Can you say “Awkward!!” Of all the things I could have said in Mongolian to a classroom full of women!! The blood eventually drained from my face, and class began. Later, I realized that there was a condom package on the poster with wings like a dove coming off of it. You cannot make this stuff up!
The sign! A bit blurry, but you get the point!!

Number one on our list of funniest foreigner moments again includes me and our cat Jejeg Baatar (Mongolian for Little Hero). Last fall, we adopted a stranded kitten and added him to our family. Since we found him in our stairwell, we took him to the vet to have him checked out. It was cool but fine to carry him in a thin-walled cat carrier. The vet was only about a ten or fifteen minute walk from our house, and Jejeg did fine except for freaking out when we crossed the road (don’t we all!!). We were told to take him back in December to get some shots. December came, and it was about -20 degrees outside. Fearing that he would freeze before we got him to the vet, I had a somewhat brilliant idea. I put Jejeg in my coat! He was still small but refused to stay in one spot. All bundled up, we left our apartment. Aside from having a very unusual lump in my middle that was moving, Jejeg would occasionally stick his head out of the jacket by peeking up over the zipper. You can only imagine the looks that we got that day!! For one thing, we are foreigners. Most people don’t pay us any attention, but others will just stare at us for being us. For another thing, most Mongolians hate cats and consider them evil omens or spirits. Can you get the significance of this picture? A foreigner walking around with a cat sticking its head out of the jacket. After seeing a few looks, I refused to look at people until after we got to the vet. Jennifer got a kick out of it though! After getting his shots, I tucked Jejeg back into my jacket. Being the curious cat that he is, he refused to stay put in the lower part of my coat but tried to climb into my sleeve. We removed him, wrapped him in the pink towel that had also been in my jacket, and Jennifer carried him like a baby. The looks on the way home where of curiosity to see a foreign baby and disgust to see a white fuzzy face hidden in the folds of the towel. There was also the occasional meow now and then. I don’t think either of us where ever so glad to just get home. Usually we try to keep a low profile, but that was difficult to do that day!


Next time, we will share our four scariest living-in-Mongolia stories. Perhaps a little less entertaining, they will still be interesting and informative.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Mouthwatering Mongolian Morsels

The answers to the Mongolia trivia questions in the November newsletter are:


1) C. 13   There are far more horses and animals in Mongolia than people!!


2) True   The Bogd Han National Park which is just south of where we live was established around the mid 1700s. We have hiked and camped in this park.


3) B. 5,000 ft   Ulaanbaatar is just under 5,000 ft above sea level but the highest point is well over that!


4) A. Indian Jones   In case you didn’t know, Roy Chapman Andrews was the first Paleontologist to find intact dinosaur eggs and nests in the Gobi.


5) True   Though there are other “wild” herds of horses in the world, Mongolia has the only remaining truly wild breed of horse which has never been totally tamed and domesticated.


In this blog post, we are going to introduce you to some Mongolian cuisine! Prepare for some mouthwatering descriptions of some of the best Mongolian foods we have eaten. Feel free to drool a little, but don’t let anybody catch you because they might think you are going crazy!


There are thousands of restaurants in Ulaanbaatar. Some are big, fancy, and expensive. Some are akin to a more western dining experience. Some are Indian. Some are Italian. There is even one that is Mexican though we would not call it that. And surprise of all surprises there are not only Mongolian Bar-B-Q restaurants but there is also a Kenny Rodger’s Roaster, not that we can afford to eat there. Alas, the only thing missing is a McDonalds or Burger King. The most numerous of restaurants in UB are the guanzes. “What the heck is that?” you are probably asking. A guanz is a Mongolian cafĂ© of sorts. One can find all sorts of traditional Mongolian foods in a guanz. Most of the time, they are also very cheap. Thus these are the restaurants that we eat at the most.


A guanz is usually small sometimes in a building that doesn’t look very sanitary. Once you get by that though, the food is most often delicious and very affordable. While there are many guanzes around our apartment building, two have arrested our attention and patronage. They are located across the street from our building very close to our meeting place and the school that we teach in. Because of this, it has become a habit of ours to eat at one of them at least once or twice a week. When we teach a double workshop, we will eat at one of these places during the hour lunch break. Also, every Sunday after meeting we eat lunch there. We have frequented one so many times that we know the owner, waitresses, and the cook. It is fun to go in some place that often and know the people and they know you.


The most traditional Mongolian food that a person can get at a guanz is called Buuz. Buuz are like dumplings which have meat, generally mutton, and are steamed. Sometimes they might have cabbage or onion, but the traditional way they are made is with only meat and fat. The fat of course becomes liquid when the Buuz is steamed and remains that way as long as it is hot. Because of this, a fresh Buuz will be full of hot liquid, so you have to be careful how you bite into it.
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Besides Buuz, another traditional food is Khoshur. Khoshur is a deep-fried meat pie. Sounds good, right!? These are flat and a little larger than the size of your hand. They have less grease than Buuz and, if cooked well, are nice and crispy. They can also be found with potato, cabbage, or kemchi filling, all of which are very nice. One variety that we have never tried is the horse innards Khoshur. Not real sure if we will ever be quite ready for that one!DSC01815DSC01818












Another dish that is usually crispy is Bansh. Bansh are like Buuz but a little smaller. They are meat filled dumplings that you can sometimes find steamed but most often fried. Fried Bansh (pronounced sharshan Bansh) is usually drizzled with mayonnaise and served with a Mongolian potato salad and cabbage salad.
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Another dish that we like is called Tsooven.  It has chunks of meat that have been cooked in oil with carrots, onions, and noodles. The noodles are firmer than most Italian noodles and are more like Oriental noodles. The dish is usually a little dry and tastes even better with some soy sauce on it. Tsooven is very easy to make, so Jennifer has even made this a few times at home. We have also eaten this with a Mongolian family in there ger; however, that meal had a lot more fat than we prefer.DSC01811Random (11-25) 033












Paroshky is kind of like khoshur but the outside is made with yeast, so the breading gets thicker. Paroshky is not a native Mongolian dish but is more Russian. It is likely that Paroshky became popular during the years of close ties between Mongolia and the Soviet Union. Paroshky usually has meat, rice, and onions but can also be found sometimes with potato and peppers or sausage and egg. This is another one of our favorites!DSC01810DSC01807












There are so many other interesting and tasty dishes that this post could go on longer than you would care to read, so we will conclude our list of food items. You can see a few more dishes in the pictures. A good explanation of Mongolian cuisine would not be complete without talking about milk tea. Milk tea (called suuta tsaa in Mongolian) is perhaps the drink of Mongolia. It is served hot which is very nice when the temperature is well below freezing outside. To make it, chips of black tea are scrapped off a block into a pot of water. A large amount of cream, milk, etc. is added. Though it is called tea, the dairy aspect is the predominate element. Some people add butter or animal fat in order to flavor it, and salt is always added. The end product is creamy and salty with a hint of black tea flavor. Though this was not our taste last year, we have become very accustomed to it this year and usually order it whenever we eat at a guanz. We can get instant milk tea packets, but the fresh made stuff is by far the best tasting.Random (11-25) 026Random (11-25) 027












It has been evident this year that our tastes are changing. Things that we tried last year and didn’t like, we are trying again and finding that we enjoy eating them. Though we are not as extreme as Craig, the specific fats and greases of Mongolian food have actually become more appealing and tasty! Who knew!?!
Here are a few more Mongolian food dishes that we enjoy!  Hope you enjoy them too!
Next time, we will share our top five funniest foreigner-living-in-Mongolia stories! You won’t want to miss that!!

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Food, Food, and Various other things!

We also promised at the first of October to tell you about our grocery shopping. It may seem mundane, but anything done in an unfamiliar context is anything but mundane. In the States, we (or Jennifer) would jump in our car once a week and go to Wal-Mart and other grocery stores like Kroger or Aldi in order to get our food stuffs. We would even take coupons and watch sale adds in order to get the best price for the things we needed. Things are a bit different here. First, we don’t have a car to hop into in order to go to the grocery store. Second, there are few grocery stores as we would call them in the States. Third, we have never seen a coupon in Mongolia and sale adds, not to mention sales, for food items are extremely rare.
We have to eat, so we find what we need. While there are few conventional grocery stores, there are small convenience type stores all over the place. There is no need for a car since our main grocery store is right across the street. This has been one of our favorite places to shop for food and basic items since we returned in August. The picture shows where it used to be. It is now in the basement of the same building but with the same general layout as before. We have frequented it so often that the owner and most of the ladies who work there know us. It reminds me of a time when people in a community actually knew one another. Honestly, how many people do you know and see regularly when you are running your weekly errands? What we can’t find here, we can usually find at two other more traditional grocery stores which are about ten minutes and fifteen minutes walking distance from our apartment. These larger stores carry more import goods. If we have a craving for or need something that is less Mongolian, these are the places we go. One is between our house and Craig and Sarah’s house which is very convenient since we walk to their house at least once a week. This is also the store where we get our breakfast cereal! Yes, we have found a reliable and cheap source for imported breakfast cereal! The boxes we get are usually 750 grams which last a while, and at just over 4 dollars, they very reasonable even with our limited budget!
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There is another store that we go to often, the Eggmart!!! It is next to our apartment building all of a minute walk from the outside door. Guess what we get here? If you guessed beef, you need to think about it a little more. We get all of our eggs as well as chicken from this place. We can get both cheaper here than any other place we have found. They also have turkeys for a reasonable price. This year we will have turkey during the holiday season! Two were purchased for our all team holiday meal, but we got one for us as well. We love turkey, and it is not a popular meat in Mongolia. Last year, we were quoted $100 for a single turkey. The ones we got for the team meal were about $28 a piece. A little pricey but affordable!
9-30-10 032DSC01739Egg Mart Trucks

Occasionally, we need to go to a market. Two markets that Jennifer went to regularly last year are located to the north in the center part of town. Sometimes when we have to go into town we will swing by one or both of these places to stock up on stuff that we can only get there or that is the best price there. Walking into town has not been uncommon for us, but we generally take a bus. A third market is east of us. It is our least favorite market to go to, but it is also the best place to get certain things. The quickest way to get there from here is by micro bus, a souped up minivan that can usually fit twenty plus people. Needless to say, we try to avoid these except when absolutely necessary.

There is no guarantee that any of our regular stores will have what we need at any one time. Frequently, we may have to look around or do without. However, things here are much better than they were a few years back, as we have been told. Today, there are a lot of things available that used to not be including a wide variety of import items from Germany (we love the Germans!), Russia, China, the USA, as well as other countries. Many of these things are not only available, but they are affordable. Most food and staple items are regularly available, or if something is not around it probably will be in a week or two. It is certainly not the States, but we have nothing to complain about and are very thankful for the blessings that we have!

Next time we will tell you about our favorite Mongolian restaurants and food! Mutton and fat, there ain’t nothin’ better! (That is actually Craig’s opinion not ours!)



Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Ins and Outs and Back Ins Again

Life in Mongolia is progressing normally. Our workshops are on a regular schedule, we are getting accustomed to the homework grading, and it is getting cold. Though it is just the first of November, we have had several snows including one that has remained on the ground for several days. It is this time of year that we think of when we think Mongolia. This is probably the case because the majority of our time spent in this country has been during the frigid months. Mongolia doesn’t really seem like Mongolia if we don’t have to bundle to go outside or watch our step while walking so as not to slip on the ice and break something. This may sound sick, but we actually enjoy the cold. There is a beauty in the cold months that cannot be matched by the warmer months. Besides, the warmer months aren’t as entertaining, there is no ice!

As promised the first of October, we are going to give an update of our class structure as well as more information about the curriculum that we are using. As is to be expected, we have had several more students drop out of the program over the past month. Two of Joshua’s dropped because they were pregnant and did not feel that they could handle all of the added responsibilities of EXCEL. Others have quit because they are currently too busy, and some we just haven’t heard from. This brings an element of discouragement, but most of the students who began the program are working hard to continue.

We currently have twenty-five students still in the program. Craig still has his original ten, Jennifer has nine which may be eight on Saturday, and Joshua is down to six. It is understandable that some have dropped because EXCEL is not an easy course. Besides being required to attend at least one if not two three hour workshops a week, they must also complete a sizable homework packet every two weeks and be observed teaching in their classrooms by their supervisor twice during the semester.
We are in the thick of the semester right now as we near the mid point. The students turned in their third homework packet this past Saturday, and we have been actively grading. Each homework assignment is comprised of three parts: Methodology, Literature, and Listening. In the Methodology section, students must read a section about English teaching methodologies, answer ten or more questions regarding the reading and their own classroom experiences, and complete two classroom application activities. This all requires a great deal of planning and writing on their part. In the Literature section, students must read two chapters out of a literature book (usually simplified), answer a number of comprehension questions, and write half to full page answers for one or two deeper thought questions related to the reading. The literature book for this semester is a simplified version of A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. In the Listening section, students must listen to a short audio clip and answer twenty or more comprehension questions. To wrap it all up, there is a writing exercise in which the student is required to write one page about a particular topic and their thoughts, feelings, etc. The writing exercise is usually related to the listening topic.

The course teaching material is likewise split up into three sections: Methodology, Oral, and Listening. The semester includes several three hour workshops for each topic. The Methodology is considered to be the most important material because this is why the government wants us to teach the program. The topics vary but are all related to how each teacher can become more effective in teaching English as a foreign language in their classes. The Oral material focuses on teaching new topics while having the students listen and talk usually to each other. The underlying goal, at least as we were told last year, is to get all of the students talking as often as we can. This is also the principle that we are trying to instill in them as teachers. Language, after all, is a subject that one cannot remember without using. Listening workshops challenge student listening comprehension. There are other aspects of the course that are involved to some degree in all lessons, but for sake of time and space, they are going to be omitted at this time. Perhaps we will give some more detail at a later date.

This post will be continued in one week with information about grocery shopping in Mongolia. Stay tuned for the latest information from your very own Mongolian correspondents!

Sunday, October 24, 2010

A Sad Farewell

I appologize that this post is later in the month than I had anticipated.  Jennifer and I have had an interesting month, and I hope to fill you in on what has been going on.  We had an unexpected journey to the States, so I am not going to talk about our grocery shopping and class structure right now.  I will cover those things next time.

About one week before we returned to Mongolia in August, we learned that my Grandpa Milan Ruble was diagnosed with bone cancer.  It had spread throughout his body, and there was nothing that doctors could do.  The final assesment was that it was simply a matter of time.  This was very hard for us to learn.  Grandpa had battled with blatter cancer for some time before having an extensive surgery which removed several organs.  The aftermath of that operation was very hard on Grandpa.  It took over a year before he was back to the way that I remembered him.

We visited with him and Grandma in Missouri the week before he found out that he had bone cancer.  I will never forget that time.  He had already been struggling with illness and was weak, but he was still Grandpa.  He told us stories about when they were younger, many of them we had heard before, but we enjoyed them nevertheless.  Grandpa and Grandma visited three congregations with us and heard our presentation that many times.  They didn't mind, in fact, Grandpa said that he enjoyed hearing us talk about Mongolia and what life has been like.  They sat through the hour plus long slide shows at home and enjoyed them!  You know that they loved us!

It was very hard for us to return to Mongolia knowing that we may never see Grandpa alive agian.  After much consideration, we decided that when the time came for Grandpa to pass, if at all possible, we would return to the States.  Some said that he had up to six months, but we figured it would be less than that.  Grandpa was very tired from the past few years of struggle, and the cancer took its toll quickly.

The end of September, Grandpa was in and out of the hospital.  The first of October, it was determined that the only thing keeping him alive was his IV and medicines.  Knowing that death is not the end, Grandpa decided to be taken off the IV and let nature take its course.  With this decision made, we got round-trip tickets to return to the States for two weeks believing that he didn't have long left.

The day after arriving, we went to see Grandpa in the hospital.  He was very weak and in pain, but he was very happy to see us.  The trip was long and hard, but I will never regret going back.  It was such a joy to see Grandpa's smile and know that we had brought him such happines.  Both that day and the next, we were able to talk with Grandpa.  After that, he was so weak and frail that he was not able to do much of anything.  For the next week and a half, we watched Grandpa die.  This has got to be one of the hardest things that I have ever experienced.  Grandpa was always a big, strong, happy man; so it was very difficult to see him like that.  However, our Father saw us through everything.

Grandpa passed from this life to the next in the early hours of October 18th, one day after his and Grandma's 57th wedding anniversary.  We think that he was holding on for that.  Because he had lived on longer than anyone had imagined, we were getting very close to our return to Mongolia.  On the 17th, I had concluded that we would not be able to be there for his funeral, but He works all things out.  The funural was held on the 20th, and we flew out on the 21st.  Though it was a sad experience, I was very thankful to be able to attend Grandpa's funeral and honor him and his life.


Grandpa Milan was one of the greatest men I have ever known.  He had a strong faith, and he loved his family.  I would not be half the man that I am today apart from his influence.  I thank Him for the time that I had with Grandpa even though it seems all too short now.


In Memory of Grandpa Milan Ruble
1936 - 2010

You will never be forgotten.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Another Month in Mongolia

This one is a little long, but we wanted to fill in some more details of what is going on around here.

One month after we got here last year, we were still feeling lost. We couldn’t speak any Mongolian, and we were definitely feeling the culture shock. Living life drastically changed in a short amount of time. However, thanks to that time and those experiences, we have been able to readjust to our life in Mongolia well. Our Mongolian may not be great, but we can communicate in many situations. We still don’t know everything, but we know a lot more than we did. We don’t have a lot of friends, but we have way more than we use to. Everything comes in its proper time.

9-27-10 005As promised in our last big post, we are going to tell about our current team situation, our training time, and our schedule.

Last year, we came in at the same time as another couple. It was the first year for all of us. IMG_0234Together we learned, made mistakes, had things stolen from us, laughed, and cried. At this time, they are expecting a baby, so they have chosen to remain in the States until after their baby is born. In returning to Mongolia, we felt like something was missing. Our teammates were not here. However, in their time of absence, He has blessed us with a new pair of teammates, Craig and Sarah. Though our time together has been short, we have Campingalready grown as a team. We are no longer new comers to this work, but we are still pretty young. Craig and Sarah have both been at this for a lot longer than we have, so they bring an experience to our team that has already been very valuable. They have faced many of the same things that we are struggling with and have been able to offer sympathy and suggestions. Our time of fellowship and work with them has truly been a blessing for both of us.Craig's pictures 026

Team Mongolia as a whole looks very similar to the way it did at the end of last year. Sadly, two did not return. One young lady moved on to a new profession in the States and will not be returning to the work here. The other lady was not able to return because of financial difficulty. We all miss their presence, but He has provided those to fill the gaps. The new comers from last semester have completed their training time and have begun teaching in the other two districts. Right now, the east side team has four supervisors, the west side team has three supervisors, and the south side team (that’s us) has three supervisors. On the leadership team, we are still short one family that will be returning from their year furlough around the end of the year.

After we all returned from the summer, we met together three days for our all team training. The location for the first two days was a nice hotel in the center of town. With all three teams living in separate sections of the city, it is important for our all team get-togethers to be in a central location. These two days were filled with organizational matters, curriculum training, discussion topics, other important info, and time as a family. Though it was busy, this time was very valuable. On our third day of training, we went to a resort Nuhkt2south of town called Nukht. It is located in a beautiful valley. Our time there was focused on team vision and individual relationship building. It was a beautiful day, so during the individual time, I climbed up the side of one of the mountains. While standing on a bare outcropping of rock about 150 feet up, two eagles began circling overhead. They were catching the updrafts and then diving at each other in play. One hovered for a few moments within ten feet of me. What an exhilarating opportunity to take in the wonder of creation! That evening, we had a team dinner at a Mongolian Bar-B-Q restaurant in town.Nuhkt

Our last day of training was the first day of September. We learned during training the dates of our entrance exam and first class. It was exciting to finally get this information, but we were a little overwhelmed that this time had finally come. We gave the entrance exam in our district on Saturday September 11th. We had an impressive number of teachers come for the test, but only 9 were able to pass the test. Because of the small number of teachers that had tested into all of the districts, it was decided by leadership to offer another test for all of the districts in a central location two days before our seminars were set to begin. We did not think many would show up, but we were proven wrong by the throng of teachers that poured in. There were so many that we were scrambling to find more classrooms to give the test in, and we called nearly the whole team to come help. In the end, we counted over 130 teachers that had come, and our district had over 30 students. Though it was a headache, all of the districts saw an impressive increase in their student enrollment.Class 10-02-10 001

All of the district programs began their seminars on Saturday September 18th. The other districts are changing their seminars to other days of the week, but we have chosen to continue teaching on Saturday. We had a very impressive showing on that first day. Statistically, we will have several drop out before this semester is over, but we are trusting that those whom He wants in our class will remain.Class 10-02-10 026

We will continue posting blogs during the first and middle parts of the month. Remember that you can check up on us any time on Facebook or by e-mail. If you have not received our last newsletter, then it should be on its way. If for some reason you don’t receive one, please let us know. If you have never received our newsletter but would like to, then we definitely want to hear from you!

In the next post, we will give you more information about our class structure, curriculum, and grocery shopping! 9-27-10 025 9-30-10 003