A kid asks me âSensei whatâs thisâ and then just. pokes me in the boob.
Ask a kid to draw his favourite fruit. He draws a dinosaur.
Learning to say âhow old are youâ / âIâm X years oldâ. One kid comments (in Japanese) âmy mum is 1 year oldâ.
Reading a dictation about childrenâs day. The kids are delighted when I repeatedly fail to pronounce koinobori and take it upon themselves to teach me
Get mobbed by five-year-olds screaming âANKOORU! ANKOORU!â until I fall over (I later learn this means âencoreâ and they basically wanted to play the game again)
Teaching a particularly rowdy class and it is hard. fucking. work. At the end, one kid turns to me and says âsensei, otsukaresama deshitaâ (which translates to something like âthank you for your hard workâ)
Proudly show the kids my kanji practice. They gasp in horror. âSensei! theyâre terrible!â Says one.
âOkay everyone, touch something BLACK!â I shout. One five-year-old touches my black jeans in the form of slapping my ass.
One kid canât write his name. I hold his crayon with him and we write it together. He spends the rest of the lesson not doing the colouring or the fun workbook activity, but just tracing his fingers over the letters and saying his name slowly and grinning.
Itâs parent observation week. All the kids have a parent in the room and understandably choose to sit with Mum/Dad. Apart from one kid, who chooses my lap over Dadâs, even though every single week he cries and wants his Pappa for the first 10 minutes of class.
Kids are talking about Pokemon. I chime in. Theyâre noticeably shocked that I understand. I tell them I like Charizard. âEeh Charizardâs weak! I like Pikachu!â One kid says. Charizard is objectively stronger than Pikachu on many levels, but I don't argue.
At the start of the class kids are doing a phonics activity. They have to choose whether word starts with C or G. One of the words is âgumâ. despite the word being more or less the same in Japanese, an alarming number of kids write âcumâ.
Kids are counting points at the end of class. Because theyâre 11-year-old boys, they find it hilarious when I get to the number six. âSex. Sex. Sensei, sex,â they say repeatedly.
I ask the kids how old they think I am. "72" says one of them. Iâm in my early thirties.
I help one new kid write their name. Suddenly, all the kids whoâve been coming for months and can definitely write their name promptly forget and I have to help all 11 of them.