"The world is a book,

and those who do not travel
read only one page."
-St. Augustine

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Italian School

I started school last Wednesday (September 19). I go to a private Catholic school, and my class has a language focus. Here are a few of the differences between my Italian school (San Giuseppe) and Meridian High School:

  • At Meridian: Classes go from 8 in the morning until 2:30 in the afternoon. We eat lunch at school around noon.  At San Giuseppe: School goes from 8:30 until 12:30. Then we go home for lunch.
  • At Meridian: During homeroom, we must stay in our classrooms reading or studying (Unless we have a pass), and no food or drink is allowed  At San Giuseppe: During homeroom, we must leave our classroom, and we can basically do whatever we want. If you want to eat or drink something you brought from home, you can.
  • At Meridian: No air conditioning, so every teacher has three fans going to try to keep people cool.  At San Giuseppe: No air conditioning. No fans. Top floor of the building. Everyday it is 80 degrees. Add that to the dress code (Read Next Bullet) and it is a miracle I haven't died yet!
  • At Meridian: The dress code is pretty relaxed. Basically if you don't look like a whore or wear something with an inappropriate slogan on it, you can wear anything. At San Giuseppe: You can't wear shorts. You can't have open-toed shoes. You must wear a cardigan if you wear a tank top (In other words, no shoulders showing). The dress code is enforced because the two principals are nuns (always in full nun clothing)
  • At Meridian: You have seven class periods a day. Every day you have the same class schedule and subject (for the whole semester) You switch classrooms for each different subject.  At San Giuseppe: You sit in the same room all day, and the teachers change rooms for each period (It made my first few days easy since trying to switch classes without knowing Italian would have sucked). You have four classes a day. Each day, the class subjects are different. I would list my subjects, but half the time I don't know what's going on, so I am not really sure what I am taking. 
  • At Meridian: Languages are taught through a textbook, and at the beginning of each year, we review what we have learned in the previous years.  At San Giuseppe: It's all verbal learning. On the first day, the Spanish teacher walked in speaking Spanish the whole time. I understand nothing.
  • At Meridian: New classes start each year. Therefore, once finals are over, no homework is assigned. At San Giuseppe:  Because they are in the same class with the same kids as last year, they had summer homework. I was exempt from that.
  • At Meridian: I was driven to and from school everyday.  At San Giuseppe: I get dropped off in the morning, but then after school I have to walk home. That walk includes crossing one of the busiest streets in town and a FOUR LANE HIGHWAY on foot (Sidenote: The rumors of the crazy Italian drivers are true. Crossing that highway on foot is like asking for death on a daily basis).
  • At Meridian: Before school, everyone hangs around their first hour classroom or in the Small Gym. At San Giuseppe: Before school, everyone is outside smoking (I don't participate). I'm pretty sure I am slowly developing lung cancer from all the second hand smoke I am inhaling, and my clothes always smell disgusting.
  • At Meridian: We have lockers where we keep our bags during school. At San Giuseppe: No lockers. We have our bags with us while in class. 
  • At Meridian: You get screamed at for talking during class or using your cell phone. Plus you must ask to go to leave class or go to the bathroom. At San Giuseppe: Everyone texts during class. Everyone talks over each other the entire time. People just get up and leave whenever they feel like it.
All of my classmates speak really good English are very friendly. Unless they are an English teacher, the teachers can't really speak English, but they are nice to me and try to talk to me when they can. My Italian is slowly improving. That's all I have to say for now. Ciao!

Monday, September 17, 2012

In Italy Finally!

The Alps. It is a cool experience to see when the ground
is so high, the clouds run into it.
I am in Italy finally! This is Day 2 for me! I left Chicago at 5:35 pm on Saturday and arrived in Dusseldorf Germany on Sunday morning about 8:45 am (1:45 am in Illinois). I had a two hour layover and then got on a bus to take me to my plane to Catania. After a twenty minute delay due to air traffic control, I started my two hour flight to Catania. We passed over the Alps (right) on the flight. All of my flights were on Lufthansa.





When I got to Catania, I found my host family and we went to their house. Italian drivers are crazy! When we got there, they showed me my room and let me have a few hours to myself. I unpacked and took a nap because I was exhausted! Then we went to the supermarket which happened to be inside the mall. It was like Aldi where you have to put in money to get a shopping cart and then you have to buy bags at checkout. It was a very interesting first Italian experience. They have a lot of the same foods we do (Just with different names). They have Coke and Pepsi here. We didn't buy any, but I did see some Diet Coke (called "Coca-Cola light" here)! After shopping, we went back home. We unloaded the groceries and then went upstairs where my host grandma's apartment is and had dinner with her and my host cousins because it was her birthday. I would tell you what I ate if I had any idea! After dinner we went back downstairs and I took a shower (which was really difficult because I am used to very hot water and good water pressure). Then, I went to sleep. 

I woke up at 12:30 today (Jet-Lag sucks) and found Ele (my host sister) and she sat with me while I ate breakfast (Muffin and a glass of water). Then, we played Wii Sports which she kicked my butt in even though I have played that like one hundred times! Then my host brother Vincenzo came home from school (He started school today) and we ate lunch (leftovers from whatever we ate the night before). While we ate lunch, they had Jersey Shore with Italian subtitles on on the television which was weird for me since I didn't watch it in America either. Then Ele downloaded CamWow on my ipod and decided we needed to have a photoshoot (She is in awe that my eyes are so blue) so we did that for a while until I got tired and took a nap from 330-430. Then Ele had some friends over (one girl named Marcella, and 3 boys whose names I don't know) and they were over for a few hours. They all talked to each other and I sat and stared because I don't know any Italian besides the colors and how to introduce myself. Then they left, and it was time for dinner. I know we ate a block of mozzarella and some other type of formaggio (cheese) and something else that contained tomato, onion, and mozzarella. For dessert we had sliced up melon which was fruity and tasty. Then we watched some sketch comedy show that I think is called "Colorado." Then everyone went to bed so I started typing this. They don't have wifi here so it is difficult to get service all the time. I start school sometime this week, and maybe then I will have something more interesting to say! Ciao!

Friday, September 14, 2012

Day Zero

It's day zero!! I leave Chicago O'Hare at 5:35 pm (Central Time) and arrive in Düsseldorf Germany tomorrow morning at 8:45 (Germany time). After a two hour layover I will fly to Catania and begin the best year ever. I can't thank everyone enough for their outstanding support! Let's get this show on the road!

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Ten More Days (Hopefully)

In ten days, I will hopefully get to leave for my year in Italy. The reason I say hopefully is because Lufthansa (the airline which I am taking from Chicago to Dusseldorf, Germany to Catania) is on strike. Their brilliant idea for this strike is to just not show up to work on random days. Yesterday was one of them, but they're back to work today. Hopefully, they will settle this strike so I am not stranded in an airport for a day. Anyway, I am so ready to leave. I am taking two checked bags (the second one has a huge baggage fee, but I need it) and one carry on backpack that will house my laptop, kindle, camera, ipod, and any other thing I need for the 13+ hours of travel I have. I still need to buy a few things at Walmart and then I will have everything I need! My biggest concern is the language because I am still not very good at Italian. That's all I have to say. Ciao!