A Typical Lesson With Class 2-6

School

We go into the classroom. Most of the boys are standing around the kerosene heater, pumping out noxious fumes. The heater also smells vile. Girls are exchanging print-club stickers. Bullied boy is pressed into a corner, as Horse-Boy punches him mechanically in the stomach and slaps him around the head. Neither of them seem to be enjoying themselves. I wander over and stop him. “What? What?” he asks me. “We were just playing”. The chime for the beginning of the second class rings. The astonishingly ineffectual Japanese English teacher asks the kids to sit down. They don’t. We wait. He asks them again. They still don’t. We wait a little longer. After about three minutes, a couple of the “cooler” boys inform horse-boy and his team that he should sit down.

We go through the pointless greetings that no one ever replies to. Bored already, I look around the room. Four boys are asleep. One odd boy is carving runes into his desk. The actually-quite-clever-girl sitting at the back of the classroom is playing poker with her neighbour. Horse-boy is leaning back in his chair, a look of glee spread across his stupid face. The quiet, bullied mouse-girl looks a little nervous. She has the same look as the Jehovah’s Witness that stands outside my local station in the evenings looking forlorn. You can tell she is hoping for a worksheet-based lesson so she will be spared from having to interact with any of her classmates. We hand out the worksheet the other teacher has made. I glance at it and am once again speechless that anyone can make such absurdly “creative” use of English grammer. Mouse-girl seems relieved. Horse-boy suddenly shouts out “cock!”, for no discernable reason, and a few other boys snigger sycophantically.

The teacher tells them to start the worksheet. Bullied-boy and mouse-girl earnestly start. No one else does. Many kids are reading. I groan as I realise four are reading Harry Potter. I ponder whether JK Rowling realises what her execrable books are doing to the education system over here? I ask one of the other reading-boys to put down his history of World War II Japanese tanks and start the worksheet. “What? What? I AM doing the worksheet!” he says, putting the book on his lap. As I walk off, he picks up the book and carries on reading. Horse-boy shouts out “Knob!!” Guffaws follow.

Fifteen blissfully quiet minutes. Half the class are asleep, most with their blazers cunningly pulled over their heads to disguise them as non-sleeping students. Two girls are scrawling the names of members of androgynous boy bands in permanent marker on their desks, having just finished erasing the names of an earlier, entirely indistinguishable, favourite. The less-attractive of the two keeps looking over for her prettier friend’s approval. One girl is sitting on her boyfriend’s lap in a corner giggling with him and occasionally permitting him to kiss her. The actually-quite-clever-girl’s poker game continues, with her and her partner cunningly putting the cards into their desks and looking at their worksheet whenever I happen to approach them. I marvel at their skills of deception. Horse-boy shouts out “Pussy”. More guffaws, but this time accompanied by tuts of disapproval from the girls. Horse-boy looks confused. I don’t think he can quite comprehend these mixed signals.

“I’ve already finished”, suddenly exclaims bullied-boy. Horse-boy and his companions glare at him. He quickly realises his mistake and looks down at his desk. I imagine he is contemplating the extra beating he will get between classes as soon as we leave the room. Mouse-girl looks pityingly at him. She has learned to keep her mouth shut. Suddenly, Horse-boy’s mobile phone rings. With uncharacteristic agility he leaps up and sprints out of the classroom to the boys toilet. The teacher follows him. I wander to the door. The teacher is standing outside, politely asking him to come out. I can just hear horse-boy ignoring him and carrying on with his conversation with his mother. The other students are discussing what Horse-boy’s ringtone was. After about five minutes of heated debate, it is generally agreed that it was Backstreet Boys, something from their second album. I’m not surprised by his lack of taste.

Horse boy returns and starts to give us all a long description of his phone call. Apparantly it was from a high-school girl he is seeing. His followers give the appropriate response. He leans back in his chair with a satisfied grin. I wonder if I misunderstood and the word “mother” has some exotic meaning among 14 year olds? Perhaps he is more sexually experienced than I have given him credit for. He shouts out “penis”. Perhaps not.

We start the answer-checking part of the lesson. The teacher and I pointlessly read through the role-plays. The teacher gets into his role, firing out mispronounced words in a variety of ridiculous accents. The kids laugh at him. He glances at me with a look of pure triumph: “see, they love me, they really love me!” his expression says. Inside, I am again astonished at his lack of self-awareness. I try to concentrate on these pointless role-plays. The kids have an adept skill of carrying on their conversations only when we are talking. It is intensely annoying. I start to daydream about whether it would be worth sanctions and the probably sacking to smack the shit out of horse-boy or one of his kabal. It probably would be. I miss a line in the role-play.

The class comes to an end. Bleary-eyed students start to wake up. Bullied-boy and mouse-girl descend as usual into their seats, and look nervously at the clock. The chime rings. An electric current surges through the room. Horse-boy and his friends are out of the classroom before the chime has finished. Six girls rush in, desperate to share their gossip with the desk-writing girls. The teacher informs the few kids that are listening that he will give them an A- for today’s performance. Even considering that Japanese grades only go down to C, this is still idiotic. I wonder how exact an approximation of Lord of the Flies would be required for them to get a B or god forbid a C. I close my book, another 45 minutes gone that I will never be able to get back.

7 Responses to “A Typical Lesson With Class 2-6”


  1. 1 ShuraNo Gravatar

    This is really good Ol. I loved reading it!!! I think you should write more! ALSO... I downloaded the Valentines Mix - it was excellent! Much Love, Shu.

  2. 2 Mother DentonNo Gravatar

    I too thought this was very good - a bit Will Randallish but with less affection for the pupils. I think you should try and get it published. Try sending it to Guardian Education or the Independent, but take out the comment about Harry Potter first or you might be sued! Call it something which makes it clear that you don't have it in for the Japanese - maybe something like 'The Same the World Over'.Send a (short) synopsis about your working life in Japan including how much you like it there. Lots of love
    Ma xxxx

  3. 3 JacobNo Gravatar

    I`ve known two or three horse-boys. I think they`re all part of the same family. Maybe if you stuff a wat of peanut butter in their mouths they`ll start speaking English. Worked for Mr. Ed.

    Nice writing. What does "execrable" mean?

    If a j-student knew "knob", I would certainly give them a sticker or something good. Where there is a shout of knob, there is a mind at work. Research should be rewarded with knick-knacks.

  4. 4 ollydentonNo Gravatar

    God, if he had shouted it in English, I would have danced a jig and given him a kiss! It was merely chin-chin! Execrable means very unpleasant - you should have been able to work it out from the fact it was describing Harry Potter!

  5. 5 MichaelNo Gravatar

    Olly-sensei,
    You do find the choice classes to teach. Reading your entry reminds me of an Olly who used to work at an another school, not quite 4-chu, yet not quite 2-chu...hmmmm.

    Perhaps you should bring up of the story of Battle Royale, and then suggest a wee field trip to Oshima.

    fight-o!

  6. 6 RobNo Gravatar

    Alirght Olly. Good to see you writing again.

    Your starting to sound a bit like what would happen if Jack Dee were to take up teaching English.

  7. 7 EricNo Gravatar

    This is exactly what I expected to find out after reading the title ical Lesson With Class 2-6 at Electric Pig. Thanks for informative article

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