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Holy *** - Could my MS students' parents be younger than me?
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 2:36 am    Post subject: Holy *** - Could my MS students' parents be younger than me? Reply with quote

My goodness did I just read something that made me feel old. One of my grade 1 MS students, on her mid-term essay question, wrote 'my father is 32 years and my mother is 30 years'. She used Arabic numerals so surely it can't be a mistake. If she's using Korean years, and from her level of English I'm guessing she is, that would mean her father was born in 1978 and her mother in 1980! When I was finishing secondary school her mother was finishing grade 5! Had I done a BA in four straight years and come to Korea I could have been her mother's teacher.

Damn do I ever feel old now.
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tzechuk



Joined: 20 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

So your student is what, 12?

Meaning she was born in 1997, and her father would have been 19 or 20 and her mother 17?

I highly doubt it....
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

tzechuk wrote:
So your student is what, 12?

Meaning she was born in 1997, and her father would have been 19 or 20 and her mother 17?

I highly doubt it....


Well, it can happen, even in Korea. And most of the students in that class were born in 1996.
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I just got another one from a grade one MS student who said her mother and father are 35. Since she says she's 14 she's obviously thinking in Korean ages. That would mean her parents turn 34 in western years this year. Since I've never met a 21-year-couple wanting kids I wonder if that was a shotgun wedding.
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Xuanzang



Joined: 10 Apr 2007
Location: Sadang

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yu_Bum_suk wrote:
I just got another one from a grade one MS student who said her mother and father are 35. Since she says she's 14 she's obviously thinking in Korean ages. That would mean her parents turn 34 in western years this year. Since I've never met a 21-year-couple wanting kids I wonder if that was a shotgun wedding.


Maybe it`s difference in the relative countryside?
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SandyG21



Joined: 26 Oct 2008

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 10:25 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Happens alot - have a kid at age 15 - that kid has a kid at 15 - your a grandparent at age 30 to 32.

Hey I am over 50 (not yet a grandparent) and I sure don't feel old!
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Ya-ta Boy



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Location: Established in 1994

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 1:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Suck it up. I'm older than most of my adult students' parents. Confused
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Underwaterbob



Joined: 08 Jan 2005
Location: In Cognito

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:55 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just wait until you teach the child of someone you taught previously. My mother taught the same grade for 35 years, this happened to her a few times.
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Otherside



Joined: 06 Sep 2007

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 3:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Underwaterbob wrote:
Just wait until you teach the child of someone you taught previously. My mother taught the same grade for 35 years, this happened to her a few times.


Reverse happened to me. I went to the same school as my father, and a good number of my teachers (3-4) remembered teaching him. (He was a model student, I didn't live up to the hype, incase you're wondering Wink )
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 4:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Underwaterbob wrote:
Just wait until you teach the child of someone you taught previously. My mother taught the same grade for 35 years, this happened to her a few times.


My CT is teaching the daughter of a former student of hers for the first time ever this year (and she's a fantastic student, too). I know it's sure making her feel old.
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oldfatfarang



Joined: 19 May 2005
Location: On the road to somewhere.

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 4:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Forget this old nonsense. That's for Koreans caught up in their outdated Confucian mindset.

When I was 26 years I had 19 people working for me - and 17 of them were older than me. Nobody said anything about that - we just got on with the job.

I see age - and Confucian preoccupation with age-related behavior - as one of the major cultural factors holding this society back. Thankfully, we don't have to buy into that.

You are, in fact, as old as you feel. I've met 22 year olds who're already 'old' - their minds are conservative and closed. In contrast, I've got mates who are much older than me - and they are open minded and live life to the full.

NB: My user name is a take off of Confucians' preoccupation with age. There's not a week goes by here without some idiot mentioning my age and how someone should be living their life at a certain age.

Get busy livin', or get busy dyin'.
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antoniothegreat



Joined: 28 Aug 2005
Location: Yangpyeong

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 5:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

speaking of age, a few of my coteachers went to the school we teach at now as students, and they work with their old teachers.

what makes it really bad, is when one of the old teachers asked the younger females on a date.
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Hyeon Een



Joined: 24 Jun 2005

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 6:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

In a conversation class one of the questions was "Do you know anyone who got married at a young age? Talk about them"

One of my students (about 20 years old) told us that her grandparents got married when they were both 13! The other students asked whether they waited a few years before having children. Apparantely not. Honeymoon baby.
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Straphanger



Joined: 09 Oct 2008
Location: Chilgok, Korea

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 7:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

In my youth, the requirements for being a substitute teacher were few. In fact, you needed only to have a certain amount of college credits and a clean FBI record check (my third set of fingerprints that year, dontcha know..)

I had many students older than me. Awkward.
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Mon May 11, 2009 8:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hyeon Een wrote:
In a conversation class one of the questions was "Do you know anyone who got married at a young age? Talk about them"

One of my students (about 20 years old) told us that her grandparents got married when they were both 13! The other students asked whether they waited a few years before having children. Apparantely not. Honeymoon baby.


Child marriages used to be common, though they usually weren't consummated until the early teens.
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