The American School Foundation has a very nice, spacious campus, which has, as far as I can tell, four main buildings: the Lower School, the Middle School, the Upper School, and a central building that holds a few extra classrooms, the infirmary, and connects to the cafeteria. Since I am working with fourth grade, I am of course spending most of my time in the Lower School.
The administration does their best to make the school feel like one in the States, which I would say it does, albeit one with an unusually high number of Spanish-speaking students. Instruction for students is bi-lingual; the 'regular' classroom teacher speaks in English, but for an hour and a half each day, students are taught by a Spanish-speaking teacher. The English teacher, with whom I am working, is Jenna Kubricht, and the Spanish teacher is Lorena Ramon.
Welcome to 4A! As you can see, teachers are addressed by first name. Also, notice the altar set up for Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead).
Doesn't look too different, does it?
There are few constants in our schedule, what with a different special each day at a different time, but the one thing we can count on is recess!
"Recess" includes eating time, and for those who don't bring a meal, there are plenty of choices at the cafeteria.
The Mexican dishes are made right when ordered and from fresh ingredients.
The only downside is that the amount of food is a bit small compared to the money paid for it, so I've been buying most of my lunches from this stand just outside the main entrance and - well, we'll get to that when I make the inevitable food post. ;)
Jenna's told me that a common downside of international schools is that the library tends to be lacking. That is not the case here.
The windowed area up top is a loft where students can read.
Cozy, no?
Other various sights from campus:
The school has a new theater building under construction. Wish I was going to be around to see its premier performance!
The underground bus depot. ASF has their own fleet of 71 buses, which both students and faculty are free to use. Riding bus #15 has saved me a lot of pesos!
Parts of a mural in the Upper School Building. Thought they were too cute not to share!
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And now it's time for...
Learning Mexican Spanish!
Disclaimer: For the most part, I have no idea which of these words/phrases are specific to Mexico. This will just be the section where I share what I've learned here that I didn't learn in my Spanish classes in the States. If I know for sure something IS Mexican, I'll mark it with an asterisk.
"jitomate" - tomato* (as opposed to just "tomate)
"papas a la francesa" - french fries (if the "papas fritas" I learned in school means anything, it's probably potato chips)
"corazón de pollo" - tender-hearted, literally "heart made of chicken"
"el ratón de dientes" - Mexican children don't believe in a tooth fairy - they believe in a tooth mouse.
"el pay de queso" - cheesecake, though it translates as cheese pie. To be fair, cheesecake is more similar to pie than cake.
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As much as I've been enjoying my time here, I'm counting down the days to when I can see everyone again. Stay safe, stay well. A belated happy birthday goes out to my brother and parents. Next post - exploring Mexico City! ¡Hasta luego!

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