Monday, September 24, 2007

Hannes celebrates a birthday

Herzlichen Glückwunsch
zum Geburtstag,
Hannes!

Today is Hannes's 14th birthday, almost back where it all began 14 years ago. He celebrated with candles and his favorite Brötchen early this morning before school and then with German pancakes for lunch after school.

Two sets of grandparents are here to help him celebrate—Jost's mother, Heidi, is here for a visit from Hamburg, and my parents are on their way home from Switzerland via Berlin.

This afternoon we had applesauce cake and presents, and tonight we plan to enjoy the last of the late-summer weather at a sidewalk table at a neighborhood restaurant. What a great way to turn 14!

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Hannes reports on school

Intenseness
by Hannes

My first week of school was intense. The school I'm going to is supposed to be an "elite" sports school. The goal for pretty much everyone is to be training for the Olympics or professional sports. Starting last year, everyone new who's accepted into the school has to specialize in one sport. They have crew (rowing), ice hockey, tennis, table tennis, track, water polo, swimming, basketball, and mostly soccer. No one knows much about basketball here because they're all soccer freaks. When I played soccer in America I was decent, but if I were to play against my classmates here who specialize in soccer it wouldn't even be fair. They'd school me!

On Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays I have two periods each day of basketball practice during the school day. It's really fun and I'm learning a lot. I'm really getting into shape! We've been having professional coaches come in to train us from Alba Berlin, the professional basketball team here in the city. They're very good and work us hard. I'm also going to start going to a club basketball team with some of my teammates from school.

Oh, yeah, there's also my other subjects: math, physics, chemistry, biology, German, English, geography, art, electronics, ethics, and history. It's very hard because everything's happening in a completely different language (duh!), but it's great because school doesn't last as long here. I have between five and seven hours of school each day. Our schedule is different every day. On Mondays and Fridays we actually get out at 1:30. We also don't have very much homework (so far). The students and the teachers rotate classrooms in our school, and there's a different teacher for almost every subject.

(This is a picture of my classmates from last year.
I'm obviously not with them!
)

In Germany the high school system is completely different from America. There is the Gymnasium for people who are going to go on to college, and it goes to 13th grade. The Realschule is for people who are going on for vocational training, and it ends with 10th grade. And the Hauptschule, the "unemployment track," ends after 9th grade. Usually these schools are completely separate, but my school is a comprehensive school that combines them all. Every student gets to choose which level of each subject they want to take. Grading is also completely different here. A "1" here is like an "A" in America, and a "6" is the worst you can get and means you automatically have to redo that year.

I could ride my bike all the way to school, but that would take almost 40 minutes, so instead I ride about 5 minutes to a subway station (Bismarckstraße) and then take the subway to my school. I have a "Monatskarte" which costs almost 30 Euro (about $45) and is an unlimited public transportation ticket. It lasts for one month so I can ride anywhere in the city with any kind of public transportation. It takes me a little less than 20 minutes to get to school.

On the 8th grade basketball team we only have five people training right now. There's Dominique, the best player, Nico, who has a broken finger, and Julius. We also have one girl on the team who's also pretty good but I can't remember her name right now. Then there are seven 7th graders who we train with. It seems like most of them are little midget point guards. One of my other best friends, Jonathan, is half Romanian and speaks Romanian fluently. He plays tennis. And my other good friend is Max. He plays table tennis.

(Here are some of my teammates in a photo from last year.
Nico is in the middle, Julius is on the far right, and Dominique is in between.
)

It's really cool because when I meet a new person, they always ask, "So you're new here, aren't you?" I say, "Yeah, I'm from America," and all of a sudden they're really interested. They connect Americans with pop stars and other super cool people. (They're right, of course!)


Saturday, September 8, 2007

Lara and Anna report on school

My First Week of School

by Anna

My first week of school was fun and not fun at the same time. It was not fun because I didn't know what to do at all and all the other kids knew exactly what they were doing. I was just kind of sitting there because I didn't understand what the teacher was saying.

It was fun because I made four new friends. Their names are Dana, Ara, Jessica (pronounced Yessica), and Nina. My teacher's name is Frau Drechsler. "Frau" means "Mrs." or "Miss" so her last name is Drechsler. She's very kind, but sometimes she gets frustrated with the rowdy boys in our class. I don't know one boy in my class who's not rowdy!

School in Germany is a lot different from America because all the teachers come into the classroom instead of the kids going into their rooms. The only things we go out of the classroom for are music, P.E. (called "Sport"), and swimming. For swimming we ride a really fancy bus with an upper deck to a swimming pool away from the school.

The name of my school is Lietzensee Schule. It's called Lietzensee Schule because there's a lake right nearby that's called the Lietzensee ("See" means "lake"). We usually walk to school through a churchyard behind our house and it takes about two minutes to get there.

The school building is a big reddish brick building. There are four stories and I’m on the very top floor so I have to walk up four flights of stairs every morning. During the morning we have a snack that we can eat anytime we want. There's a big recess courtyard and all the kids go to recess at the same time, from 1st grade through 6th grade. We have recess twice a day. At recess I usually play with Jessica. There's a big soccer field that the boys play soccer on. There are also two places for hopscotch.

We finish school at 1:30 and eat lunch at home. Mommy comes to pick me up. Then I do my homework. I'm working on learning cursive because all of my other classmates learned last year, so if I don't have other homework I practice in my cursive book. We also write with fountain pens, so I'm practicing that, too. Papa says that my handwriting has gotten much better from practicing.

And that's my first week of school!

Tschüs!


Die erste Schulwoche

von Lara

I just finished my first week of school yesterday. It was really hard to keep up with everyone else in my class because I had no idea where to go and what to do. Luckily, a few of the girls from the class helped me and showed me around the school. My main teacher is called Frau Otto, but I only have her for a few classes each day because each period a different teacher comes into the classroom to teach a different subject. Each day I get out of school at a different time, most days at 1:30, but depending on the day it sometimes goes later then that.

The only classes that I understand so far are math and English, so now I have a student teacher who translates everything that I do not understand into English. She will continue to help me until I feel more comfortable in the classroom and have learned more German. My other subjects are natural science, German, religion, music, art, P.E., and history/geography. It seems weird that a public school would teach religion but I really like the teacher so it’s a lot of fun for me.

Half the school was originally made for boys and half for girls. There are two front doors with stone carvings that say "GIRLS" over one and "BOYS" over the other. The school is really different than all our schools in Reedsport because it's over 100 hundred years old but on the inside it has been remodeled and looks really nice.

In all, the first week of school was hard but not too hard that I don't want to go back. The kids are nice and the teachers are helpful which helps a lot!!!


Editor's note: Hannes starts his new school this Monday. Stay tuned next week for his first impressions!

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Biking in Berlin

I love to ride my bicycle, I love to ride my bike,
I love to ride my bicycle, I love to ride it where I like . . .

It’s been an interesting transition again to a life without cars for a small-town car addict like me. The children are becoming adept at deciphering the maps describing public transportation routes and jumping on and off of subways, trams, buses, and trains.

And we’ve become the proud owners of five flea-market bikes in varying stages of age and repair. Hannes and Lara have some hot 15-gear mountain bikes, Anna’s is a three-speed pink and teal beauty, mine is a good sturdy city vehicle, and Jost's--well, Jost's is a piece of junk. Fortunately, Jost is an experienced bike mechanic who’s passing his wisdom down to Hannes, and they’ve become a familiar sight down in the central courtyard of our building with an overturned bike between them.

The bikes have liberated us from the miles we walked during our first two weeks in the city. It’s amazing how effortlessly we can cover those same miles from atop a bike. But it’s also added a new anxiety to my life as I watch my children negotiating the roads with German car drivers. There are fewer bike lanes than we had in Hamburg, and too often we have to share the streets. Anna is still allowed to ride on the sidewalk, but the older kids are consigned to traffic.

Still, there are many beautiful—and safer—places to ride in Berlin. Not far from our apartment is the huge city park in the center of Berlin with miles of broad, pea-gravel paths beneath shade trees and alongside canals and ponds. For several kilometers it borders the city zoo, so as we ride we smell the elephants and see the ostriches and flamingoes on the other side of the fence. We’ve also discovered the “gardens” behind the Charlottenburg Castle near our home, extensive paths that go through amazingly overgrown greenery that makes me feel like I’m riding somewhere along Smith River!

The weather has turned suddenly fall-like in the last few days. Stay tuned to see how bike riding goes as we approach a continental winter!