The Year of Living Audaciously

Former food blog, now travel blog - following my year as a Fulbright ETA in Indonesia

  • Home
  • About Me
    • Travels and Life Updates
    • Privacy Policy
  • Fellow Fulbrighters
  • Never Skip Dessert
    • Recipes By Category
    • Recipe Index
    • The Best of the Best
    • The Social Kitchen Project
  • Recommended

Teaching English to 305 Students

October 14, 2016 by Mackenzie

First, I want to say thank you so much everyone who reached out after my last post (“Hey Mister”). Hearing from everyone, near and far, was so encouraging. It can be hard to live so far away from friends and family but having a virtual support system is a wonderful second best. I was also so glad to know that my post sparked conversations and thoughts about skin color, race, bules, and more… Please don’t let the conversations and thoughts stop – this is such an important topic.

But on to other subjects! I just completed my fourth week of teaching here in Kendari and things couldn’t be going better (in that regard). I teach 12 classes each week – all of them 90 minutes, except one which is a little over two hours. Each class has anywhere between 22-40 students (most around 30-35). I see each class 1x per week – which is a horrible, and impossible, way to learn a language. The lucky kids are the “Bahasa track” kids who essentially take English (and Japanese) as elective courses and so they get English twice a week.

img_1965

All Indonesian high school students are split into “tracks” in high school. Schools generally offer 2+ tracks: Science, Social, Religion, Language, etc. SMAN 5 PKY only had science and social tracks, but MAN 1 KDI has all four of these. Vocational schools (SMKs) offer a whole different group: tourism, cooking, tailoring, etc. Students in Indonesian high schools take all of their classes with their “class.” So X IPA 1 (10th grade Science #1) is together the whole day, taking all of their classes together, while X IPS 1 (10th grade Social #1) sits in their room and takes all of their classes together. From what I understand, students choose their track but are tested into the higher or lower classes (IPA 1 is the “best” whereas IPA 4 is the “lowest” of the science track). Additionally, science students are considered the “smartest” and social students the “not as smart.” Religion and Bahasa tracks fall somewhere in between (and most people outside of those tracks wonder why you would choose that). I teach the entire 10th grade: X IPA 1, 2, 3, 4 (science); X IPS 1, 2, 3 (social); X Agama (Religion); and X Bahasa (Language). And two 11th Grade classes: XI Agama (Religion) and XI Bahasa (Language) –> but I see XI Bahasa twice a week. 

img_1653

A rare moment of quiet in the courtyard

My first and second weeks of teaching were difficult because I was expecting a higher level of English (something comparable to my students last year) but I wasn’t finding it. Giving instructions, praise, comments, greetings… anything in English was falling on deaf ears. Anything I said was greeted by… silence. Initially, I was really surprised. Seeing as this is a school that seems to run more efficiently and organized than my school last year, with teachers almost always going to class, and rules much more strict about students being in the classroom, I figured the English level would potentially be higher than my kids last year. At the very least it would be comparable, right?

Well… no. It took about two weeks for me to come to terms with it – but these kids’ English levels are low. And I mean LOW. Some classes don’t even know the word for “makan” (eat). Like, that has to be the most basic English word ever. Some students in my classes, and some 12th graders (who I don’t teach), call me “mister.” (Seriously?!) Sometimes, when I give them an activity, they ask if it should be completed in English or Bahasa Indonesian. Ummmmm… wild guess? What do you think you are supposed to do?!?!?!?!?  This is ENGLISH class for crying out loud! Asking them to answer a simple question out loud is like asking them to give a speech in front of the whole school in French.

All this to say, teaching English is an uphill battle.

I’m generally at school for most of the day. Most days I teach 3 classes, which are separated by a 45 minute break, except Friday when they are back-to-back-to-back. I get to school at 8:30 or so. Teach from 8:45-10:15, break until 10:45, teach again from 10:45-12:15, break (to pray) until 1pm, and teach again from 1-2:30. Obviously, it’s Indonesia, so we usually don’t go to class until at least 5 minutes after the bell has rung, but more common 10-15 minutes late. (I’m slowly trying to change that with my coteachers…).

So considering all of these challenges, how do we spend those precious 90 minutes in the classroom?

It starts with lesson planning – this year, I am so much more prepared for my lessons. This in part has to do with a massive google drive collection of lesson plans from previous ETAs that Grace and I compiled and organized this summer. It makes it SO much easier to find lessons on the sometimes-obscure topics we are supposed to be teaching. I usually come up with a few ideas over the weekend for the four different topics I will be teaching over the week. I’ll teach the 10th grade general lesson 8 times, the 11th grade general lesson 2 times, 1 special lesson for the Bahasa track (English elective) kids in 10th grade, and another for the 11th grade. On Monday afternoon, I meet with the other English teachers and I share my ideas for each of the four lessons. Together we choose the best ideas and end the meeting with an outline for each lesson. I then go home and spend all of Monday evening and afternoon typing up a complete lesson plan and creating/printing/copying the materials (worksheets, handouts, powerpoints, etc) and then emailing my coteachers the completed lesson plans for the week. Tuesday (11th grade) and Wednesday (10th grade) are when we kick off the new lessons, which last until the following Monday and Tuesday, when every class has then had the lesson.

Here’s a few examples of what we are up to!

Compliments Lesson

The 10th grade focused on “giving and receiving compliments” a few weeks ago. The best part of this lesson was the final activity – we gave one sticky note to each student and asked them to write their name at the top. Then, they passed that sticky note to their friend who wrote a compliment to them on their sticky note. Then, the note was passed again. The students passed and passed and passed until all the sticky notes were full of compliments to each other. Then, I pulled out a big poster, on which I had written, “We are Special,” and they all stuck their sticky notes to it. At the end, they anxiously searched for their sticky note to read the compliments their friends had written to them.

img_1715

My heart was bursting! <3

img_1734

Proudly hanging it up on their classroom wall!

I had so much fun with this activity. The students were so excited to be complimenting each other and to have a finished product to get to keep. Many of the classes hung the poster up in the classroom and I smile every time I enter their room. (Another difference: teachers move from room to room while the students stay put. One of my goals this year is to take the unused “Language Laboratory” Classroom and turn it into an American classroom, where the students come to us, as teachers, instead of us going to them. Stay tuned…)

img_1841

This = very proud teacher moment!

Daily Activities

After compliments, the 10th grade learned about daily activities. The textbook called for something a little more advanced but I reeled it back in because by this point, I had realized the students lacked simple vocabulary. So for this week, I had my handy-dandy popsicle sticks, on which I had written every student’s name on a stick. I would pull a name and ask a question – “What did you do this morning?” “What will you do after school?” What will you do this weekend?” Many of the students strugggggggggled with this but with their friends’ help, I could finally squeeze out an answer. I then explained that today, we are going to talk about daily activities, just like the ones you all just named.

I split them into groups of 4-5 and each team had to make a list of activities for every letter of the alphabet (A: amusement park B: beach, basketball, breakfast etc). I banned the use of dictionaries because I really wanted the students to think. I really believe that most of the students do know some English but they have never been asked to produce it. English classes, before I came, were often conducted in Bahasa, and they never had to speak in English if they didn’t want to. As they worked on the activity, I circulated the classroom and helped give hints for words and letters they were stuck on.

img_1868

The second half of the class we spent compiling a big list on the board together. Letter by letter I asked for the words they had written in their groups and added any that they had missed from my master list. I did a lot of silly acting and speaking in Bahasa to get them to guess the words – and I think my candor helped them to relax. If there was still time at the end, we played a quick game of hot seat – where one student sits with his/her back to the board and I write a word from this list on the board and the class had to describe the word and get him/her to guess it.

All in all, a great class.

You can see the A-Z on the whiteboard behind us!

You can see the A-Z on the whiteboard behind us

Daily Activities –> Sentences

This week, as the follow up lesson, we focused on taking all those daily activity vocabulary words and learned to make a complete sentence with them.

The first activity was interviewing their friends about their daily and weekly activities. Each student got a grid that they had to go around and ask their friends, “what are you going to do Sunday morning?” and then fill it in on their chart. I encouraged them to walk around with their A-Z list from last week, to have a a huge list of vocabulary to draw from. Hearing them all wander around and ask and answer questions in English was music to my ears!

screen-shot-2016-10-15-at-12-41-32-pm

When that was done, I wrote the grammar structures on the board (Subject + to be + going to + verb …. etc) and asked for examples from their interviews. We would write examples like, Dina is going to sleep on Sunday night. My favorite toy in the classroom is my beachball. After a bit of practice all together, I then tossed my globe beach ball to a random student and gave them a day and time, “Wednesday morning.” Then then had to make a sentence with the information from their sheet and share it with the class. We practiced negative and interrogative forms, wrote individual sentences, and practiced more by throwing the beachball to each other. By the end, I feel confident saying that some 29/30 students were able to make a correct sentence by the end. I was thrilled.

Telling Time

The 10th grade language-track kids have me as their “English literature” teacher. I laughed when I saw the name of the class – there’s just no way. The syllabus itself, while far from “English Literature,” is far too advanced for them, so my coteacher and I decided to do our own thing this year with them. We want to go back to the basics and make sure they have a really solid understanding of basic English.

The first week, we decided to teach about time. I opened the class asking if someone could tell me what time it was. No one could.

First, we played Bingo. Good, old fashioned number bingo. And they LOVED it. I used an app to generate random numbers and would call them out and they had to cross it off if they had it – the goal was get a feel for listening to numbers called out loud.

After bingo, I drew a clock on the board and we talked about the correct way to tell the time in English. Then, we practiced using mini whiteboards. This is one of my favorite assessment tools – I bought a pack of sheet protectors, stuck a white sheet of paper in each one, bought a dozen whiteboard markers, a pack of tissues, and ta da! Mini whiteboards! I call out a time and in pairs, they have to write it down and then hold up the whiteboard so I can check if they got it right. If not, they try again. I love this. It’s a fast, quick way to check understanding, plus it’s something totally different for them and they love it. In another class, we did it with present tense verbs to past tense, and again, it worked great.

Once most of the class was answer my time calling correctly, they completed a worksheet where they had to write in the correct times. Then we moved on to the vocabulary associated with telling time, “a quarter past,” “ten to 2,” etc… This proved to be much trickier for them. We practiced with the whiteboards again, completed part 2 of the worksheet, and then time was up. At this point, I felt like everyone had a pretty solid understanding of telling time (some more or less on the vocabulary but that’s not really common, so I wasn’t too focused on that). I asked what time it was now, and they all raced to answer my question and gave me the correct time! I was thrilled! We had come a long way in that two hours!

Playing a board game to practice Simple Past verbs

The following week we played a “telling time” board game to review what we had learned the previous week.

Filed Under: Fulbright, MAN 1, teaching, Year 2 Tagged With: Lesson Plans, MAN 1, teaching, TEFL

Week 1

September 24, 2016 by Mackenzie

 

After living in hotels for five out of the last six weeks, it feels so good to unpack my suitcases and settle in to my new home. I’ve been at site now for a full seven days. I’ve already experienced a number of mati lampus (blackouts), been to hypermart (~Walmart) three times, sweated my way through a zillion classes, and found myself being interviewed on tv. What a week.

img_1424

While I was in Bandung for orientation, I had asked my school to fix up some of the things in my house… namely, the AC. They ended up putting plastic over the open space above the partition so the cold air stays inside my bedrooms but the light still comes in. It’s definitely made a difference and it’s comfortable now. It’s not super cold, and I often wish I was back in my room in Pky because the AC there was incredible. But it works, and I bought a mini fan that helps too. While I was gone they also fixed the outlets, closed the hole in the ceiling, and bought me a refrigerator! I’m very happy to have that and am now loaded up with fruit and snacks.  I also bought a blender and LOVED being able to make smoothies in the morning! That is… until it stopped working this morning ?TBD I’ll keep you posted.

Bought a mosquito net in Bandung and my coteacher recruited some of my students to help put it up

Bought a mosquito net in Bandung and my coteacher recruited some of my students to help put it up

Yay!! Sleeping very peacefully now!

Yay!! Sleeping very peacefully now!

School has been great this week and I’m excited to be back in the classroom! I really want to learn my student’s names this year (all 300+ of them!) so the first thing I did with every class this week was to pass out sticky notes and have them write 1) their full name 2) their nickname (everyone goes by a nickname that may or may not be close to their real name) and 3) their hobbies. I then took pictures of all the students holding their sticky note so now I can match names to faces! I didn’t do this last year and regretted it the whole year! I also made little seating charts of where they sit in the classroom (usually they always sit in the same place every day) so I can refer to that as well.

img_1431

In one of my classes we brainstormed words describing personality from A-Z. We made a huge list on the board and then the students used those words to create acrostic poems of their names… Mine looked like:

(M)ischevious

(A)dventurous

(C)lever

(K)ind

(E)ergetic

(N)eat

(Z)any

(I)ntelligent

(E)nthusiastic

I had the kids make a table tent name card with the front just their nickname and the acrostic poem on the back – it was super cute!img_1467

img_1464

We also began the visa conversion process this week. It’s really difficult to get work visas in Indonesia and AMINEF can’t get them in time for when we arrive in August. So instead they bring us in on Socio-cultural visas and then we convert them once we have all the paperwork. It’s still a 8-step project even then but at least we’ll be legal in a month or two? Anyways, the first of many visits to immigration occurred on Monday and then the immigration officials showed up at my school to “check” on things and to see my housing…

img_1383

Kate and I ended the week with dinner here:

img_1596

It was a great way to celebrate the end of a long, first week!

It’s great being back and being back for the long term. Last year, at this point was when we were evacuated for the first time. It’s crazy to look back at that now and think how long that lasted, when initially we thought it was only going to be for a few days! It’s weird to me to think I’ll be here for several months before I travel again. Last year was so much movement and travel I was rarely at site for more than a month at a time. But this year, I’m in it for good! I’m looking forward to next week and lesson planning with my teachers, continuing to develop routines, and exploring with Kate and Shelby!

Filed Under: Fulbright, MAN 1, teaching, Year 2 Tagged With: First week, Kendari, MAN 1, school, teaching

Welcome to Kendari!

August 29, 2016 by Mackenzie

“I can’t believe I’m doing this again” has been the thought swirling in my mind for the last several days. It’s Monday afternoon and I’m nearing the end of my fifth day at site. I’m exhausted. I haven’t been able to get through a day yet without at least an hour, but usually a two hour, nap. I can’t imagine the poor new ETAs who are dealing with jetlag on top of exhaustion from site!

The newness of it all is overwhelming. Seeking out new places to eat, seeking out new places to buy pulsa and data (phone credit), meeting 66 new teachers and some 700 students. It’s purely exhausting. My counterpart asked me today why I haven’t asked the ibu (mother, mrs.) in charge of my house for help buying the things I need, and my answer was that in the afternoon, when I finally get home, I just pass out exhausted!

Kendari is HOT. My weather app says it is 88 degrees, but “feels like 92” with 75% humidity. It’s fairly similar to Palangkaraya, almost the exact same distance from the equator. What is not cool, pun intended, is my very minimally working AC. My room is large – and there is a partial wall separating the front and back rooms which the AC has to cover both of. This means the AC makes zero difference. I have a fan and that helps a lot but I don’t have a respite from the heat until late at night, when suddenly my AC seems to kick into gear and cools everything down. Or maybe it’s just the temperature dropping… who knows. I suppose it’s nice that my nights are cool but gah, my days are just hot.

I’m going to pause in my site description and tell you that I currently have some 15-odd children yelling, screaming, and banging outside my house. My house is next to a basketball court, the hoop is attached to my wall actually, and this is where all the neighborhood kids play every, and I mean every afternoon. It’s cute but gosh they are loud. I’m not sure I can handle this every afternoon… They have asked me to teach them English, which I’m excited to do, but it’s hard to imagine that right now when I come home from school and just want to sleep. Although I can’t exactly sleep because they are so loud…

However loud they are, they are pretty adorable <3

However loud they are, they are pretty adorable <3

I asked them all to write down their names and ages in my notebook...

I asked them all to write down their names and ages in my notebook…

Picking up all the leaves in front of my house <3

Picking up all the leaves in front of my house <3

Kendari is beautiful. Absolutely beautiful. The city is set around a bay and what is not open to the ocean is surrounded by mountains. I’m so looking forward to exploring the city and surrounding areas!

Kendari Beach

Sunset at Kendari Beach

I am very, very lucky to be living in the middle of the city. Last year, I was living outside the city, a ten minute motorcycle ride from the nearest anything. This year, I’m in the heart of the city! There is a huge plaza/tower area called MTQ in the center of the city and I live a two minute walk from it! In the evenings there are tons of food stalls that open up around MTQ and in the afternoons, lots of people go walk or jog around the “track” inside the plaza. I cannot believe my good fortune in living literally across the street, especially considering how far away I lived from anything last year. There are plenty of warungs (small food stalls) nearby and even a stellar restaurant/coffee shop/hangout place called Kopi Kita, which is no more than a five minute walk from my house. They’ve got every kind of jus (juice) you could want along with every kind of sugary coffee concoction. Plus great food at very reasonable prices. At 7:30 every night (yes, I’ve been there three times in five days), they have live music. Oh, and EXCELLENT wifi. Andddd, it’s right in between Kate’s (one of my sitemates) house and my house so we can both meet there very easily! My other sitemate, Shelby lives pretty nearby us too so we are very lucky to all be living close to each other!

The tower at MTQ that I believe is a spaceship

The tower at MTQ that I believe is a spaceship

The plaza area below the tower where I can run/walk

The plaza area below the tower where I can run/walk

My house itself is a ruko (rumah toko ~ store house). Basically, the building used to be a store (selling hijabs, I think) and they have turned it into a house for me. Everyone outside of Kendari (my friends in Pky and AMINEF) find it very funny that I’m living in a ruko. When Rizqi (from AMINEF) visited Kendari in July to check the housing and talk with the school, it was still very much a store, and zero part a house. But they built a partition wall and added a bed, a wardrobe, and a vanity and now it’s working out as a house! The front is a huge storefront, complete with floor to ceiling windows and a legit store front door, which I chain up when I leave. The bathroom is nice for Indo and there is a third room in the back that theoretically acts as a kitchen… but has yet to have any means of cooking anything inside. It’s definitely working out and as soon as I get a few more things, a fridge, a rice cooker, a few extension cords, a non-leaking water dispenser, working AC, outlets not falling out of the wall, etc I’ll be happy with this as my home for the next year 🙂

Welcome to my ruko!

Welcome to my ruko!

Left side of front room

Left side of front room

Middle view of front room

Middle view of front room

Right side

Right side

The middle room is the bedroom

The middle room is the bedroom

IMG_1074

From the back corner looking forward

From the back corner looking forward

Back room ~ tbd kitchen

Back room ~ tbd kitchen

Bathroom

Bathroom

The ruko is on the property of, and right in front of, a family’s house. They take care of me – taking me to the store, fixing things for me, etc. They don’t speak English so it’s an excellent opportunity to practice my Bahasa! They have taken me to dinner with them several times already – the mom has 9 siblings and they usually all have dinner together at grandma’s house! Now I’m part of the family too! 😀

Host-sisters :)

Host-sisters 🙂 Pia, Cinta, and Nisa

And finally, my school! This year I’m teaching at a madrasah, an Islamic school. Public schools in Indonesia are called SMA #, vocational schools are SMK #, and madrasahs are MAN #. So this year, my school is called MAN 1 Kendari. It’s quite large, at least compared to SMA 5 last year. There are 66 teachers and my guess is around 600-700 students. Last year my school had maybe 30 teachers and 350 students… The school compound itself is so different from SMA 5. Whereas last year, the school was quite rural and surrounded a huge soccer field, this school is right in the city with a dozen buildings or so, some two story, most facing an inner courtyard. All the teachers and students at this school are Muslim, except me. That means that every female is wearing a headscarf, except me. AMINEF requires schools to not force ETAs to wear a headscarf, so while I’m sure the school would love to see me in one, they won’t be haha 😀 I do however, have to wear clothes that cover me from collarbone, to wrists, to ankles. Unfortunately, most of my batik from last year is not made in that style so I’m struggling a bit on that front – but I’ll get some things made soon and have plenty of things to wear soon enough.

Selfies with my fellow teachers teachers!

Selfies with my fellow teachers!

My students are adorable and oh so sweet. It looks like I’ll be teaching 13 classes this year, for a total of 25 teaching hours. This is more than last year (9 classes, 18 hours) so I’m fairly confident I’m going to continue being exhausted and have to take naps every day… I’ll teach mostly tenth grade with two eleventh grade classes as well, I think. I have four different coteachers (compared to 2 last year), which means a lot of different lesson planning… Basically, lots of adjusting to do this year! However, MAN 1 seems like a VERY organized school, with classes starting and ending when they are supposed to, teachers going to their classes, etc. I am a big fan of this 😀 See this post for what happened last year…

IMG_0935

Many times this week I’ve thought, “I can’t believe I’m doing this again”. This is hard. Even though it’s my second time it’s hard. Living in an area with very few other foreigners means I often feel like a monkey in a cage where everyone wants to take pictures with me. After a year of this, I’m sooooo done with the “Mister, foto?” or the sneaky pictures when they don’t even ask you. Adjusting to a new school is hard… I’m unfamiliar with the customs and routine of things. I don’t know where to get food, I don’t know how long I’m expected to stay at school… It’s the same as any new job but add the burden of another culture, another language, another religion, and this oppressive heat and it’s a whole new battle. The living conditions aren’t bad, but I sometimes still wonder why I’m doing this again when I could be living much more comfortably somewhere else, near to my family and friends, and in a place where I speak the language and can get around…

But I know that once I get to know these faces, it will all be so worth it.

IMG_1057

This first week is hard, and I need to remember that SMA 5 was hard that first week too. But I came to love it and I miss it so much. Remembering my students and life there, helps and hurts as I adjust here… I’m grateful for Tisia, my best friend and counterpart last year, who helped me with so, so much those first weeks there and who I became so close to so fast. Things are different here and while I know that I will eventually know my new counterpart and coteachers well, it will take time. I’ll eventually know the names of my students, as I did at SMA 5, and we will eventually get to hang out and explore together. I’ll eventually know my neighbors like I did Ibu Vera and Ibu Riana and their kids, Hardy, Monique, and Rian. I’ll eventually know where I can find a great breakfast, like I did with Mama Ina every day. I’ll eventually adjust to life here, just like I did at SMAN 5.

But for now, it’s enough to say that adjustment is tough, Kendari is hot, and the community here is wonderful <3

IMG_0945

 

 

Filed Under: Fulbright, MAN 1, Year 2 Tagged With: First week, fulbright, Kendari, MAN 1

Meet Mackenzie

Hi! I'm Mackenzie! I'm currently a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Indonesia! I'm writing all about my year on this blog and hope you'll follow along on this journey! Read More…

Disclaimer:

Students and Indonesian Friends: Please don't take anything I say here as critical of my experience or you and your culture. Rather, through this blog I want to share my experience in your country with my friends and family in America! I may write and laugh about a lot of things that are different but none of it is bad, it's just different!

This blog is not an official Department of State website, and the views and information presented here are my own and do not represent the Fulbright Program or the Department of State.

My Latest Posts on Instagram

[instagram-feed]

My Latest Reads

My Latest Reads

Between the World and Me
5 of 5 stars
Between the World and Me
by Ta-Nehisi Coates
If You Follow Me: A Novel
3 of 5 stars
If You Follow Me: A Novel
by Malena Watrous
The Goldfinch
4 of 5 stars
The Goldfinch
by Donna Tartt
Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town
4 of 5 stars
Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town
by Jon Krakauer
Station Eleven
4 of 5 stars
Station Eleven
by Emily St. John Mandel
Fight Back and Win
2 of 5 stars
Fight Back and Win
by Gloria Allred

goodreads.com

Archives

  • August 2017 (1)
  • June 2017 (2)
  • March 2017 (1)
  • February 2017 (1)
  • January 2017 (1)
  • December 2016 (1)
  • November 2016 (3)
  • October 2016 (3)
  • September 2016 (2)
  • August 2016 (2)
  • June 2016 (1)
  • May 2016 (3)
  • April 2016 (1)
  • March 2016 (4)
  • February 2016 (2)
  • January 2016 (1)
  • December 2015 (3)
  • November 2015 (2)
  • October 2015 (4)
  • September 2015 (5)
  • August 2015 (6)
  • June 2015 (2)
  • March 2015 (1)
  • December 2014 (4)
  • November 2014 (3)
  • October 2014 (3)
  • September 2014 (4)
  • August 2014 (5)
  • July 2014 (4)
  • June 2014 (2)
  • April 2014 (1)
  • March 2014 (4)
  • February 2014 (1)
  • January 2014 (3)
  • December 2013 (5)
  • November 2013 (3)
  • October 2013 (1)
  • September 2013 (4)
  • August 2013 (3)
  • July 2013 (2)
  • June 2013 (6)
  • May 2013 (6)
  • April 2013 (6)
  • March 2013 (3)
  • February 2013 (7)
  • December 2012 (10)
  • November 2012 (4)
  • October 2012 (1)
  • September 2012 (3)
  • July 2012 (3)
  • June 2012 (5)
  • May 2012 (18)

Mackenzie

Hi! I'm Mackenzie! I'm currently a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Indonesia! I'm writing all about my year on this blog and hope you'll follow along on this journey! Read More…

A Look Back

Palangkaraya smog
This blog is not an official U.S. Department of State website and the views and opinions expressed here are entirely my own, and do not represent the U.S. Department of State or the Fulbright Program.

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Child Theme by Shay Bocks · Built on the Genesis Framework · Powered by WordPress