Welcome to Paul Sundberg's ongoing Mideast adventures! I won't publish every day - or every week - so don't get mad if you come back two weeks in a row to find the same old post. (Dates of postings move chronologically backwards, so the most recent posting is at the top, with older postings as you scroll down.) My email is (still) pasundberg @ yahoo.com

Friday, December 05, 2008

GIVING THANKS

Our four-day Thanksgiving break was a welcome relief in the midst of a busy term. I left Dad's battered '98 Infiniti at a body shop the Monday before, but with all the AAA insurance negotiations, there was no way I'd be getting THAT back by the Thanksgiving weekend, so I got an AAA-funded rental car for my drive to California. (Probably safest, under the circumstances.)

Old Aramco Brat friend Kim Ayers and her husband Allan Petker had invited me to Allan's parents' home in Bakersfield, up the interstate from LA towards Fresno, so that added a few hours onto my LA drive. The desolate, wide-open spaces of Arizona and the Mojave desert were soothing after living daily in a home-work-home Tempe existence for so long.

It was a Petker family Thanksgiving, and I knew few people there, but it was an interesting mix: the parents’ semi-adopted Cambodian-American daughter and her Burmese-American husband, Allan’s LA artist son Josh, Allan’s aunt’s family and their extended brood (her son-in-law quit his job as a school principal to sign up for the armed forces out of a sense of duty and “giving back”). They were a musical bunch (Allan is a professional master chorale conductor), so the Old 100th sung before the meal turned spontaneously into polyphony!

We drove back to LA late after the meal. I revisited my storage area at my rented condo in San Pedro (I missed my CD collection!) and visited various old Burbank friends from my former Episcopal church there in the 1980’s, St. Jude’s. They’re a friendly, small bunch, and it was hard to get back on the road after church Sunday afternoon!

TOEFL SUCCESS!

I while back I wrote that in October I had taken the main pre-college ESL test that all our ESL students have to take: the dreaded TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language). Well, I got my results this week, and I’m happy to report I am qualified to be admitted into most American colleges now!

Each of the four sections – Reading, Listening, Speaking, and Writing – has a maximum of 30 points. I got 30 on every section, except Listening, where I am ashamed to say I only pulled a 29! (Total = 119/120).

Word got around the office, and one of our instructors who teaches a TOEFL prep course boasted about it to his class. A couple of my students were there, and I have to say, that has given me FAR more credibility among the ESL masses than my Doctorate in Educational Psychology. (Yeah, yeah, so you’re a PhD, but man, you got 119 on the TOEFL!! Awesome, dude!! – ok, our ESL college-bound kids probably wouldn’t say “awesome, dude”.)

Finals and classes end December 19.

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