For Eva Jeffers, one of the best things about instructing children in India is the teaching.
The hardest thing?
The teaching.
“Shoutout to anyone who is a teacher,” said Jeffers, who won a Fulbright scholarship and is now an English teaching assistant at a school in New Delhi.
Jeffers, whose hometown is Greeley, Colorado, earned a degree in global health, from ASU's School of Human Evolution and Social Change, in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, last year.
She works at a school that’s equivalent to a low-income public school as a speaking and listening teacher for 350 10- to 13-year-olds. The kids keep her on her toes, and slip her notes that say, “"Ma'am, you teaching are very good."
“I have gained so much confidence from being required to teach, but also so much humility and respect for teachers that teach well,” she said.
Jeffers answered some questions about her Fulbright experience:
Question: Why did you decide to apply for a Fulbright?
Answer: I had spent time in India before and knew I wanted to go back. I had gotten to work with kids and international students before, so I thought this would be the perfect trifecta — kids, English confidence building, in India!
Q. What is a typical day like for you?
A. The consistent piece is waking up at 6:30 a.m. and needing to be asleep no later than 11 p.m. — I never believed I could have such a reliable sleep schedule! Most weekdays I take the school bus and chat with kids on the way on the way to school, teach three or four 40-minute classes of 35 to 56 students, and spend the rest of the school day talking with kids who are on recess, keeping up on the latest teacher gossip, or my personal favorite — playing volleyball and basketball with anyone who wants to join. After school, I sometimes get to treat myself to a nap. Other days, I volunteer at a non-profit, teaching English to young women and children, attend Hindi classes, or try to learn a little more about the crazy city in which I live.
Q. What do you do on the weekends?
A. Some weekends I travel to other cities. No matter how long I have lived in this country, I am convinced I can never understand or see all of it! Other weekends, I sleep and read books. Usually, it ends up being a mix of laundry, exploring new or favorite parts of Delhi with other Fulbright or Indian friends, catching up with friends or family at home, and planning for the upcoming week. Some weekends qualify as a 'crazy adventure in another country' while others just feel like a part of normal life.
Q. What’s been the best part of your experience?
The kids. I have never taught before and it is INCREDIBLY difficult. Any teacher will tell you that the kids is always the best part. They are hilarious, persistent, troublesome, but also have a good heart. While some days I may never want to see them again, every morning when I get to school, I am so grateful to have their expectant smiles greet me with, "Good Morning, Ma'am!"
Q. Have there been any challenges?
A. We design our own curriculum, which brings a lot of freedom but also very little guidance. We don't give exams or grades, so classroom management and inspiring our students to work hard is difficult. We largely have to rely on charisma and creating exciting activities that are also controlled in small classrooms packed with students and only a blackboards for resources. The kids are at all language levels, so working with that is also difficult.
Additionally, my body had a hard adjustment and for about a month I was sick with some mysterious puking disease. Persevering was difficult, but worth it. Some days I wanted to go home, but I am so glad that I didn't.
Q. What’s next for you, after you return?
A. I am currently applying for a master’s in public health for healthy aging and community education. I want to work with communities and elderly refugee populations to breakdown cultural barriers.
Q. What would you tell someone who is contemplating applying for a Fulbright?
A. Go for it! I never expected to be here. But also, especially if you are applying to be an English teaching assistant, make sure that you want to teach. You get to travel and learn and experience cross-cultural things, but every day you wake up really early to go to school and teach classrooms full of kids. If you don't want to teach, do something else. If you want to teach, do everything you can to be here.
Also, understand the program and country you are applying to — every country, location and situation are incredibly different. There are six English teaching assistants in Delhi and our experiences are only slightly similar. So know what you are applying for but be flexible in adapting to where you are placed.
More Local, national and global affairs
Video series tells story of 'Resettled People'
What better way for the story of former refugees to be told than having the refugees tell those stories themselves.That’s the idea behind "STEM Dreams in Motion: Stories of Resettled People."Using…
Department of State and ASU host Government Leaders Forum to strengthen semiconductor supply chains
By Emilia FrancoAs the global demand for semiconductors accelerates — with projections reaching $1 trillion by 2030 — Arizona State University, in partnership with the U.S. Department of State,…
Environmental writer, ER doctor address violence, climate change, more at sold-out ASU event
“The difficulty of understanding the consequences of heat is amplified by conventional notions of what it means to be hot. In pop culture, hot is sexy, hot is cool, hot is new…” That excerpt was…