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Which school to send my kids in Lodz?


posts: 20
 
anamak [Guest]
  Jan 25, 07, 13:29  #1

Who could please suggest one?

Private or Public.

Any ideas where to send kids 4 and 10 years of age while our family stays in Lodz - it's temporarily, but it's for 4 years.

Kids don't know any Polish, and need a school thought mostly in English in Lodz. Please, help!!!

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globetrotter
  Jan 25, 07, 13:32  #2

There is the British International School in Lodz. Don't know too much about it but I know they have a web site as my friend looked into it before his job went to warsaw rather than Lodz

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anamak [Guest]
  Jan 25, 07, 13:37  #3

sorry, the topic should have been called "Elementary school thought imostly in English in Lodz?" I
I wrote "Kids in Lodz", originally planning to ask about kidz' life in general . Is that hard to live with kids in Poland? (They know no word in Polish) What to expect?

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anamak [Guest]
  Jan 25, 07, 13:37  #4

wow! Thanks for the information! I'll find it!

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Grzegorz_
  Jan 25, 07, 13:38  #5

Quoting: anamak, Post #3
What to expect?


Hungry people hunting for English speaking kids.

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anamak [Guest]
  Jan 25, 07, 13:52  #6

what do you mean?

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anamak [Guest]
  Jan 25, 07, 13:56  #7

Quoting: Grzegorz_, Post #5
Hungry people hunting for English speaking kids.


I'm scared. I don't have any sense of humor when it comes to kids...please explain your comment.

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Wroclaw
  Jan 25, 07, 14:00  #8

anamak,

Some of the local kids will have a laugh at your 4 year old because they won't understand him/her. It will be a form of bullying and it might affect your child. Watch out for it.

The ten year old should be better able to deal with it. But, again, look out for the signs.

I must stress MIGHT have problems.

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krysia
  Jan 25, 07, 14:29  #9

I have a 5 and a 3 year old. There are some kids here in kindergarten that don't speak english, they speak Vietnamese and nobody laughs at them. They are accepted as they are, kids don't make judgements based on race, language or looks.
Your kids will be fine. I was 8 when I went to Poland. Knew very little Polish, my brother was 6, older sister 10 and nobody laughed at us. We were really cool kids. Had lots of friends. The only hard part were the teachers. They were very strict, they never smiled and some made me feel uncomfortable because I didn't speak Polish well enough.

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Wroclaw
  Jan 25, 07, 14:36  #10

Krysia,

With respect. I'm not talking about kids at school. I'm talking about free time in the back yard, playground etc. I guess I should have said so.

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krysia
  Jan 25, 07, 14:52  #11

That's Ok Wroclaw. I'm not picking on your answer, it was a very good reply, because some kids will do that. I'm just saying my experiences and my observations. When my oldest brother was 12, 13 we lived in the US and the kids were really mean to him because he spoke Polish and they called him Polak and made fun out of him.
But younger kids usually are too young to be so mean.

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Wroclaw
  Jan 25, 07, 15:07  #12

K

I've had a think. You are right. It would be the older kids who cause the problems.

There was a story somewhere, which was about a kid in Scotland. The teacher had a Polish day with food and stuff. The result, more understanding on both sides.

I would think that if anamak finds an English speaking school his/her kids will find plenty of friends. And of course it depends on the neighbourhood one lives in.

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Giles [Guest]
  Jan 26, 07, 12:29  #13

I would not be overly concerned about the language barrier kids pick up languages very quickly. mabye total immersion in the language will be daunting but the best for the child. if they go to an English speaking elemtary school (if they exist), this will delay them picking up the language.

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krysia
  Jan 26, 07, 12:54  #14

Quoting: Giles, Post #13
kids pick up languages very quickly.

True.
My mother was 4 years old when she moved to France. She only spoke Polish but learned French really quick.

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Decorator
  Jan 26, 07, 13:14  #15

When i was leaning Dutch, the buggers kept speaking English to me it was a nightmare... it was great amusement for them to listen to my pronounciation, but my Dutch girlfriends daughter picked up English off me very quickly. Kids are fast learners.

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Huegel
  Jan 26, 07, 14:28  #16

Quoting: Decorator, Post #15
When i was leaning Dutch, the buggers kept speaking English to me it was a nightmare...


Exact same problem in German speaking countries too. Bloody american tv!

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globetrotter
  Jan 26, 07, 14:34  #17

Quoting: Decorator, Post #15
When i was leaning Dutch, the buggers kept speaking English to me


When I was learning French the buggers would only speak in French to me Vive la difference.

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anamak [Guest]
  Jan 28, 07, 16:27  #18

Forgive for a stupid question, pls.

do kids go to school and extra curricular activities and come back by themselves or it's expected that parents drive/walk them in and out like it is in the US?

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Wroclaw
  Jan 28, 07, 16:47  #19

The law states that you should collect them up to age eleven. [I think]
But it doesn't happen. It depends how close to home they live.
I've seen kids age eight make their own way home. [but only a short distance]

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statysta
  Jul 15, 07, 18:34  #20

No.No. Not the international school. I'm British and spent many years living in Lodz, married to someone in education. My kids went to local podstawowki - ie primary schools and thrived there. Yes, teaching and teachers are far more formal than in the UK. But in part this is because children are well socialized at home befroe they school, and so don't need to be taught such skills formally. Also formal education starts later. Note that you'd be hard pressed to find anyone working in education sending their child to a private school. I think that you need to get there and ask around. My two youngsters are thriving educationally having been brought up in both Pol. and English education systems. Good luck

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