Archive for the ‘Society’ Category
Administering French life from afar
One of the greatest hassles in our lives at the moment is that we’ve to try to sort out some administration with the French tax and social security people whilst we’re in the UK.
You’d think that it would be relatively easy to do as you can obviously use email, faxes, phone calls and even letters but in practice it just isn’t. For one thing, French fax machines seem to work on a different standard as other places as faxes from the UK aren’t accepted by the French fax machines that I’ve tried (even sending from a French fax machine!). Phone calls just don’t seem to get you anywhere and emails rarely receive any response. You might think that leaves letters as a workable approach but even that doesn’t always seem to work. In fact, the French lettre recommandé is the only approach to use but, of course, that’s not available outside France, is it?
Actually, even in France we found that the only really reliable way to do things was to visit the office concerned though flying over all the time is hardly a viable option.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Back to school with yet another time change
When John started school this year he only went to noon which wasn’t too bad as it gave us a sensible break before needing to go back for James at 2.30pm.
However, they changed that to a 1.30pm finish for John the week before the holidays which was a major pain for everyone with more than one child at the school. That hour just doesn’t give you enough time to really do anything yet it’s a bit pointless hanging around the school too.
Still, they’re now onto a 2.15pm finish so at least we can pick them both up at the same time now. That’s also given us a lot more time to do our own thing in the mornings so, all being well, I’ll be able to get caught up with everything that just didn’t seem to fit into what turned out to be a very limited period in the mornings.
Also on another schedule is James’ Kumon. Thanks to something of a buildup of kids going to it, they’ve had to give us broad timeslots for the two days as it was getting just too crowded at times. In practice, we’re going to our regular Tuesday slot at 4pm which seems to work fairly well but I’m not so sure about the 10am Saturday morning slot. The snag is that on Saturdays sometimes we have a bit of a lie-in but other times we want to get out early to go somewhere. With a fixed timeslot for James the lie-ins won’t be possible though aiming for a later slot would mean we couldn’t get out anywhere which isn’t good either.
Not that it looks like it’ll matter much. With the arrival of James’ glasses it seems clear that it was his eyesight that was causing the reading difficulties so he may be shooting ahead with that over the next month or two.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Overlapping course for the first time
Up to now I’ve stuck with one course per year in my time with the Open University which has given that time something of a pottering along feel to it all.
However, I managed to let myself get talked into thinking about overlapping courses over the coming year which means that I now find myself sort-of doing 90 points worth of courses over the next couple of weeks. I say sort-of as I’m not actually doing anything on the human biology course at the moment as I’m working on revising for the child development on the 21st.
Well not quite “nothing” as I’ve been dipping into the forum for the course and picked up the assignments for it last night. Frankly, the level of them is something of a shock. I thought that I’d find this course relatively hard going as I’ve not even done GCSE biology but I’d have been able to do the first couple of questions on the assignment in a matter of an hour or perhaps two. Having said that, the first assignment is mainly health rather than biology based so it avoids the difficult parts of the first book so perhaps later assignments and the exam will be a different matter.
That in turn has me thinking of signing up for the Biological Psychology (SD226) course which starts in February and which would have five months of overlap with the human biology course. It’s got a reputation of being rather difficult though so I’m going to have a look at the course texts before I do anything drastic.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.A really full Sunday
I’d been planning on writing up the notes on gender identity and running up another chunk of the answer for the seen question but in the end very little of either got done. The gender identity stuff should get written tomorrow and looks like a fairly easy one to do though there’s quite a heap of other things needing done tomorrow as well.
James woke up feeling a bit the worse for wear and with quite a temperature. That knocked the normal Sunday morning routine out somewhat but at least he was feeling reasonably OK by around noon so ’twas off to the “adventurous playground” in the Cave Hill Country Park. We’d been aiming to go there for a couple of weeks as we’d spotted it on our way to the zoo a few weeks back. It looks quite impressive from outside but isn’t really all that large as parks go these days mainly because almost all the local authorities seem to have decided to up the ante in terms of what equipment a playground has over recent years. Playgrounds that were pretty naff just a few years ago now seem to sport an enormous number of climbing frames and all kinds of other things for the kids nowadays. Anyway, it’s made the £2 per child entry fee seem fairly steep.
Anyway, once they’d worked their way round all the gear there (aside from the castle construction it’s nothing spectacular) it was going to be off for lunch but we happened to pass the public playground at Jordanstown on the way. Boy has it had a major upgrade over the last couple of years! Gone are the couple of swings and the largely broken down boat and in their place is quite a spectacular array of stuff for children from preschool through to young teenagers which, as you would expect, was being very well used.
And finally it was off to Papa Brown’s Grill at Carrickfergus where we’d a very enjoyable meal before heading home.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Back to school so, of course, we’ll all sick
Sniffling, coughing and sneezing have been working their way through all of us over the past week or so thanks to to James & John bringing these home from school.
Yesterday it was James’ turn to feel a bit off but now that he’s back to school ’tis the turn of John and me to feel dreadful.
Oh well, I guess another week or two and they’ll have worked their way through the range of minor colds and whatnot that their friends have…
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.