Archive for August, 2008

The little country that could

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Size.

I’m from Texas. It’s true - everything in Texas is bigger. I wonder if the reverse is true for Korea?

South Korea encompasses a skant 38,492 square miles - which makes it slightly bigger than the state of Indiana but slightly smaller than Kentucky. Woah~ that is small. What about population? Kentucky has roughly 4,500,000 residents while Korea has just under 50,000,000. That makes Texas roughly half the population of South Korea. So, Kentucky has 40,411 square miles of land with about 111 people per square mile. Texas fares a bit better with 268,601 square miles - that’s roughly 93 people per square mile. Korea? 1300 people per square mile. Shall we have a chart? Oh man I love charts:

  • Korea - 38,492 square miles - 50 million people - 1300 people per square mile
  • Kentucky - 40,411 square miles - 4.5 million people - 111 people per square mile
  • Texas - 268,601 square miles - 24 million people - 93 people per square mile

That means that even if we kicked everyone out and put Korea’s population within the borders of the Lone Star state, there would still be 186 people per square mile. Nuts to that!

Ecological Footprint

Notice that even though China is slightly larger in land mass and more than four times the population, they have a much smaller ecological footprint. I wonder where Korea ranks? I couldn’t find any pertinent data. I’d imagine it’s comparable to either Japan or China ( Sacrilegious! :) )

The most obvious reason for this discrepancy is how much America is consumer-driven. We buy a lot of stuff. Also, we like our space. We like a little bit more space than our East Asian friends. We also don’t build up as much - more of a side to side motion. I’m sure eventually we’ll start building up.

I’m certainly not an expert (they don’t teach much about nothing here in college) and I’m also not trying to get into a eco-battle over who is better, but I wanted to write about the sheer size difference between these countries. It’s also kind of mind boggling just how many of us are learning Korean - a language that is from a country that is easy to miss on a world map (“Isn’t that little Florida looking thing part of China?” ) .

Thoughts?

Wanna Bite?

Monday, August 4th, 2008

More from Stephanie: 

So on an early release day at the elementary school where I helped teach, my aunt picked me up and I went with her to help her with her job, which was a private English tutor for kids. Her job seemed to consist mostly of driving to each kid’s apartment, checking their homework, asking a few questions and assigning more homework for next time. (maybe it was homework-check-day or something) but after we visited a few kids and got in the elevator to ascend yet again, we were joined by some very young “초딩”s. Before we came to that apartment we had each bought an “ice cream” (more of popsicle type things really) and were trying to eat it before we got to the kids house and when my aunt saw the two second or third grade boys, she immediately offerred her half eaten ice cream to one of them saying “무글래?”(먹을래). I was a little suprised that she would do this, because I highly doubted that she knew this kid, let alone be close enough to offer her ice cream!

Later, as I was leaving a tutoring session, ( that I taught by myself) with “Michael” (6th grade) who came from a different apartment and therefore had to go home also, we were joined by another small kid from that floor whom neither of us knew. Michael was eating a box of 빼빼로 that the 아줌아 whose kid I was teaching supplied for refreshments. When he saw the kid, he offerred some to the little guy who took a couple. I asked Michael if he even knew the kid and he was like , “No. Just.” (그냥 makes more sense in Korean, which by itself means like, ‘just because’ or ‘no reason̵ ;) and when I asked “why would you give a kid you don’t even know something to eat?!” to which he replied “Koreans are just friendly.” I thought this was a very interesting thing. I don’t know about other places, but here, random people are not apt to offer you stuff, unless they’re flyers advertising something but I know I would be a little freaked out if someone I didn’t even know offered me their 과자 they happened to be eating at the moment. Anyone else have a similar experience?