Sunday, November 07, 2004

OTOP Fair

Sunday, 7 November 2004

This morning, Linda (the American professor who works at a local university and is married to a Thai and has been living here for 20 years) called at 6:45 am to ask if Christy and I wanted to go on a field trip with her husband's students (he's a high school teacher). She told us it would be great to buy Christmas gifts. OTOP stands for One Tambon One Product, and is a company that organizes all of the quality merchants from all over Thailand. Every hand made product, from silks to pineapple paper to food to bags and kitchenware from various provinces can be found here. We got on an air-conditioned bus (It's key that you get to ride on a bus with AC. No AC can make the trip a bit unbearable and uncomfortable.) with 100 7th - 9th graders and headed to Muang Thong Thani, the Impact Convention Center in Bangkok where many concerts and presentations (like the upcoming Dr. Steven Covey's presentation on leadership in mid-November) are held.

Basically, it was a huge trade show with buildings of different vendors. We spent hours looking at different crafts, and I bought Thai placemat/chopstick sets, Thai print boxes, a purse, recycled Heineken beer can purses (as requested by relatives in Hawai'i, after they saw my Singha beer can purse), cotton scarves, and cosmetic bags. Everything was reasonably price, and you could still do some bargaining for things.

It was exhausting, and by 2:30 pm, we were shopped out! Although it was good for us, unfortunately, I don't think it was too interesting for the 100 students that went. Crazy thing is this is a field trip sponsored by the government. They paid for 100 students from high schools to go, perhaps to be more informed about business or Thai economy and merchants? And, there were busloads of students from other schools there. But, the students didn't have money to buy things, and they really didn't make it an educational field trip for them. A waste of government money really to pay 3000 baht for the buses and all. But, there are a lot of things that the Thai government and education system are still trying to figure out.

4 comments:

Anna Rae said...

Wow, the beer can purse sounds incredibly cool!! Are they expensive?

Tanya Mau-Halsall said...

The beer can purse is made out of the recycled cans themselves, tied together with silver twistie ties and accessorized with a silver handle and buckle. I thought it was pretty trendy and so I splurged on one for myself when I saw it. They take 1 - 2 days to make, all hand made, so they are expensive by Thai standards, but not expensive by American standards. I paid about $6 to $ 9 for each purse, depending on the size.

Teresa said...

A lot cheaper than any French hand bag, right Anna Rae?
Tanya, I sure felt sorry for those students. It sounds like a waste of government money. How much English did the high school students speak?

Tanya Mau-Halsall said...

Yeah, even the teacher we went with said it was a waste of money. The kids don't speak English, but everything was in Thai, so that wasn't really an issue. The real issue is that in Thailand, it's all about the presentation when it comes to formal events. It's how it looks to the public vs. the actual quality of it. So, when it comes to performances we do in school or field trips or writing lesson plans, if the costumes are pretty and you spend hours on end rehearsing (rather than teaching the regular curriculum all day long), the field trip "seems" educational and like a lot of effort is being put into putting it into action, or the lesson plan has a lot of big "education" words in it, the more professional it is.