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Twelvetongue
Joined: 16 Oct 2006 Posts: 14 Location: Sacramento, CA
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 4:26 pm Post subject: Which countries give you the most freedom of method? |
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What do the experienced teachers have to say? |
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Justin Trullinger

Joined: 28 Jan 2005 Posts: 3110 Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 4:50 pm Post subject: |
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The more details you get into your question, the more likely you are to get detailed answers.
In my experience, which covers only Europe and Latin America, I'd say it has fairly little to do with countries, and a lot to do with individual schools. Here in Quito, some schools give a lot of autonomy, others give them scripts.
Best,
Justin |
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rusmeister
Joined: 15 Jun 2006 Posts: 867 Location: Russia
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 4:50 pm Post subject: |
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It isn't the country - it's the employer.
Self-employment beats the heck out of everything else for that. |
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furiousmilksheikali

Joined: 31 Jul 2006 Posts: 1660 Location: In a coffee shop, splitting a 30,000 yen tab with Sekiguchi.
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 5:03 pm Post subject: |
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North Korea may have the least, but I am guessing as I have never taught there. Other than that, few countries impose a teaching method on ESL/EFL practioners. Why do you think it is otherwise? |
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Justin Trullinger

Joined: 28 Jan 2005 Posts: 3110 Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 5:56 pm Post subject: |
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Few countries do, but a fair number of schools do...
Some good, some bad.
I certainly "impose" communication as the basis for our methodology- simply based on the fact that teachers lecturing about grammar doesn't work very well, if it's all they do...
Inlingua has their own materials, and insists on them being used. (Though there's some variation on what this means from place to place.)
Callan Method, Berlitz, Wall Street...a lot of chains have their own preferred method, and in places where staff turnover is high, prefer not to get too much teacher creativity...
Best,
Justin |
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guangho

Joined: 16 Oct 2004 Posts: 476 Location: in transit
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 6:01 pm Post subject: |
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rusmeister wrote: |
It isn't the country - it's the employer.
Self-employment beats the heck out of everything else for that. |
Ditto:
I had 4 employers in EFL
#1 couldn't care less
#2 was a Korean hakwon presided over by a lad whose name changed weekly and a spinster who screamed at me that I did not know Bible verses. She was quite the drill sergeant but did not actually care about the lessons, it was more of a domination thing than anything else
#3 was a Korean after-school program featuring another multiple named supervisor and Michelle, a kyopo (Korean-American) with a severe identity crisis. She did not show up very often, which was a blessing.
#4 seems the most balanced of them. It's a Uni in Eastern Europe and as long as you teach what's on the syllabi and the students are reasonably content, they will leave you alone.
There is no real way to divide employers by country or type of employment. The one universal in the above 4 were that none of them had sufficient materials. EFL is not taken seriously as a field and you, the native speaker, are expected to entertain rather than to teach, unless you get really lucky like I did with #4. |
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denise

Joined: 23 Apr 2003 Posts: 3419 Location: finally home-ish
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 6:45 pm Post subject: |
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I agree with the others. There's a range. I've worked in universities that allowed us to choose our own texts (or choose not to use one) and create our own syllabi, universities and language schools that assigned us texts and loose outlines (for testing dates) but gave us freedom on a day-to-day basis, and one language school that had its own method based on powerpoint slides that required us to lug our laptops to every lesson every day. (That last school has since closed up and disappeared...)
And there is quite a range geographically in the places I've worked... Europe, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East.
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 9:43 pm Post subject: |
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Twelvetongue,
What are you qualified to teach (or what WILL you be qualified to teach)?
There are conversation schools, public and private mainstream schools, international schools, universities, junior colleges, technical schools, business English schools, etc.
Even in one country (Japan), methods vary widely (as others have mentioned).
In one conversation school here, you are strictly limited to what you must teach. No yawning allowed, either!
In another, you may have total freedom including choice of a textbook.
In yet another, you may be given a textbook and told to make page 67 by a certain date, with no other restrictions (unless students complain).
In university, I have found that you get a course description, but teachers are pretty much allowed to choose textbooks and make up the syllabus on their own.
Pick a country or at least pick a type of teaching business, and we can answer you better, as Justin Trullinger wrote. |
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tedkarma

Joined: 17 May 2004 Posts: 1598 Location: The World is my Oyster
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Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2007 12:28 am Post subject: |
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My experience since 1992 across four countries and a variety of schools is that the higher level the school (universities for example) for greater freedom you are given.
Universities generally just assume you know what to do - and leave you to do it. The one exception for me was in Saudi Arabia. But the difference I think is really the size of the school too. (We had 25+ EFL teachers at the Saudi school)
Large schools with many EFL teachers will be forced to standardize - small schools won't.
So, for real freedom look for a small tertiary school.
Even if these schools don't offer a lot of freedom initially - once they see that you know what you are doing they loosen up considerably. |
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