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How important are teaching qualifications?
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Marcoregano



Joined: 19 May 2003
Posts: 872
Location: Hong Kong

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 3:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Many courses are lousy and many well qualified teachers are lousy teachers and many unqualified teachers make great teachers. However:

Qualifications + Experience = Salary. This will never change.
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foster



Joined: 07 Feb 2003
Posts: 485
Location: Honkers, SARS

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 4:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Denise, must admit that teaching a class of 4 year olds fills me with a dread that is not asuaged by my teaching degree. I would sooner attempt to teach proper essay and research format to college bound kids than a room of screaming 4 year olds.

I feel that if you are in a proper school setting, you should have a degree. MANY local teachers in HK are degreeless and to some extent, it shows. My local teachers who teach English are constantly making with flagrant and repetetive mistakes. As a native speaker, it drives me nuts.

For conversation schools or tutorial centers, TEFL or the like with a degree of some sort would be fine.

Although I have a BEd, I would never say I am a better teacher than a non-BEd person. I would however, be frustrated and annoyed if a non-BEd teacher took my job.
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denise



Joined: 23 Apr 2003
Posts: 3419
Location: finally home-ish

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:25 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Foster--I agree about the kids. I am fully qualified for my job, but completely unqualified for children. Sure, on paper I should theoretically be able to handle them, but paper qualifications aren't everything, and I know very well that I don't have the right personality to teach children.

Qualifications + experience do, often, add up to more than just higher salaries. They quite often--at the risk of being flamed--add up to competence.

d
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Roger



Joined: 19 Jan 2003
Posts: 9138

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 6:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

This whole thread - especially the answers provided by Glenski and Denise as well as struelle and others - made me realise one important thing: that if you have no relevant qualificiations you are more likely to drift in and out of teaching, and if you do have qualifications you are likely to stay and make a lasting contribution; then also you will widen your professional horizon and probably learn how to do your job in a different and potentially more challenging environment.
While I was sufficiently prepared for my college students I had to learn most ropes when I was hired by a kindergarten; I did this most successfully (and it gave my self-esteem a big shot in the arm!).
Now I can handle "adult" students a lot better. It shows in every day class management!
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foster



Joined: 07 Feb 2003
Posts: 485
Location: Honkers, SARS

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 11:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think that is a fair point Roger. I feel that sometimes the ones who are not qualified are not as concerned about their kids/students/adults as we who are (dare I say) professionals.

Yes, some days I could cheerfully throttle my kids and not blink an eye. But when I mark a composition and I see improvement or when more than 50% of my kids get a passing grades on the cracker-jack standarized test in HK (DO NOT get me started on uniform testing), I feel all warm and fuzzy inside...that job satisfaction feeling. Cool

When my kids ask why I was not at school and if I feel better, which shows me that despite the abuse they heap on teachers, they do care, I am glad I am in a school. Wink Confused

No two days are ever the same, which I kind of like. Shocked

With my B.Ed, technically, I *could* teach elementary school...however, I do not need a criminal homicide on my record...I like kids...I do...in small doses and in even smaller groups. All it would take is one "Teeeeeaaacccchhhherr...he looked at me...wipe my nose...tie my shoe..."etc etc and I would be wringing a neck. Twisted Evil Evil or Very Mad I do have to give elementary teachers a LOAD of credit.
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Celeste



Joined: 17 Jan 2003
Posts: 814
Location: Fukuoka City, Japan

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 10:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
All it would take is one "Teeeeeaaacccchhhherr...he looked at me...wipe my nose...tie my shoe..."etc etc and I would be wringing a neck.


I do teach elementary school, and I can attest to the fact that kids never ask for their noses to be wiped. They prefer to go around with a booger moustache until a teacher hands them a kleenex and orders them to wipe their nose. I do notice a lot of people working in elementary schools who really shouldn't be. Here in Japan, elementary school English is just getting off the ground, and so the schools are having a hard time finding teachers (mostly because their idea of advertising a position means going to other school administrators and asking "Can you introduce me to some foreign teachers?"). Often they will hire people from universities to teach the little ones. Now I am not saying that people with MAs in liguistics have no business teaching kids, but a lot of the ones I have seen are a bit unsuitable. (I loved it when I met one of them in the teachers' room after his first class and he said "This is really hard. I didn't think they would be so bad!" They weren't bad- they were just 7years old.)
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Snoopy



Joined: 13 Jul 2003
Posts: 185

PostPosted: Tue Mar 16, 2004 10:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I took the trouble to become qualified at my own expense, giving up my Jobseeker Allowance, and recouped the cost in a very short time moonlighting in the Kingdom of Stupid @rseholes. It was also a good experience to review teaching techniques and mix with people from a wide range of backgrounds to share ideas. Get it done!
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