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Percent of foreign teachers that are "good"...
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sharpe88



Joined: 21 Oct 2008
Posts: 226

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 3:18 am    Post subject: Percent of foreign teachers that are "good"... Reply with quote

I'd say about 10% know what they're doing (hopefully higher on this board)...

This observation comes from my frustration as a supervisor and recruiter of foreign teachers.. Most teachers are unskilled and at best can do the "entertainment" thing. They also tend to be stubborn and dislike constructive criticism. Kind of a pointless rant, i know..
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Miajiayou



Joined: 30 Apr 2011
Posts: 283
Location: Nanjing

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 3:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Probably not the majority. I'd say that goes for all teachers though, not just foreign teachers in China. It isn't an easy job.

While we're at it, I wouldn't mind discussing the percentage of supervisors that are "good"
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Johnny_Utah



Joined: 24 Jun 2010
Posts: 35

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 3:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Let's not forget the % of chinese students that are "good" oh boy, that could be a thread of it's own.
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sharpe88



Joined: 21 Oct 2008
Posts: 226

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 3:48 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Good point miajiayou. The number of good training centers and schools is probably the same proportion. Probably the crappy schools and low expectations creates a self-fulfilling prophecy.

I've never really had a problem with students that some seem to have though. On the contrary, the great majority have been good, eager learners. I guess I've been picky with the places I work.
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7969



Joined: 26 Mar 2003
Posts: 5782
Location: Coastal Guangdong

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 4:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sharpe88 wrote:
I'd say about 10% know what they're doing.

This observation comes from my frustration as a supervisor and recruiter of foreign teachers.. Most teachers are unskilled and at best can do the "entertainment" thing. They also tend to be stubborn and dislike constructive criticism. Kind of a pointless rant, i know..

Not pointless at all, and I think this will be a good thread. The following may ruffle some feathers but c'est la vie.

To start out I define a competent teacher as someone who:

1. shows up on time and in good shape (no hangover),
2. has a plan,
3. can execute the plan, and
4. doesn't cause problems in the workplace or in their private lives.

Before I give my opinion of others, let me give my take on myself. I admit when I first started out I had minimal teacher training/experience and looking back, I wasn't competent. I made all the mistakes of someone with little experience and training - disorganized, taught straight from a boring textbook, focused more on my personal life than work, got angry and frustrated over minor occurrences, didn't show enough flexibility etc etc.

But as time passed, and as I watched and learned from other more experienced and skilled individuals (internet was also useful) I realized where my mistakes were. Over time, I managed to correct these shortcomings. Still not perfect but after every lesson, after every term, I critique myself and weed out what doesn't work and add in smth that does. I plan in advance, I come to class prepared, I never get angry or frustrated any longer (teaching smth other than oral English helps in this respect), and I try to give the students material that's useful and (usually) interesting. As a result I've gotten better with each year that goes by. The stability provided by staying in the same job for five years has also helped a lot.

As for other FTs, at our school we've currently got five. Four do an adequate or better job, one does not and has caused more than their share of problems. In the past we had one FT who liked to give the girls a pat on the back(side) once in awhile (also liked the DVD player as it gave him more opportunities to smoke). This FT (when he did actually teach smth) gave the same lesson almost every week, his thinking being that if they did the same thing over and over they'd get real good at it. Another FT whose main concern was where to find hot women (lasted two months), another one who fled for some unknown reason (one term), and a fourth who was angry at the world and also left early (also one term). There have been a few others that I don't remember much about. So overall the percentage of competent teachers I've seen at this school over five years has been about 50%.

In another job I worked with a FT who was chronically late and drank till all hours, and did little in the classroom. Another older woman who liked to throw in a DVD more often than not. I've had a couple of other jobs as well where the talent was less than stellar.

Overall, in my experience at the four or five ESL jobs I've held I'd say the number of competent FTs I've come across in China is higher than 10% but probably lower than 50%.

sharpe88 wrote:
I'd say about 10% know what they're doing (hopefully higher on this board)...

I'm not sure that people on this board are any better than the general population at large. The way I read it, forums are places where you're more likely to find angry people who haven't adapted well to life abroad (this might explain the disproportionate number of negative threads/posts on seemingly every topic). And IMO those people don't always function well at work or life in general. Hence the anger.
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flyingscotsman



Joined: 24 Mar 2010
Posts: 339
Location: Suzhou, China

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 4:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well for $600 month most schools get what they pay for.
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sharpe88



Joined: 21 Oct 2008
Posts: 226

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 5:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

For fulltime I don't know any that pay "$600". Even higher paying schools like EF and WS hire pretty randomly

flyingscotsman wrote:
Well for $600 month most schools get what they pay for.
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TexasHighway



Joined: 03 Dec 2005
Posts: 779

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 5:50 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am wondering what percentage of Chinese teachers are good. Many times, I have walked passed classrooms where the teacher is sitting down reading from a textbook into a microphone while smoking a cigarette. Usually half of the students are sound asleep. By comparison, it seems foreign teachers aren't so bad.
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dog backwards



Joined: 27 Jan 2011
Posts: 178

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 6:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Without any sort of empirical data accompanied by a study, any comments are purely anecdotal and speculative. I think it would be better for the respondents to address their own experiences as teachers rather than to discuss their observations of others. If one speaks truthfully of his own experiences, he may speak with authority.

To speak poorly of the work of others in a public forum amounts to nothing good.

I'd like to read how a "recruiter and a supervisor of foreign teachers" can help the supposed remaining ninety percent become better teachers.
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catinthehatter



Joined: 04 Apr 2011
Posts: 29

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 7:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sharpe88 wrote:
For fulltime I don't know any that pay "$600". Even higher paying schools like EF and WS hire pretty randomly

flyingscotsman wrote:
Well for $600 month most schools get what they pay for.


That comment follows no real logic. Considering the economic state of China and for example compare we foreign teachers to Chinese teachers or other professions, salary has no bearing. Cost of living, life costs, whatever you want to call it is what it is. $600 has no direct bearing on anything. You're implying that even though a Chinese person may make 1/5 of what you make that you should still make $60,000 a year for sake of what/who you are ?

No sense or logic at all.

Good -v- Qualified is the real issue
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MisterButtkins



Joined: 03 Oct 2009
Posts: 1221

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 11:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think it's more than 10%, maybe 20%, which is still not that many. This is going to sound weird, but to some extent I believe someone's personality greatly affects their teaching in a way that you might not expect a computer programmer's personality to affect their programs. I've known people who have postgraduate degrees in education and all the teaching experience in the world and are still awful. At the same time I feel that, despite the fact I do not have a teaching certification and only have two years experience, I do a better job than most of my colleagues (not saying I'm perfect).

The most common problems I notice over here, even in people who are licensed and experienced, are:

1)Inability to adapt to a different teaching environment. I've known several people who taught English in high schools in the US and they arrive here and attempt to teach their classes the exact same material they taught in the US, which of course doesn't work. Or, they find that the setup doesn't meet their expectations and completely stop caring about what they are teaching.

2)For lack of a better term, being completely clueless about what they are supposed to teach. The biggest example that comes to mind to me is one of my coworkers who taught an IELTS Writing class who, at the end of the semester, still had no idea what "Task 1" and "Task 2" were. Another example is someone who gave an essay test to his Oral English class.

3)They are too lazy to lesson plan properly, and so fill their class with boring time-killers which the students hate. IMO, the students can generally tell if you are giving them a BS activity to kill time, and they don't like it. Some examples of this are people who play hangman in their oral English class and people who make their kids write lots of papers so they can sit there and not do anything during class time. Also, people who show movies too often.

4)They want their classes to be fun, and prioritize this over actual learning. This type is probably less harmful in some cases than the above, but I still feel like it's a problem. These are the people who just play games or chat with the students every day and make no attempt to fix problems that repeatedly crop up. Here's a newsflash: just getting kids to talk a lot does not automatically fix their verb tense problems or their pronunciation problems. In fact, it might make their bad habits more inveterate. An offender in this category I remember was a girl who taught Business English and simply had her class play games and do fun business scenarios all the time. At the end of the semester her kids didn't know any of the vocabulary or concepts our boss had asked us to cover.

5)Teachers who are generally bitter and take it out on the students. These are the teachers who get off to yelling at their students or giving extremely difficult but pedagogically useless assignments. A red flag for this category is if a teacher refers to his students as 'stupid'.

6)General lack of communication skills. Some teachers here seem woefully oblivious to the fact that their students do not understand everything they say. Another problem is teachers who are bad at explaining things, with some teachers giving overly complex and drawn-out examples and others simply not making the effort to elucidate a difficult word or concept, instead telling their students to look it up.

So yeah, there are a lot of bad teachers out there. In my opinion, the most important factors for someone to be a good teacher are a clear idea of the purpose of each course, a sense of professionalism even if the administration doesn't expect it, and the belief that learning and education are valuable. If a teacher lacks these, it doesn't matter how much education or experience he has, he's probably still going to be bad.
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milkweedma



Joined: 19 Nov 2006
Posts: 151

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 12:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

flyingscotsman wrote:
Well for $600 month most schools get what they pay for.


"If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys" springs to mind.
Perfectly logical concept.
The Chinese can afford to pay much, much more than they do but the rich and the powerful control the wealth so that everyone else gets peanuts so they can continue living the "highlife".

As for teaching, I always tried to engage the students with conversation in oral english class. Getting them talking, rather than just blabbering away myself like I've seen some other teachers do. I often asked them if they understood me and how can we make the class better. I loved watching Dr Who DVDs with them once a week and they loved watching them. David Tennent's Doctor was the first Doctor Who for my students!
Adjusting to living in China is a big ask. I got angry several times due to food poisoning and noise mostly, and I left my post early so I'm not a perfect teacher either!
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SahanRiddhi



Joined: 18 Sep 2010
Posts: 267

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 1:58 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

catinthehatter wrote:
sharpe88 wrote:
For fulltime I don't know any that pay "$600". Even higher paying schools like EF and WS hire pretty randomly

flyingscotsman wrote:
Well for $600 month most schools get what they pay for.


That comment follows no real logic. Considering the economic state of China and for example compare we foreign teachers to Chinese teachers or other professions, salary has no bearing. Cost of living, life costs, whatever you want to call it is what it is. $600 has no direct bearing on anything. You're implying that even though a Chinese person may make 1/5 of what you make that you should still make $60,000 a year for sake of what/who you are ?

No sense or logic at all.

Good -v- Qualified is the real issue


It's perfectly logical. If you wanted to make the standards higher, attract people with CELTA or other qualifications and those who are not running from something in their own country, pay higher. The low pay suggests they want a warm foreign body in the classroom, primarily for marketing purposes, and they don't really care what or how you teach. You don't have to pay much to get that.
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The Great Wall of Whiner



Joined: 29 Jan 2003
Posts: 4946
Location: Blabbing

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 5:31 pm    Post subject: Re: Percent of foreign teachers that are "good"... Reply with quote

sharpe88 wrote:
I'd say about 10% know what they're doing (hopefully higher on this board).....


I guess because only 10% of the jobs pay a decent salary and thus the job is actually worth it to do a decent job?

Or maybe 10% of the teachers have qualifications (true qualifications)?

I am not sure.... these are just guesses.

Only in China can a recruiter pick a homeless guy off the street in Norfolk, Virginia... then get him a passport and fly him to Smalltown China to teach for 2000 RMB a month and pocket the other 3000 RMB.

Dozens of times.
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brsmith15



Joined: 12 May 2003
Posts: 1142
Location: New Hampshire USA

PostPosted: Thu May 26, 2011 9:50 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Try my 10-80-10 rule (a bit of a variation of the normal distribution) which seems to work in most instances, thiis one included:

10% are outstanding, dedicated souls who might even consider working for little or no money.

10% are the dregs of the universe and should be taken out and burned.

80% are between the two extremes.

Having done the whole bit here, from managing an MBA program to teaching a class of sleeping dolts who couldn't have gotten into a uni on a train, I've seen them all. Characteristics such as age, education, background, country of origin seem to matter little. The best ESL teacher I ever saw came from the Ukraine and the worst "professor" was a middle-aged guy from Yorkshire UK with a PhD who was a drunkard, a womanizer, a bigot, and just plain distasteful.
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