|
Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Students and Teachers from Around the World!"
|
| View previous topic :: View next topic |
| Author |
Message |
AGoodStory
Joined: 26 Feb 2010 Posts: 738
|
Posted: Tue Aug 01, 2017 6:23 pm Post subject: Teacher Training for Deportees |
|
|
.
Is this program gaining any traction?
Deportees back in Mexico offered free training to become English teachers
(REUTERS)
MEXICO CITY – A progressive initiative in Mexico City is giving U.S. deportees the opportunity to obtain English language and teaching qualifications, in an effort to help them rebuild their lives following ejection from their American homes.
An entirely free program, the joint effort between the city’s government and citizens’ council, offers a four to six week teacher training course, culminating in an official TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) exam, after which successful candidates will be qualified to teach in Mexican schools.
“We have a massive influx of deportees to this country, a pool of talent that is almost entirely ignored by the Mexican authorities,” said Luis Wertman, the president of the Mexico City Citizens’ Council, which brought the idea to fruition. “Yet we have a deficit of over 80,000 qualified English teachers in Mexico, and these people are perfect candidates to fill posts we desperately need."
The program’s first course begins on Saturday, and although it has capacity for 100 trainee teachers, so far only 25 spaces on the class have been filled. The Citizens’ Council has been spreading the word of its strategy through advice kiosks at the city’s airport and four major bus terminals, as well as its citizens’ hotline, but has struggled to convince potential candidates of its benefits.
“It seems to be a win-win situation and we are trying to get the word out,” said Wertman, “but unfortunately deportees are not a community who are very trusting of the government.”
Mexico City currently receives three flights of deportees from the United States a week, an average of 350 arrivals, 10 percent of whom choose to remain in the capital. Those who make up this 10 percent are generally young men to whom Mexico is a foreign country, with little cultural or family connections having been taken to the U.S. as young children. Finding themselves alone, without official documentation and spurned by the city’s residents, many end up homeless.
“The deportees live extremely difficult lives,” said Marco Castillo, the founder of IIPSOCULTA, a humanitarian organization that works, among many other projects, to improve the lives of U.S. deportees in Mexico.
“This city is very intense, competitive, angry and expensive. For someone who has been through the psychological stress of deportation from a country they call home, it can be too much.”
Jesus Navarro left his home state of Nayarit with his parents at the age of three, and grew up in California. After being deported two years ago, he said his arrival in Mexico City was a very difficult time.
“I barely spoke Spanish, and no one here was interested in knowing a chicano (a slang term for Mexican-Americans),” he told Fox News outside the Teletech call center in downtown Mexico City, where he and many other deportees have found work. “I was torn away from my family and friends, it was a very depressing time.”
Tomas Perez, who grew up in Chicago, had a similar experience when he was deported 12 years ago. Now a butcher in a quiet neighborhood of the capital, he said this new program for deportees would have been welcome when he first arrived.
“I had no papers, no one would even give me a job sweeping a floor,” he told Fox News. “It’s good that this initiative will help deportees, but it’s not much good to me. After so long living here I’ve completely lost my English.”
While many deportees find work in call centers where their English fluency can be put to use, the pay is rarely more than the $4.30 daily minimum wage, as employers take advantage of the deportees’ legal limbo status.
Wertman said the English teacher training program aims to show respect to its candidates, and offer them an opportunity at building a sense of self-esteem that is rarely afforded to deportees.
“We refer to them as Returning Mexicans, not deportees, as we want them to think of themselves as belonging to this country,” he told Fox News. “Not only do we aim to train a new generation of English teachers who can benefit Mexican society, but we will offer our participants all the legal help they need to get their Mexican paperwork in order.”
Despite his optimism, the Citizens’ Council president nevertheless feels concerned about the threats of mass deportation by the Trump administration.
“So far we haven’t seen an increase in deportees arriving in Mexico City,” he said, “but we are employing a popular Mexican saying: we are prepared for the worst, but hoping for the best.”
As the news spreads of the government initiative, the Citizens’ Council hopes to include the deportees in the future.
“As a society we feel to a certain extent that we have failed these Returning Mexicans,” he told Fox News. “They left this country to seek a life elsewhere for a reason, and when they return they can feel rejected and without identity or value.
“But solidarity is a Mexican value,” he said with a benevolent smile, “and we have to extend that to all members of our society.”
Alasdair Baverstock is a freelance writer based in Mexico.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/03/08/deportees-back-in-mexico-offered-free-training-to-become-english-teachers.html
. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Guy Courchesne

Joined: 10 Mar 2003 Posts: 9650 Location: Mexico City
|
Posted: Wed Aug 02, 2017 8:37 pm Post subject: |
|
|
I'm watching this closely...I have strong ties to the Dreamer community in Mexico and have been hoping something like this would happen.
This is the right hand of the government's efforts. The left hand is to steer them towards public education where a major pay increase is in the works for public school English teachers. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
MotherF
Joined: 07 Jun 2010 Posts: 1450 Location: 17�48'N 97�46'W
|
Posted: Thu Aug 03, 2017 2:22 pm Post subject: |
|
|
I've also been following this closely. It's a very explosive topic in the Facebook groups for English teachers in Mexico, which are mostly made up of Mexican teachers.
I'm not sure you have been following quite closely enough Guy in terms of the pay increase. The 21,000 pesos a month positions are for teachers to teach at the teacher's colleges. The plan is to make English a required subject at the Normales as of this fall and in 5 years ALL the graduates of the theses schools will have a B2 level of English, and the regular classroom teachers in primarias will also teach English. Therefore--NO pay increase for public primary teachers, additional work for public primary teachers, and a lot of current add on English teachers out of jobs (jobs which are miserably paid anyway and often pay is delayed for months).
Anyone reading this forum, can probably see the massive hole in this plan. If just putting a qualified teacher into a higher education institution was enough for 100% of the students to learn and met the requirements, well, the world would be a very different place than it is today!
https://www.gob.mx/sep/prensa/comunicado-194-iniciara-en-agosto-el-proceso-de-seleccion-de-maestros-de-ingles-para-normales-nuno-mayer |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Samantha

Joined: 25 Oct 2003 Posts: 2038 Location: Mexican Riviera
|
Posted: Fri Aug 04, 2017 5:53 am Post subject: |
|
|
I hadn't heard of this program and am also interested in how it works out. Many returnees have arrived in our city because it's a tourist area and they can use their perfect English working with foreign visitors during the peak season. For the most part, English teaching jobs are filled with local Mexican teachers so steady work for foreigners is tough either way.
I solved the work situation by offering private lessons combined with a job online (in social media). Best of both worlds and one paycheck is always on time! Surprisingly, many of my global coworkers are from right here in Mexico (both nationals and foreigners). So, anything is possible under the right circumstances and I hope everything works out for the returnees. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Guy Courchesne

Joined: 10 Mar 2003 Posts: 9650 Location: Mexico City
|
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Jultime
Joined: 25 Jun 2014 Posts: 113 Location: Mexico
|
Posted: Fri Sep 01, 2017 3:45 pm Post subject: |
|
|
| The Dreamers here in Guzman are making more money driving GoCab than they would be teaching English. I know one of my drivers made over 2,000 pesos in one day driving GoCab. Sure beats the offer of 90 pesos per hour I received to teach English at CURSUR (through another company). Jeez, I make more than 90 at the crap school where I'm teaching now. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
Guy Courchesne

Joined: 10 Mar 2003 Posts: 9650 Location: Mexico City
|
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
nomad soul

Joined: 31 Jan 2010 Posts: 11454 Location: The real world
|
| |