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The "weirdness" of English teachers in Korea.
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Are English teachers in Korea anti-social?
Yes
27%
 27%  [ 10 ]
No
43%
 43%  [ 16 ]
They are just insecure.
29%
 29%  [ 11 ]
Total Votes : 37

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superacidjax



Joined: 17 Oct 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 8:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

princess wrote:
Well, I met a girl here from Australia two years ago who expected to come here and be put in a traditional Korean house... Shocked She was shocked when the front desk guy drove her to her high rise apartment and told her that this was her home. I hope no one from my school told her that as a joke. I don't understand how anyone could come here expecting to live in a traditional house.


I've met tons of people that act like they can't buy Benadryl or Tylenol here and seem to act like they are moving to Mars rather than to the second largest city in the world.
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Roch



Joined: 24 Apr 2003
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 9:14 pm    Post subject: Re: The "weirdness" of English teachers in Korea. Reply with quote

superacidjax wrote:
I have found that most of the foreign English teachers in Korea that I've encountered are just plan strange. I occasssionally read the "Foreigner's View" section of the Korea Times and I am amazed at the complete ignorance of the world that these articles represent.

One article mentioned some girl's amazement of the "fast-pace" of Seoul and how that was strange to her and unexpected. In every large city, there is a fast pace.

I'm beginning to wonder if most of the teachers here come from some isolated fishing village in Canada somewhere. At the dance/electronic music clubs I frequent, I notice a large number of foreigners just seem to have trouble with basic social skills. They dress like they are purposefully trying to look weird for the sake of it. Kind of reminds me of many art students.. just being weird for weird's sake.

I've been to many countries, but Korea is one of the few that I've noticed westerners, especially teachers, just seem to act like social rejects. Or worse than that, they try to act superior to Koreans or other westerners. The only westerners I've met in Korea that I seem to like are the DJs. I suppose that the DJ-crowd is out amongst the population more and is probably more chilled out about Korea.

I suppose it seems to me that the problem is that many Westerners here are just very high-strung and can't adapt well to the new culture. Rather than becoming a part of the life of the city, they seem to wall themselves off from the rest of society.

I am not suggesting that any of you are like that of course.


Eat me, Young Thang.
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nautilus



Joined: 26 Nov 2005
Location: Je jump, Tu jump, oui jump!

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 9:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

[quote="superacidjax"]

Quote:
the club world


You came here on an entertainer visa?

Quote:
Experts in Korea (and let everyone know it)


Exclamation each foreigner has his own unique version of korean. Each jostles to be the one to make the order. The waitress usually does not understand either, and replies in english. Laughing
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Roch



Joined: 24 Apr 2003
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 9:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

superacidjax wrote:
happeningthang wrote:
So what are you saying?

Seems to me that you consider people who aren't just like you to be weird. Do you only encounter other foreigners in the clubs? There's a lot more foreigners outside of the clubs than in, isn't there?


It isn't the "club" people. It's the people that are just plain ignorant about Korea. I know a person who only eats McDonalds and Subway. I know still others that are just permanantly culture-shocked. Here on Dave's, it seems like many people are just clueless about Korea. There's a guy I know that says "Ass-Ah" all the time, just because he's trying to be cool to Koreans.

I'm just annoyed that people here seem to treat Koreans like they are some kind of novelty. It's like many of the Westerners here act like characatures of westerners.

And no, I'd prefer that people NOT be like me. I just get tired of everyone acting like they are superior and somehow "better" than Koreans.

Cliquish and snotty is the best descriptor of many of the teachers here.


In all due respect: you're way beyond me, Dudette/Dude.
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Mon Mar 12, 2007 9:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't think the foreigners are extremely different from the ones back home. I mean many people are cliquish back home. That part isn't different. Everyone finds their own crowd. I prefer a mixed one with different interests. However, there may be a larger percentage of drunks and misfits than normal because Koreans seem to tolerate that. That isn't the fault of people who don't drink so much. I mean there are people I would have had deported long ago if I had the power. I knew a guy who was drunk every single day, and he teaches kids. That is really bad news.
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Hollywoodaction



Joined: 02 Jul 2004

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 6:45 am    Post subject: Re: The "weirdness" of English teachers in Korea. Reply with quote

superacidjax wrote:
I have found that most of the foreign English teachers in Korea that I've encountered are just plan strange. I occasssionally read the "Foreigner's View" section of the Korea Times and I am amazed at the complete ignorance of the world that these articles represent.

One article mentioned some girl's amazement of the "fast-pace" of Seoul and how that was strange to her and unexpected. In every large city, there is a fast pace.

I'm beginning to wonder if most of the teachers here come from some isolated fishing village in Canada somewhere. At the dance/electronic music clubs I frequent, I notice a large number of foreigners just seem to have trouble with basic social skills. They dress like they are purposefully trying to look weird for the sake of it. Kind of reminds me of many art students.. just being weird for weird's sake.

I've been to many countries, but Korea is one of the few that I've noticed westerners, especially teachers, just seem to act like social rejects. Or worse than that, they try to act superior to Koreans or other westerners. The only westerners I've met in Korea that I seem to like are the DJs. I suppose that the DJ-crowd is out amongst the population more and is probably more chilled out about Korea.

I suppose it seems to me that the problem is that many Westerners here are just very high-strung and can't adapt well to the new culture. Rather than becoming a part of the life of the city, they seem to wall themselves off from the rest of society.

I am not suggesting that any of you are like that of course.


You're obviously ignorant and insecure. Stop trolling. Get a life.


Last edited by Hollywoodaction on Tue Mar 13, 2007 12:59 pm; edited 1 time in total
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uberscheisse



Joined: 02 Dec 2003
Location: japan is better than korea.

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 7:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

i've been here a few years and can say that 6 times out of 10 you're meeting someone who is either 1. cool/intelligent/worth kowing 2. entertaining yet drunk as hell all the damn time 3. sociopathic yet still interesting on an intellectual level.

the worst people are the other 40% - the ones who come here and do the following:

1. start treating korea like it's their pet project and condescend to everyone about their own personal experience here, regardless of how many weeks they've put in and how many profound, real situations have happened to them.

2. come here and act all bothered and bent-out-of-shape that the proper incense burners aren't available at the ikea that doesn't exist in yecheon.

3. talk about thailand too much

4. talk about christianity as if it's not obsolete

5. ask for advice but not listen to people as they're answering the question.

edit - and anyone who wears those hybrid hiking/running shoes - go jump into a shark's mouth. you don't belong in any country.
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trubadour



Joined: 03 Nov 2006

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 9:48 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

arse
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superacidjax



Joined: 17 Oct 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 6:28 pm    Post subject: Re: The "weirdness" of English teachers in Korea. Reply with quote

Hollywoodaction wrote:
You're obviously ignorant and insecure. Stop trolling. Get a life.


I'm ignorant because I think that most of the teachers here (that I've met) are nutcases?

That's just a fact. There's one girl I knew that didn't know that you could get Tylenol here. She was having her mom ship it over from home.

Just read Dave's for about 30 seconds. I'm not trolling, I'm just wondering if other people feel the same way. It seems like there are plenty of semi-sane people in Korea.. I was just wondering why there are so many people that aren't.

As far as my comment about the fishing village.. do you actually take everything literally? Perhaps you are among the people I'm discussing. Like I said, people here (that I've met) are so freakin' high strung. For many, Korea is the first country they've ever been too outside of there home. Korea isn't the easiest "introductory" country to live at least a solid year in.

It seems like the school recruiters should do a better job finding teachers with more of a sense of humor, sense of adventure (not to mention teaching aptitude!) For many teachers I encountered, it seems like their sense of adventure ends right at eating fresh roasted octopus on the street in the afternoon in Itaewon. They make no attempt to learn the language. They dress like hippies at their schools (when you know the standard in Korea is different regarding appearance) or they grow their hair long,greasy and scraggly lest they be mistaken for US soldiers (God forbid!) Still others are here to nail as many Korean girls as possible. Just visit the back bar at Route 66 for a demonstration..

So perhaps I am ignorant. I must be ignorant to not understand why the heck these people are so numerous. Korea is a very conservative place (at least in the workplace) so why do so many teachers try to act like they are still college freshmen when they show up to teach? Grow up. Act like a teacher when you're at work. Dress the part. Comb your hair. Stop hiding from Korean culture. Start opening your eyes to something beyond TGI Fridays. That wasn't directed at everyone.. just the "weird" ones about which I've been writing.
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superacidjax



Joined: 17 Oct 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 6:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

uberscheisse wrote:
1. start treating korea like it's their pet project and condescend to everyone about their own personal experience here, regardless of how many weeks they've put in and how many profound, real situations have happened to them.

2. come here and act all bothered and bent-out-of-shape that the proper incense burners aren't available at the ikea that doesn't exist in yecheon.

3. talk about thailand too much

5. ask for advice but not listen to people as they're answering the question.


BINGO. You hit the nail right on the head. My point exactly. I was refering to that 40%. You said it better than I could.
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 7:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am actually happy about many of the teachers I meet and met in Korea. I mean I can be with people from Eire, England, America, and Canada. I like seeing people from all parts of Canada.

Since they all supposedly have degrees and many of them are in the humanities, there is a good chance that there is a large percentage of intellectual or at least educated types. Also many who are here have been to other countries and are fellow traveler types. You overlooked those. Yes, there are the people who are alcoholics and there might be a larger percentage of the washed up alcoholic types. At least, I think so.

And yes there are those who are not into foreign cultures and just want the cash, but that attitude is ever present back home and very strong, but it is just not voiced because it is not politically correct obviously. How many people say in the U.S. really try to another language and compare that to those who try to learn Korean who are Americans. Probably a higher percentage of the Americans who are here, for example, try to learn Korean than their counterparts back home.

I am not really trying to learn Korean. It is not that I don't want to. I don't plan on staying here forever and my language exchange partner got a job, and I need someone to pronounce things. And after a week at work, I want to hang out with other foreigners. We want a taste of home while in a foreign place. Many people fit what you said, but the majority are pretty good.
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Grimalkin



Joined: 22 May 2005

PostPosted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 8:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ditto Adventurer and...



superacidjax


Quote:
For many teachers I encountered...... They dress like hippies at their schools (when you know the standard in Korea is different regarding appearance)



You don't teach here so....when your not deejaying you spent your free time visting schools to check the dress code of English teachers? Confused
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superacidjax



Joined: 17 Oct 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2007 1:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Grimalkin wrote:
You don't teach here so....when your not deejaying you spent your free time visting schools to check the dress code of English teachers? Confused


Am I wrong? One just needs to look at the average style of those westerners on the subway. And I have friends who are teachers. I have taught in Korea before. Just open your eyes. The "I've-just-returned-from-treking-across-Thailand-look" is more common than teachers wearing venue-appropriate clothing.

I don't personally care what teachers wear. It's just the attitude behind it that I'm wondering about.

If it makes you feel better, we can expand the parameters to include all non-tourist Westerners, not just teachers.
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bixlerscott



Joined: 27 Sep 2006
Location: Near Wonju, South Korea

PostPosted: Wed Mar 14, 2007 2:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The teachers I know are all good guys, like em' lots, want to hang out and talk to them more often, but that is not how it works here. I am finding other foreigners live after work doing one of these activities: 1. doing private language consultations 2. going to foreigner bars to be even more lonely in front of people 3. going to computer like we do often. 4. going home to Korean girlfriend or wife like long timers do. 5. dunno what else might be going on.

But to have friendly brothas' and sistas' to hang out with and talk in the evenings is not happening, it's a lonely life over here. (not much different than home in the line of social life unless you into nightclub or college social happenings)

As for dress code, there is no dress code, but it's well appreciated (image is valued) if you do look hansome or pretty in a professional manner. Dress is very very casual with the foreigners I know. I wanted to dress nicer (collared shirt and tie) as that is the right thing to do here and that I am more the professional type, but that alienates your super casual co-teachers so I dress down like I am going for a walk in the mountains on a Saturday knowing that the Koreans (director and teachers) look down on my for lowering my standards of image after seeing me look nice in my first few days (I feel I decieved them a little). No ties, blazers, or pin stripe stuff even though that works so well here in being liked and respected much more by Koreans in and outside of school. Yes, many teachers are hippies who love Thailand and Sri Lanka who take trips once or twice a year to these places to smoke bud and be even more casual. T-shirts, jeans, long hair, earrings, and the usual college boy thing seems to be the norm here, instead of a more professional image. I wear Dockers, button shirts, T-shirts, short hair, and a Columbia Sportwear fleece and I am still the best dressed up out of my bunch.

The teachers I have met all seem to be friendly people, but we are all individuals in it for ourselves so we do not coagulate much other than maybe one beer party a month, albeit we are very supportive and not out to sabotage one another or anything. Your on your own here in the line of an active foreigner social life (go meet professional Koreans who speak fluent English through things like Toastmasters International) as foreigners split and goes their own way. (privates?) You can go to foreigner bars, but the foreign, mostly familiar looking, bar flies do not seem all that friendly or talkative whatsoever (boring, not worth time and money). At first, in the foriegner bars, I thought I could meet highly intellegent friendly people talking about the world in many aspects. LOL. I get a whole bunch more out of my nights alone at a computer with my beer or Soju than I do sitting in the foreigner bars trying to chat with other foriegners who just blow me off or lack. So this might be why many of you also go to computer after work each night.

My 2 cents of observation reporting...
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