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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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Yu_Bum_suk

Joined: 25 Dec 2004
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:20 pm Post subject: |
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I just saw a student walk by a teacher who was re-parking her car. Coming up from the back corner of the car the student was giving the teacher the middle finger in front of her friends, and then she nodded politely to the teacher when she got out of her car and saw her.
I guess it's their disposition when our backs are turned that really counts. |
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Draz

Joined: 27 Jun 2007 Location: Land of Morning Clam
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:22 pm Post subject: |
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| nomad-ish wrote: |
| i think it would have to depend on the student. if i had an alright or bad student use the informal with me, i'd correct them, but if one of my great kids did it and it was obviously not intended maliciously, i would definitely just shrug it off. |
I'm even worse in my inconsistency... I only call them out on not being polite by Korean standards when they are pissing me off. Normally good or bad, it doesn't matter. If we're just having class and they use one hand, fine, but if they want their stupid cell phones back I make them use two. (For example.) |
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antoniothegreat

Joined: 28 Aug 2005 Location: Yangpyeong
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:23 pm Post subject: |
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obviously, this is not true with all situations, but from what i have seen, lots of times the FTs get what they deserve. the kids dont know what to make of you, so you tell them, directly or by your actions, how to treat you.
if you allow them to give you things with their left hand, snatch things from your hands, talk to you in banmal, then you deserve it.
remember, you are not in Kansas anymore, you are on the other side of the planet. act like a korean teacher would act, and you shall be treated like a korean teacher.
when they do those things, tell them it cannot be done, that can be with a harsh scolding, a beating, whatever. but do SOMETHING. I was dongchimmed once. once in five years at my school. that kid is still probably in pain. some will call me an ars for beating/punishing him, but god, he and all students learned their lesson about that. NO ONE has ever tried that again.
if a student hands me something with their left hand, i stand there waiting looking at them like i am confused, then they change. if they grab something out of my hand, before they have it i have already smacked them in the head. if they dont give it back, i squeeze their ears and kick them out of my classroom.
like an OP said about his seargents, they still love you if you are good in non-discipline times.
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
lastly, a reason they do that, is the PREVIOUS FTs didnt care enough to teach them it is not okay. I remember watching a little 4th grader hit an FT because he didnt answer his question. I asked why he didnt punish the kid and he said he didnt care. I told him that in a few years when that kid enters my school, if he tries that, he will be coming home with bruises, so punish him now and save the beating. |
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nicam

Joined: 14 Jun 2008
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:35 pm Post subject: |
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antoniothegreat said:obviously, this is not true with all situations, but from what i have seen, lots of times the FTs get what they deserve. the kids dont know what to make of you, so you tell them, directly or by your actions, how to treat you.
if you allow them to give you things with their left hand, snatch things from your hands, talk to you in banmal, then you deserve it.
remember, you are not in Kansas anymore, you are on the other side of the planet. act like a korean teacher would act, and you shall be treated like a korean teacher.
when they do those things, tell them it cannot be done, that can be with a harsh scolding, a beating, whatever. but do SOMETHING. I was dongchimmed once. once in five years at my school. that kid is still probably in pain. some will call me an ars for beating/punishing him, but god, he and all students learned their lesson about that. NO ONE has ever tried that again.
if a student hands me something with their left hand, i stand there waiting looking at them like i am confused, then they change. if they grab something out of my hand, before they have it i have already smacked them in the head. if they dont give it back, i squeeze their ears and kick them out of my classroom.
like an OP said about his seargents, they still love you if you are good in non-discipline times.
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
lastly, a reason they do that, is the PREVIOUS FTs didnt care enough to teach them it is not okay. I remember watching a little 4th grader hit an FT because he didnt answer his question. I asked why he didnt punish the kid and he said he didnt care. I told him that in a few years when that kid enters my school, if he tries that, he will be coming home with bruises, so punish him now and save the beating. |
Great post. I have thought about the role of the K-teacher, and how they may tell the kids to treat us a certain casual way in accordance with what they perceive to be our lack of hierarchy.
Many posters who have been here for a long time have this 'you deserve to be treated badly if you are willing to put up with it' attitude, and while I agree that remaining a victim warrants some blame, many of us are only starting to grasp the Korean system. Newbies need some time to figure out what is respectful, acceptable, etc, and it seems by the time we figure it out it is too late to turn it around. |
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Leslie Cheswyck

Joined: 31 May 2003 Location: University of Western Chile
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:42 pm Post subject: |
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| A segment of Eric Hoffer's The True Believer touches on this. Folks naturally follow the path of least resistance. And when it comes to rebelling against authority, they'll seek out the weakest link in the chain. And that's you, foreigner. |
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antoniothegreat

Joined: 28 Aug 2005 Location: Yangpyeong
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 10:46 pm Post subject: |
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true, it is often too late to turn it around by the time you learn.
so my advice has always been, when i meet a new teacher, be a complete nazi in the beginning. it is a heck of a lot easier to make them respect and fear you, then play even a simple game that they love, than to get used to treating you like a sibling and not understand why later you get upset.
sadly, this advice often goes unheeded. usually new teachers are younger and want to be the "cool" teacher that the kids want to "hang with." it wont work. 6 months later, the newbies almost always tell me i was right.
i hope this doesnt sound like a "i am holier than thou" thing... just trying to help... |
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ardis
Joined: 20 Apr 2006 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Sun Feb 08, 2009 11:04 pm Post subject: |
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| antoniothegreat wrote: |
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
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I forgot about that--definitely a valid point. One day, the student greeters at the front gates didn't bow to me. Instead, they waved and said, "Hello." It really caught me off-guard and they continued to do it for the rest of the week, sometimes just saying, "hello" and omitting the wave. I asked a co-teacher about it, and she said that she had told them not to bow to me anymore. She figured it made me uncomfortable and I just shrugged it off. The next week, the kids reverted back to the Korean greeting. I think they were too embarrassed to keep doing the English one. |
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nicam

Joined: 14 Jun 2008
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:23 am Post subject: |
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[antoniothegreat wrote:]
true, it is often too late to turn it around by the time you learn.
so my advice has always been, when i meet a new teacher, be a complete nazi in the beginning. it is a heck of a lot easier to make them respect and fear you, then play even a simple game that they love, than to get used to treating you like a sibling and not understand why later you get upset.
sadly, this advice often goes unheeded. usually new teachers are younger and want to be the "cool" teacher that the kids want to "hang with." it wont work. 6 months later, the newbies almost always tell me i was right.
i hope this doesnt sound like a "i am holier than thou" thing... just trying to help...[/quote]
Not at all, you are spot on. I wish I would have read this 6 months ago! Don't know if I would have listened at that point, but... Yes, I thought the best way to reach the kids was by being "cool", figured if I was the epitomy of "cool" I could glamorize English, and they'd all be dying to learn it. Hell, I didn't know what else to do. I swear my co-teachers reinforced this. After a while though, the novelty wore off, and now, save for a few gems, the kids don't care enough to listen, and don't fear me enough to at least PRETEND to listen.
The co-teachers think they are doing us a favor by asking the kids to apapt to our customs, but the co-teachers don't know jack about our customs, so they don't know to ask the kids to show us respect the way western kids show respect to western teachers (i.e. using surnames and titles, not sleeping during lessons, not talking while we are talking, etc.), so we are just left with no means of exercising authority or control over the classrooms, and that sucks. |
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nicam

Joined: 14 Jun 2008
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 12:36 am Post subject: |
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| Sorry, I can't quote today. |
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TheUrbanMyth
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Location: Retired
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:26 am Post subject: |
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Edit.
Last edited by TheUrbanMyth on Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:29 am; edited 1 time in total |
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TheUrbanMyth
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Location: Retired
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:28 am Post subject: |
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| antoniothegreat wrote: |
obviously, this is not true with all situations, but from what i have seen, lots of times the FTs get what they deserve. the kids dont know what to make of you, so you tell them, directly or by your actions, how to treat you.
if you allow them to give you things with their left hand, snatch things from your hands, talk to you in banmal, then you deserve it.
remember, you are not in Kansas anymore, you are on the other side of the planet. act like a korean teacher would act, and you shall be treated like a korean teacher.
when they do those things, tell them it cannot be done, that can be with a harsh scolding, a beating, whatever. but do SOMETHING. I was dongchimmed once. once in five years at my school. that kid is still probably in pain. some will call me an ars for beating/punishing him, but god, he and all students learned their lesson about that. NO ONE has ever tried that again.
if a student hands me something with their left hand, i stand there waiting looking at them like i am confused, then they change. if they grab something out of my hand, before they have it i have already smacked them in the head. if they dont give it back, i squeeze their ears and kick them out of my classroom.
like an OP said about his seargents, they still love you if you are good in non-discipline times.
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
lastly, a reason they do that, is the PREVIOUS FTs didnt care enough to teach them it is not okay. I remember watching a little 4th grader hit an FT because he didnt answer his question. I asked why he didnt punish the kid and he said he didnt care. I told him that in a few years when that kid enters my school, if he tries that, he will be coming home with bruises, so punish him now and save the beating. |
And what happens if after beating a child he goes home to his mother and lies that you molested him?
It has happened before. FT's have been falsely accused. You would be lucky just to get deported. |
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cruisemonkey

Joined: 04 Jul 2005 Location: Hopefully, the same place as my luggage.
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 2:30 am Post subject: |
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One obvious factor that has not been mentioned in this thread is the age and sex of the teacher. As an 'older' male, I'm sure it's easier for me than a younger male; or an 'older' female; or, at the opposite extreme, a young female. It's hardly fair, but it is a fact of teaching in a Confucian society.
Of course, even an old male will have problems with discipline if he allows the kids to be disrespectful; and a young female will not if she doesn't. Any teacher, regardless of age or sex, must be a firm but fair authoritarian. |
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antoniothegreat

Joined: 28 Aug 2005 Location: Yangpyeong
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 6:06 am Post subject: |
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| TheUrbanMyth wrote: |
| antoniothegreat wrote: |
obviously, this is not true with all situations, but from what i have seen, lots of times the FTs get what they deserve. the kids dont know what to make of you, so you tell them, directly or by your actions, how to treat you.
if you allow them to give you things with their left hand, snatch things from your hands, talk to you in banmal, then you deserve it.
remember, you are not in Kansas anymore, you are on the other side of the planet. act like a korean teacher would act, and you shall be treated like a korean teacher.
when they do those things, tell them it cannot be done, that can be with a harsh scolding, a beating, whatever. but do SOMETHING. I was dongchimmed once. once in five years at my school. that kid is still probably in pain. some will call me an ars for beating/punishing him, but god, he and all students learned their lesson about that. NO ONE has ever tried that again.
if a student hands me something with their left hand, i stand there waiting looking at them like i am confused, then they change. if they grab something out of my hand, before they have it i have already smacked them in the head. if they dont give it back, i squeeze their ears and kick them out of my classroom.
like an OP said about his seargents, they still love you if you are good in non-discipline times.
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
lastly, a reason they do that, is the PREVIOUS FTs didnt care enough to teach them it is not okay. I remember watching a little 4th grader hit an FT because he didnt answer his question. I asked why he didnt punish the kid and he said he didnt care. I told him that in a few years when that kid enters my school, if he tries that, he will be coming home with bruises, so punish him now and save the beating. |
And what happens if after beating a child he goes home to his mother and lies that you molested him?
It has happened before. FT's have been falsely accused. You would be lucky just to get deported. |
so then should we just watch movies and give all students perfect grades out of fear?
everytime you do your job you run the risk of something like that happening. but honestly, i think it happens just as much back home. |
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dmbfan

Joined: 09 Mar 2006
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 6:34 am Post subject: |
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| Just give him a friendly slap or flick to the ear or drag him along the corridor with you asking him why he's such an insolent little prat in English and don't let him go until he finds some way of explaning himself in English. |
Yeah.......................that only works when you don't have a "progressive" principle who does not cater to the whims of the parents.
It all depends on your principle. Does he/she care? Does he/she see education as a business or an institution? Do your co-teachers help you with these sorts of problems?
Those who teach at public schools that do NOT empower the students and parents are....................lucky.
Nothing more.
dmbfan |
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Provence
Joined: 18 Oct 2008 Location: South Korea
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Posted: Mon Feb 09, 2009 6:50 am Post subject: |
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| antoniothegreat wrote: |
obviously, this is not true with all situations, but from what i have seen, lots of times the FTs get what they deserve. the kids dont know what to make of you, so you tell them, directly or by your actions, how to treat you.
if you allow them to give you things with their left hand, snatch things from your hands, talk to you in banmal, then you deserve it.
remember, you are not in Kansas anymore, you are on the other side of the planet. act like a korean teacher would act, and you shall be treated like a korean teacher.
when they do those things, tell them it cannot be done, that can be with a harsh scolding, a beating, whatever. but do SOMETHING. I was dongchimmed once. once in five years at my school. that kid is still probably in pain. some will call me an ars for beating/punishing him, but god, he and all students learned their lesson about that. NO ONE has ever tried that again.
if a student hands me something with their left hand, i stand there waiting looking at them like i am confused, then they change. if they grab something out of my hand, before they have it i have already smacked them in the head. if they dont give it back, i squeeze their ears and kick them out of my classroom.
like an OP said about his seargents, they still love you if you are good in non-discipline times.
now, to defend myself, often it is the parents or KTs fault. they often tell the kids that since the west doesnt have a hierarchy we can be treated like that. so in the beginning of school, on introduction day, i tell them my rules... dont speak banmal, blah blah blah.
lastly, a reason they do that, is the PREVIOUS FTs didnt care enough to teach them it is not okay. I remember watching a little 4th grader hit an FT because he didnt answer his question. I asked why he didnt punish the kid and he said he didnt care. I told him that in a few years when that kid enters my school, if he tries that, he will be coming home with bruises, so punish him now and save the beating. |
I am guessing you don�t work in hagwon. If I tried any of the above suggestions my hagwon boss would probably send me home the next day.
Just keep the little devils happy so their parents keep paying. |
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