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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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BUSTAK
Joined: 18 Mar 2010
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Posted: Mon May 10, 2010 5:47 am Post subject: Update: FREED (First Response English Educators) |
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UPDATE OF FREED
Who is FREED, you ask?
FREED is First Response for English Educators, the alternative association of English teachers focusing on the conditions and welfare of the newest of newcomers. We got started in April 2010.
FREED aspires to make a difference in the lives of teachers, students and others. It identifies with the movements for democracy and human rights in Korea and beyond.
How is it going?
[color=black]We've gone far fast. A committee with John, Stephannie and Barbara began working on a Charter They are all former leaders in ATEK looking for a new kind of support group. The draft Charter was circulated and discussed, and now it is posted on the website.
New folks joined. One was Dan who offered to create our website, and what a great job he did. Check it out:[/color] www.freedteachers.org.
We also built the labour committee of Galen, John, Sean and Barb. A lawyer stepped forward with some answers, free of charge, and he continues to stand by for FREED as a consultant. We've handled quite a few inquiries. Out of the inquiries, we're making a Q&A section on the website.
We have the Busan Human Rights Counseling Center as an ally ready to serve. That's our postal address and meeting place, should we need it.
Lately, we've mostly been talking with a group of teachers who work together at one site for a big corporate hagwon. The are experiencing multiple problems continually. We've helped some of them leave and go on to better things. We're hoping though to facilitate a resolution enough to improve the day-to-day situation there. But the employees have been fearful. Finally, one person quit and went to the authorities to register complaints and the HR center is looking into the matter.
On the other hand, we had an inquiry from a hagwon owner wanting to know how to hire someone properly and negotiate the teacher's transition from the old workplace to the new one. That was cool.
The English speaking counselor, Ae-Young, at the Foreigner Services Center of BFIA (Busan Foundation of International Activities) is also collaborating with FREED to help teachers. We consult each other on cases, and she refers callers to various English speaking services. Ae-Young also sends us information on major cultural events in Busan to keep us tuned into what's happening in the city. (see www.bfia.or.kr)
We're grateful to Sean who took on the role of Vice-Chair to back up Barb and assist with making sure that FREED functions and grows. Barb and Sean met recently to discuss how to publicize FREED further, and they decided to post ads on Facebook and use the forums like this one.
[color=indigo][color=indigo]Consensus and grassroots collaboration
If you followed FREED's history, you'd know that we wanted to escape unnecessary bureaucracy. Our organization does not organize in a conventional way that minimizes labour and time. So we depend on telecommunications, while we have quick in-person get-togethers, at least one-on-ones, as required.
Self-reliance
Really, though, FREED works on equipping teachers to be self-reliant and vigilant. By educating ourselves, we can prevent and reduce crises, rather than operate to rescue people from emergencies all the time. We can also give each other the tools to handle our own problems effectively, and in turn inform other teachers.
Yes, we need the special skills and knowledge of certain experts and professionals. Fortunately, we already have some friends like that who are assisting us voluntarily. Also, we're very fortunate that the BFIA exists and is setting up a network and services that teachers and others can access. We do not have to build everything from scratch in Busan.
Medical assistance, urgent and otherwise
BFIA provides a handy list of English speaking physicians and other medical professionals. It has even listed places where required overnight surgery and diagnostic appointments and treatments can be had without charge for teachers stuck without medical coverage. Go to the website and download the guide or drop by the BFIA office in the bottom floor of City Hall to get it. You see, we do not need to find and hone our own experts. We're teachers, and we have lives. FREED does not need to become emergency services specialists or legal specialists.
Legal assistance
[color=black]We advise against investing in legal services, through membership contributions or monthly fee paying, and the like. There are many sources providing free legal help to migrant workers including teachers. See our website for some such sources. There is the YMCA, Catholic Migrant Centre, Busan Human Rights Counseling Centre, and various church people who can and do provide free translation and legal support when necessary. Yes, sometimes a legal representative is helpful and even required. For instance, some labour issues cannot be handled by the labour bureau and must instead be handled in the courts, where a lawyer might be needed. That's where the above-mentioned free services come in. They will also write letters and make phonecalls to defend the rights of teachers and other workers.[/color]
The key, however, is to educate ourselves and learn how to manage situations ourselves.
Building solidarity and alliances
Following the general labour and political situation is important too. Let's remember that most people have really serious problems. FREED likes to express solidarity, for what goes around comes around and building understanding through education, formal and grassroots, can help us stand up and be strong and address injustices for the sake of making things better.[/color]
Barb just came back from the International Solidarity Affair where she was a delegate for a friend of FREED's, TEA-KOR. Look up the Facebook and Unionbook.org group pages to learn more about TEA-KOR. Anyway, the ISA was in the Philippines, and the international delegates exchanged information about their respective countries and then met groups offarmers and sweatshop workers who told us about their conditions and struggles. Barb in turn got to tell people about the situation facing teachers of English who migrate to work in Korea.
[color=black]Well, to wrap up, we'd really like you to get acquainted with FREED and subscribe Just go to[/color] [b]www.freedteachers.org. [/b] |
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PatrickGHBusan
Joined: 24 Jun 2008 Location: Busan (1997-2008) Canada 2008 -
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Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 9:31 am Post subject: |
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Reviewed the website.
It shows promise.
Liked:
However, there is an acute need to build a national network for teachers to assist each other in a range of other issues, especially the most newly arrived teachers. Teachers from abroad need help with cultural adjustment, settlement, employment and social life.
Great motivation and goal.
Disliked:
The history of organizing teachers within South Korea with the intention to provide a service to teachers, especially foreign teachers, has exposed that organization either detached from the working and living conditions of the people or without a vision based on human rights and democratic change, cannot work. A hollow organization is an empty bureaucratic cage that has nothing to say. It loses compassion and results in despotism and petty conflict. It then loses its mass appeal.
1- The Human Rights and Democracy rethoric is out of place and the use of the word despotism is complete innapropriate in this context. It sounds more like a Human Righs advocacy group than a Teachetrs network. This was the exact same problem ATEK had initially.
Also disliked the sidebar with the messages concerning the conflict with ATEK. These messages have no place there on the website of a professional organisation. They are there for selfish reasons rather than organisational reasons.
They drain credibility from the organisation from the get go because it is in no ones best interest to share the inner infighting between ATEK and FREED.
The tone of the messages is also too personal and too emotional.
Still, good luck to this new group.
Finally, I have not been pro-ATEK and had severe reservations about that group but this latest news hardly seems like they are detached from the working and living conditions of Teachers in Korea and also hints that they can achieve things without the Human Righs all workers of the world unite in democracy rethoric.
http://www.koreaherald.com/lifestyle/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20100510000488 |
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TheUrbanMyth
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Location: Retired
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Posted: Wed May 12, 2010 10:12 pm Post subject: |
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I've probably been the most vocal critic of ATEK on these boards. And I still do not see it doing much or going very far.
That said I am pleasantly surprised by the link posted above...it seems to be long at last moving in the right direction. |
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T-J

Joined: 10 Oct 2008 Location: Seoul EunpyungGu Yeonsinnae
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 4:58 am Post subject: |
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Quote: |
....the ISA was in the Philippines, and the international delegates exchanged information about their respective countries and then met groups of farmers and sweatshop workers who told us about their conditions and struggles.
Barb in turn got to tell people about the situation facing teachers of English who migrate to work in Korea.
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Words fail me. I'm actually laughing to hard to produce coherent thought. How can someone listen to the plight of sweatshop workers and then proceed to convey the experiences facing English teachers in Korea.
FREED is a piece of work.
Barb, Steph, and John the three of you need your heads examined. |
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PatrickGHBusan
Joined: 24 Jun 2008 Location: Busan (1997-2008) Canada 2008 -
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 6:34 am Post subject: |
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I missed that one TJ.
It is not sad or funny..no no...it is far worse then that. What it is is disgusting, ignorant and shameful.
Sharing the "plight" of foreign teachers in Korea with people who deal with sweatshop wortkers in the Filipines is a flabergastign display of idiocy. |
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BUSTAK
Joined: 18 Mar 2010
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 8:39 pm Post subject: |
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PatrickGHBusan wrote: |
I missed that one TJ.
It is not sad or funny..no no...it is far worse then that. What it is is disgusting, ignorant and shameful.
Sharing the "plight" of foreign teachers in Korea with people who deal with sweatshop wortkers in the Filipines is a flabergastign display of idiocy. |
When you learn to read, I'll take such comments seriously. Meanwhile, crank on all you like from your lonely PCs and over your lattes in the cosy cafes while others try to address and understand real problems and work on creating solutions. |
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Scouse Mouse
Joined: 07 Jan 2007 Location: Cloud #9
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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I've been trying to keep out of the FREED discussions, because I keep getting this overwhelming urge to type MENTALIST! in a huge red font. Oops.
Well now the cat's out the bag, let's play:
BUSTAK wrote: |
When you learn to read, I'll take such comments seriously. Meanwhile, crank on all you like from your lonely PCs and over your lattes in the cosy cafes while others try to address and understand real problems and work on creating solutions. |
1. You took a private spat with the ATEK President and made it public. It's the only thing you have really done since you formed, and it looks to me as if it was THE reason you formed, and THE reason you created a website. Why should this be a priority for any other teacher in Korea?
2. You are allowing recruiters to post on your forums. Does this not strike you as having the potential to cause severe conflicts of interest in the future? Methinks you need to try to address and understand this little problem a little better if you want to be taken seriously.
3. How many of your founders have received treatment for mental health issues? Serious question. Your entire "mission" seems to be a random bunch of ideas with no coherency. In fact, it's the kind of thing I expect to hear from somebody who has bald spots from yanking out their own hair. It makes you seem weird. |
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yfb
Joined: 29 Jan 2009
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Posted: Tue Jun 01, 2010 9:22 pm Post subject: |
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Keep up the ATEK infighting, guys! It makes for some quality drama! |
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