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Laughable WSJ Piece on Korean Education
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happiness



Joined: 04 Sep 2010

PostPosted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 3:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Drop out of all this fluff, and teach kids to be compassionate, proactive, and creative, and youll potentially fix ll these problems with the kids, Stop trying to make a perfect education environment. Crazy, I know.
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ontheway



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Location: Somewhere under the rainbow...

PostPosted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 6:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Who's Your Daddy? wrote:
ontheway wrote:
In fact, there is already a small but growing segment of the population that has dropped out of the government schools altogether


I thought the government required school age students to go to school?

My understanding of "Home Schooling" was it was supplementary to regular schooling, not a replacement.



It may be illegal, but that makes the number of students exercising this option even more impressive. Perhaps this isn't a big thing nationwide, I haven't seen any statistics on this. For a long time there have been families who sent their children to unregistered, hence illegal, alternative private schools. But this new trend of only attending hogwans - in some cases, only attending a single English hogwan and no other school - starkly reveals the failure of the government schools. In any case, Korea has a GED available as an alternative to HS graduation making any illegality moot for the students.
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Threequalseven



Joined: 08 May 2012

PostPosted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 10:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ontheway wrote:
There are good teachers within the failed government educational system. They could be even better in a private setting, and by leaving the current bureaucracy behind they would be able to produce far better results and earn more money; many founding or managing their own schools...

Throw in some religious education funded by believers, and religious groups could do it even cheaper also with scholarships for the truly poor.

Oh no, a republican ESL guru!! Have you ever even worked in a hagwon? A private bureaucracy (or, in more accurate terms, a dictatorship) is no better than a public bureaucracy no matter how you spin it. Many, if not most, successful hagwons use a cookie-cutter method of teaching anyway, so the actual input of the teacher reduced to mechanization. The notion that results at a hagwon are better or that hagwon teachers can or do earn more money is laughable. Lastly, your belief that people who can't afford private school should be forced into religious indoctrination to learn English is quite telling, as you must certainly have blind faith to believe half the things you're saying.
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Threequalseven



Joined: 08 May 2012

PostPosted: Wed Aug 07, 2013 11:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Here's what I see from this article, which is nothing other than a cheap attempt to justify cuts to the U.S. public education system:

- "[Hagwon teachers] don't have benefits or even a guaranteed base salary"
- "[Hagwon teachers] work long hours and earn less than public school teachers."
- "Each year, Ms. Lee fires about 10% of her instructors."
- "Eight out of 10 South Korean parents say they feel financial pressure from hagwon tuition costs."
- "But are students actually learning more in hagwons? That is a surprisingly hard question to answer." (even though the whole *beep*ing article makes this suggestion anyway.)
- "'The only solution is to improve public education,' says Mr. Kim"

Now here's what I didn't see:
- Any correlation to suggest private "free-market" hagwons cause higher test scores.
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World Traveler



Joined: 29 May 2009

PostPosted: Sun Aug 11, 2013 7:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

A good discussion here:
http://how-to-learn-any-language.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=36580&PN=1
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ontheway



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Location: Somewhere under the rainbow...

PostPosted: Sun Aug 11, 2013 8:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Threequalseven wrote:
ontheway wrote:
There are good teachers within the failed government educational system. They could be even better in a private setting, and by leaving the current bureaucracy behind they would be able to produce far better results and earn more money; many founding or managing their own schools...

Throw in some religious education funded by believers, and religious groups could do it even cheaper also with scholarships for the truly poor.

Oh no, a republican ESL guru!! Have you ever even worked in a hagwon? A private bureaucracy (or, in more accurate terms, a dictatorship) is no better than a public bureaucracy no matter how you spin it. Many, if not most, successful hagwons use a cookie-cutter method of teaching anyway, so the actual input of the teacher reduced to mechanization. The notion that results at a hagwon are better or that hagwon teachers can or do earn more money is laughable. Lastly, your belief that people who can't afford private school should be forced into religious indoctrination to learn English is quite telling, as you must certainly have blind faith to believe half the things you're saying.



Having taught in hogwans, public schools and one university in Korea it is clear that most of the learning of all K-12 subjects in Korea occurs in hogwans, with private at home tutors, or children teaching themselves at home - often a combination of all three. Add in the fact that the best students also have parents who encourage, motivate, support, help teach at home and in some cases push too hard.

The Korean government schools are terrible. This is especially true with English. You will be hard pressed to find any student that has learned anything beyond a simple beginner level in the government schools. In fact, the Korean English teachers are nearly all at the beginner level.

Students with good English skills have all been to hogwans, lived in English speaking countries or had home teachers - often illegal private teachers, even if they won't admit this to you.
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Who's Your Daddy?



Joined: 30 May 2010
Location: Victoria, Canada.

PostPosted: Mon Aug 12, 2013 5:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ontheway wrote:

Having taught in hogwans, public schools and one university in Korea it is clear that most of the learning of all K-12 subjects in Korea occurs in hogwans, with private at home tutors, or children teaching themselves at home...


I read a thread before debating whether people would sent their kids to public school in Korea. Some were pro, some con. But I always wondered, if you just asked those that had taught at a public school, what would their recommendation be?

Personally, after teaching at public schools here, I could see it up to about Grade 3.
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jvalmer



Joined: 06 Jun 2003

PostPosted: Tue Aug 13, 2013 10:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Who's Your Daddy? wrote:
ontheway wrote:

Having taught in hogwans, public schools and one university in Korea it is clear that most of the learning of all K-12 subjects in Korea occurs in hogwans, with private at home tutors, or children teaching themselves at home...

I read a thread before debating whether people would sent their kids to public school in Korea. Some were pro, some con. But I always wondered, if you just asked those that had taught at a public school, what would their recommendation be?

Personally, after teaching at public schools here, I could see it up to about Grade 3.

One of my favorite quotes -

"The measure of a civilization is how it treats its weakest members."

- many people have said similar things and something I really believe.

I've taught in Seoul, and way outside of Seoul. And outside of Seoul, many don't go to hagwons. Public schools are needed. Anyone advocating abolishing public schools in favor for hagwons haven't seen the 20% that live in rural areas.

And also, even if for some 'crazy' reason the government went all private. Korean parents will never ever think their 'school' is good enough. Their would be tiers among hagwons. The debate will cycle on forever, until Korean parents lighten up on how 'smart' their kid is.
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Threequalseven



Joined: 08 May 2012

PostPosted: Tue Aug 13, 2013 11:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ontheway wrote:
Having taught in hogwans, public schools and one university in Korea it is clear that most of the learning of all K-12 subjects in Korea occurs in hogwans, with private at home tutors, or children teaching themselves at home - often a combination of all three. Add in the fact that the best students also have parents who encourage, motivate, support, help teach at home and in some cases push too hard.

The Korean government schools are terrible. This is especially true with English. You will be hard pressed to find any student that has learned anything beyond a simple beginner level in the government schools. In fact, the Korean English teachers are nearly all at the beginner level.

Students with good English skills have all been to hogwans, lived in English speaking countries or had home teachers - often illegal private teachers, even if they won't admit this to you.

If by "encourage, motivate, support, help teach at home and in some cases push too hard" you mean, use their children as status symbols to brag to other housewives about how many different extra-curriculars little Min Hwa is taking, while the kid is so wound up from being forced inside windowless boxes all day he can't concentrate on a thing, and while the vast majority of native hagwon teachers could speak to you at length about how ineffective their curriculum is and they're really just paid to serve as a marketing tool and keep the kids entertained... then you might have a point.

Also, I've spoken to a number of Koreans who have neither lived abroad nor enrolled in a hogwon, including a girl last week at the convenience store and my best Korean friend, and they speak English quite well. Your claim that the only way to learn a second language is through private enterprise is repulsive and absurd. You should probably go back to America and see if Fox News is hiring, because it's clear you aren't concerned about any of the real problems the world is facing. Just another money-loving libertarian who wears his agenda on his sleeve.
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