Tuesday 30 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 36

Elizabeth - UK
What keeps you motivated?
Huge interpersonal satisfaction plus a sense of repairing (political) damage done to vulnerable individuals.
Best teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)?
Having a Palestinian move from a position of hatred for the British, to developing warm relationships with people here. I had pleasure seeing her grow and flourish and pass her exams, but greater pleasure when she emailed saying, "I actually feel your heart is with me and you make me happy."
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Study a TEFL course with TEFL Zorritos in Peru, South America and travel the world, live abroad and enrich people's lives by teaching them English. A TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) Certificate is an internationally accredited and accepted qualification to teach English to people from non-English speaking countries. More questions? Head to our What is TEFL? page
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Worst teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)?
Facing up to the fact (after eight months), that despite all the goodwill and application in the world, a particular illiterate adult's window of learning to read and write had passed.
The biggest challenge you face (in your current teaching situation)?
To be honest, it's finding tactful ways of ensuring well-intentioned but untrained volunteer English Language teachers working on a one-to-one basis with refugees have some idea how to engage and actually teach language. Refugee classes are about a lot more than language learning: there's welcome, reassurance and being at the coal face of acceptance. It's true that learning in the community will go on when people have the confidence to mix but, although any kind of listening/activity will help, it is a tragic waste when teaching/learning is not taking place because of lack of skill, imagination and experience on the part of the teacher. For me, to hear untrained colleagues blundering down blind alleys is painful.
What have you learned from your students?
Courtesy, gentleness, respect and patience.
What's next?
The fat lady hasn't sung yet.
Top tip for other teachers?
Start from where your students are at. Adults who have never learned to read or write in their own languages do not need to learn all the letters of the alphabet at once or in any particular order. The struggling middle-aged woman who has never been to school is between a rock and a hard place. Use easy words she will see everywhere, like bus stop. This will give her the confidence to continue.
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Monday 29 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 35

Louise - Madagascar
What keeps you motivated? Learning new skills. In Madagascar the teachers' challenge is how to teach XYZ when you have absolutely no resources, 60 to 100+ students in class, and when you can barely understand the target language yourself. To help them deal with this you have to use your imagination.
Worst teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)? When I first arrived in Madagascar I made the mistake that so many outsiders make: I'm an experienced native speaker and I know my stuff, and therefore my workshops will be useful. The Malagasy, being so polite, would smile and thank me, even though I now realise most of the ideas were inappropriate and impractical. With time you learn to tell the 'polite feedback' from the real thing.
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Best teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)? There's a point about half-way through the first morning of the workshop when you start to feel a buzz in the room: the teachers start to sit up, they become more active and then they start contributing ideas and analysing how the activities work. That's when you know it's working, when they're excited to be there. I've seen teachers walk 60 km followed by 48 hours in a bus just to get to a three-day workshop and then cheer at the idea of doing it again in a few months.
Biggest challenge you face (in your current teaching situation)? There is a huge discrepancy between what gets decided in offices in the capital city and the reality on the ground. Trying to help teachers bridge that gap is hard enough, but in Madagascar it can be difficult to get people fired up. Teachers here tend to be very risk-averse, so getting them to try new things when what they want is a quick fix can be hard.
What have you learned from your students? A broken photocopier won't kill you! I've realised how many of us EFL teachers think we're God's gift when the truth is that if we had to teach under the same conditions we would flounder from the get go. I've had to revaluate my skills and use my imagination.
What's next? I want to continue working with rural teachers for another year, at least, doing follow-up workshops and getting to more parts of the country.
Top tip for teachers? Good resources are like money: great to have but they can also make you lazy and overly dependent. Next time you open your course book, think about how you would do the lesson with no student books and no handouts. And what about if you had 60 students in the class with seating designed for 30? You may never be in that situation, but using your imagination will keep you on your toes.
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Sunday 28 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 34

Sharon - Italy
What keeps you motivated? The belief that what I'm doing is interesting, successful and useful. Every time I get positive feedback from one of my students I get a boost that encourages me to go on.
Best teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)? Imagine 90 advanced learners from the University of Verona running around a lecture theatre, fully engaged in a mingling/drilling activity. It was a classroom management nightmare but they told me it had been really useful for them. Another very positive moment was recently when I saw just how much my learners' writing was improving after work on collocation and language patterning combined with dictionary skills training.
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Worst teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)? Having to deal with a class of over a hundred students who were expected to fit into a classroom designed for a maximum of forty people. Apart from the fire hazards, etc, it was very difficult to know who to send away. In the end the only solution seemed to be to split the group into two.
The biggest challenge you face (in your current teaching situation)? To keep everything fresh, motivating and still help learners to prepare for their exams. I have tried to do this by introducing blended learning courses slowly into my normal courses. Motivating learners to spend time working autonomously online has been a challenge as many are very busy with other subjects too, but I must say that I'm pleased with the online work done so far this year. The feedback has been very positive too.
What have you learned from your students? I have learned this year from my students that motivation is a key issue. It's something that, with limited time available, we have not worked on too much in the past. However, this year I provided a series of motivation podcasts on our Moodle platform and the success they met with was actually overwhelming. So I will not underestimate, in future, how important this is for them.
What's next? I think that I would now like to concentrate on teaching and training in technology-related areas, learning more about Second Life.
Top tip for other teachers? Keep your sense of curiosity and fun, so that you explore new things and learn along with your learners.
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Saturday 27 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 33

Chris - North Korea
What keeps you motivated? The thought that I'm in a position to reach out to students and teachers that very few others have the chance to reach out to.
Best teaching moment? I don't want to highlight one event, but slowly getting a silent, uncommunicative class to begin to open up, even a little, and to interact on a more personal basis has been my best experience here. Interaction with the local people is limited so it's been of special importance to me.
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Worst teaching moment? There are sometimes infrastructure problems here that I wasn't aware of when I first arrived, and this can make lesson planning quite difficult. When I got to the university for one of my earlier sessions with a carefully planned lesson and materials all on a memory stick, I was told the electricity was off and there was no chance of printing my lesson out. I had no choice but to go into the class with my memory stick, show it to the students and say, "Well here's your lesson! What would you like to talk about for the next 90 minutes?" We had a good time in the end but walking in there wasn't very comfortable.
The biggest challenge you face? That open discussion of so many things is not an option in this environment, and it takes time and patience to get students to ask any penetrating questions about the teaching materials (as opposed to the grammar, etc.).
The issue of materials is also quite interesting. If we use general English books they tend to be quite Eurocentric and the materials are irrelevant to local life. Local people and universities have no access to the internet. There is an interest in the outside world and people do know about current events from their local news but information is very restricted and politically-focused, as one would expect.
What I have done this year is try to be more inventive than much of the available British Studies material allows and give a realistic picture of Britain, its demographic patterns, attitudes to minorities, how the media works and the impact of new media delivery via the internet and mobile phones. Mobiles have only just been introduced here for local people - I still get mine taken off me at the airport as I come in!
What have you learned from your students? That even in remote, cut-off places without a pool of native speakers or access to English language media it is possible to have a very high standard of English indeed and a high level of knowledge about the UK, if a little fossilized.
What's next? What to do, where to go after this? I really don't know. Somewhere with broadband I guess.
Top tip for other teachers? If you're coming to North Korea come with an open mind and lots of warm underwear; it's quite chilly in the winter!
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Thursday 25 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 32

Stephanie - Bhutan
What keeps you motivated?
I'm not a Buddhist myself but almost everyone else here is, and I find it very motivating to be reminded that if I don't try hard at everything I do I might end up as a mosquito in my next life.
Best teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)?
Being greeted with a bow and called Ma'am by my students! Seriously though, the most amazing classroom moment so far has been meeting the 10th reincarnation of a Bodhisattva, who is a student in one of the monastery classes I teach. He asks tricky philosophical questions but he's on his way to becoming a Buddha so I let him off. The most fun I've had is drinking home-brewed wine (Arra) while singing and dancing with colleagues at staff parties. If you participate enthusiastically enough the principal gives you a day off!
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Worst teaching moment (in your current teaching situation)?
Nothing terrible so far, apart from the difficulty of getting students to concentrate amid the racket of packs of stray dogs barking in the playground. However, I did feel mild panic the other day when one of my colleagues mentioned to me in passing "If you get bitten, lean into the bite." I haven't been bitten by a student yet ... or a dog.
The biggest challenge you face (in your current teaching situation)?
Trying to teach a class of 30 monks of all different ages and levels, with no books, only half the necessary amount of pens, and constant interruptions from people walking into the classroom (actually a prayer room) to pray. People praying in your lesson is a little bit distracting.
What have you learned from your students?
The monks have taught me what real discipline is. It's amazing how much they've learnt from studying their textbooks without a teacher or tables or chairs. The books are often quite ancient and sometimes just cobbled-together bundles of worksheets. I'm new to teaching young learners so I've also discovered that teaching very young children can be a lot less forgiving, but a lot more fun, than teaching adults. Below is a poem I saw on the wall in one of the classrooms - not from one of my classes - I don't remember doing anything so philosophical at school ...
Take time to work, it is the price of success
Take time to think, it is the source of power
Take time to play, it is the secret of perpetual youth
Take time to be friendly, it is the road to happiness
Take time to love and be loved, it is the privilege of the gods
Take time to share, life is too short to be selfish
Take time to laugh, laughter is the music of the soul
What's next?
Hopefully teaching in nunneries as well as monasteries.
Top tip for other teachers?
Don't expect large classes of small children to concentrate for any length of time. Use songs and physical games to help them learn and keep them interested. And of course, if a student bites you, lean into the bite!
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Wednesday 24 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 31

Annie - South Korea
I am writing regarding my experience so far of teaching English in South Korea. I'll point out straight away that I have no where near the experience level of teaching English as the other teachers I have read do. In fact I am just a babe in the woods who has been in Korea for a mere three months. Let me tell you about myself.
My name is Annie and I grew up on a farm in the South West country of NSW Australia. I met my darling husband Yohan when I was 19 and studying at university In Queensland. He is Korean. He was the first Korean I had ever met. When I first talked to him at our church, I had no idea where Korea was precisely, although I had heard about it from the show 'Mash'. I related this to him, but of course he'd never heard of it. He had come to Australia from Seoul to study English and had just been enrolled in the university after his English studies were completed. Needless to say we were fascinated with each other and soon fell in love.
We were married in the new millennium, lived in Australia for a while while I completed my studies, then we moved to South Korea, his home. Now I am an English teacher, which is something I never quite imagined myself to be, but I have adapted quite well and am enjoying myself.
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I have recently finished teaching in my first contract which was with a university for a six week intensive English course for university students. I found myself to be the youngest and the only female teacher on the staff. I had done some tutoring as well as the TESOL course in Australia, but nothing prepares you enough for facing a class of nearly twenty watchful and expectant eyes in a large, echoing classroom. I'll never forget my first class. I stepped into the sombre room and was confronted with the sight of a circle students all about my age. I am 23 years old. Up until that moment, the reality of teaching had not quite dawned upon me, but strangely, I plucked up my courage and faced the students now as their teacher. This very fact gave me courage and I quickly evolved into my new role. My heart pounded within me but I stepped towards them and raised my voice with a command I did not know I had. In those first few days of working there I also had an optional class given to me to talk about Australian life and culture. When I opened the door to go into this class for the first time, I quickly pulled back again as I had not planned on almost 60 students turning up! So I pulled myself together and walked in with supreme confidence and instead of the discussion style lesson I had planned, I 'lectured' by talking about the history and recent events happening in Australia. After doing that my confidence grew enormously and I felt I could now face anything.

These memories stand out most in my mind, as well as the way I grew to love teaching, the students and all the other teachers. This program was itself especially rewarding for all because it was a complete immersion program with absolutely no Korean allowed. The student's level of English improved dramatically over the number of weeks.

Working at the small institutes is a little different because the English level is very low as they are children, but also the motivation is low as they are there because of their parents. I find that the best way to get the children to like learning English is to get them to really like you. You yourself are probably the only native speaker or 'real life' example of English they have. So by being a good teacher to them, I think this will have a great impact on their young, developing lives.

South Korea is a great place to live and work, especially if you are young and looking for adventure like me. I also have had the added benefit and experiences of being involved with a Korean family. They are all really loving towards me. I truly can say I have absolutely no problems whatsoever, and have learned so many things about people and life already.

I am only in the beginning stage of my life and career, but look forward to life with such an expectancy that I shall have a myriad of things to write about again in the near future.

Happy teaching!

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Tuesday 23 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 29

Genevieve - Shetland Islands
Taking a deep breath, I brace myself, ready to be blown along the windiest street in Lerwick. But tonight is unusually calm. As I walk towards the town hall, I can make out a procession of figures ahead of me. I follow it; past the green-eyed gargoyles guarding the entrance and into the chill of the vestibule where a crowd of people stand, waiting. Many of them hold plastic boxes. Enticing smells waft through the Tupperware and the air hums with cheerful anticipation.
Tonight the Shetland community celebrates the achievements of its ever-growing community of ESOL learners, who attend English night classes through the seemingly endless, dark Shetland winter. Many of them do this on top of long hours working in gruelling fish factory and catering work. This night, however, is for celebration.
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It begins with a speech given by one of the local councillors. His presence lends the occasion a certain pomp and circumstance. However, I wonder if many of his audience understand more than a few phrases; and when he utters the words "Your English is a lot better than my Russian … or whatever", I hope they don't.
With the speech finally over, we settle down to our evening of celebration. The learners read poems in their own languages: we hear a ballad in Latvian, a song in Nepali and an Arabic hip hop number. A dark and impossibly handsome Sicilian entrances the audience by reading a recipe in Italian. My class has made a film about their experiences of life in Shetland: I have been waiting nervously, dreading technical hitches, but none come. The audience laugh at the right places and the faces of the learners next to me are happy and proud.
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After the ceremony, we retire to the back of the hall where the contents of the Tupperware dishes are displayed on plates. What a spread we have prepared together! Hungarian langos, Polish bigos, Thai vegetables and Nepali dhal. One of the teachers has prepared a token Scottish dish: mince and tatties. It lingers forlornly on its plate, outshone by its exotic neighbours.
A handful of us venture out into the cold night: a mixture of Polish, Hungarian and Serbian learners. We head towards a small, fairy-lit pub on one of the lanes: Da lounge. Once inside, we are already planning our next film.
Outside, winter's first snow floats past the window and the boats on Victoria pier are already iced with white. We spill out onto the streets and stand with our heads tipped back, tasting the icy flakes. An inebriated sailor amuses us with his monologue. My learners, emboldened by beer, banter and laugh with him.
Back inside Da Lounge, the barman is playing jazz on the piano. His friend takes up her guitar and they play on till closing time. By this time, Lerwick is covered by a thick white blanket. We end this perfect night with a snowball fight then walk home through a newly-light town.
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Monday 22 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 28

Ben - China
Sixteen students are absent from my grade one lesson. Almost half the class. This is by no means a common occurrence - there's no place for truantism in China's rigidly disciplined school system - yet they seem to think they can get away with it during my lessons because to them I'm simply not a teacher. I'm a Foreign Teacher, an entirely different species, and what I say or do just doesn't carry the same weight as my Chinese colleagues.
"They are not here," pipes up one of their more outspoken classmates "because they think your lessons are not very interesting."
"Do they do the same in your other lessons?" Even as I ask, I know I'm flogging a dead horse and that this line of reasoning will get me nowhere.
"Haha. It is not allowed." By now I've become accustomed to this particular variety of humourless Chinese laughter; it says, "Don't ask such a stupid question."
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Another of the more vocal members of class 6 joins the discussion:
"Your lesson is not very important to us. There is no exam."
As hard as this might be for me - their caring, sharing, progressive teacher - to accept, in a way it's actually true. No exam means that my Spoken English course will not contribute to their all-important final grade, and therefore will have absolutely no bearing on their chances of getting a good university place, and ultimately a job. To these students, grades are everything.
"We must study English well; it is vital for the development of our China", I have been told. But bland platitudes like this aside, and despite China's current obsession with adopting English as de facto second language, when it comes to the crunch for most high school students - not to mention their parents - the only thing that matters is a percentage score on a piece of paper.
Every student in China is required to study English up to and including University level, and standards in reading and writing are often very high, especially in schools like mine - this is one of the provincial education bureau's 'key schools' for English teaching. Grammar, vocabulary, sentence constructions; the traditional aspects of language learning are taught and tested thoroughly and by rote - perhaps not the most pedagogically useful of methods, but at least it helps pass those exams. The spoken and communicative aspects of the language, however, are almost never assessed. Even though there are some very talented students simply begging to be challenged and inspired in their English classes, my lessons will always play a poor second fiddle to grammar rules and textbook work.

"You're not like other Foreign Teachers, Mr. Ben. You don't want to play games."
This frustrating situation is what an American colleague of mine has described as the dancing monkey syndrome. Balanced precariously between valuable educational resource and cut-price entertainment service, the role of the Foreign Teacher is not often clearly defined by the institutions that recruit or employ them. This is a situation which isn't helped by the flooding of the circuit in recent years with young, unqualified teachers who see an ESL job in China as a stepping-stone to an expenses-paid holiday in return for sixteen periods of hangman each week - acting the fool and playing the dancing monkey to keep the students happy. While I see nothing wrong with that in itself - China needs all the help she can get when it comes to English, and it's certainly great experience for anyone considering a teaching career - it leaves in the minds of my students a confusing and conflicting impression of the purpose of the Foreign Teacher.
The schools themselves don't help matters either. Competition in the education sector is strong, and having a pet Foreigner is a very prestigious mascot for a Chinese school. Middle-ranked schools especially feel they have to set themselves apart from local rivals, yet in the race to attract us the schools are tripping over themselves.
I am left largely to my own devices when it comes to teaching. On one hand this is no bad thing - complete freedom in the classroom to teach whatever and however I see fit, with no textbook to slavishly follow is, I'm sure, a situation that many teachers would envy - but the flipside of this is that my classes just don't fit into the larger scheme of school life. Since coming to China I've taught classes of up to 60 for only a single, 45-minute period each week. You don't have to be a maths teacher to see that this doesn't amount to a lot of contact time per student, but this is all the timetable space the school have been willing to make available for what is - so they claim - one of their most important subjects. Not only that, but my classes are regularly moved or cancelled at no notice to make way for something eminently more important - like yet another set of exams. To add insult to injury I'm not even on the timetable as an English lesson. I'm a 'Foreign' lesson.
Neither are many institutions especially rigorous in their recruitment. The luckier ones get to work with organisations such as VSO or the British Council, who guarantee a certain standard and commitment from the teachers they provide, but this route is not open to every school - in most cases only to those, such as key schools, which already have a high calibre of student. The remainder, being almost too eager for their own good to employ a Foreign Teacher, seem to operate a no-questions-asked policy. I've even come across non-native speakers employed as English teachers; in many cases all that would seem to be required is merely looking Foreign enough.
As a result of all this, the students - too used to a rapid turnover of dancing monkeys - have decided not to co-operate. In short, they don't want my carefully crafted, inspiring, life-enriching lessons; they want a clown who plays hangman. At times I have felt like a wasted resource.
Outside the classroom - as a novelty, an interesting Foreigner to talk to, confide in, ask for advice or just to make fun of - they love me, but as a teacher they'll never truly like me.
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Sunday 21 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 26

Nihat - Turkey
Turkey is a strange country. On one hand, she is one of the biggest natural open museums in the world with Hegia Sophia, Ephesus, antique theatres, and the other ruins of all the ancient civilizations that dwelled in here. Being located in Eurasia, she bridges Asia and Europe and is also surrounded by three seas (Mediterranean, Aegean, Black Sea). She has got beautiful beaches, natural resources like spas and an incomparably beautiful nature. On top of all this the Turkish people regard entertaining guests as a holy mission. On the other hand, Turkey cannot make the best use of these beauties. People have been seriously suffering from an economic crisis for two years. You may think this has affected the English teaching sector in a negative way. "While people cannot make a living easily, how on earth can they spend money on language learning?" you may think. On the contrary, the crisis surprisingly contributed positively to the sector for people that were laid off have learned a lesson: they need to get more and actually working qualifications like English and computers.
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Study a TEFL course with TEFL Zorritos in Peru, South America and travel the world, live abroad and enrich people's lives by teaching them English. A TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) Certificate is an internationally accredited and accepted qualification to teach English to people from non-English speaking countries. More questions? Head to our What is TEFL? page
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Employed or unemployed, business (wo)men or employees, a lot of people are nowadays taking English courses. There are a lot of successful entrepreneurs in Turkey that follow the technological developments closely and try to catch up with the newest innovations. They have seen that the domestic market is too small for all, so they need to open to the world market. They are using English in their web pages to advertise and/or to import and export.
I've been teaching English to Turkish students for 7 years all of which passed in private schools. Private schools in Turkey have preparatory classes during which students are taught about 25-30 hours of English a week.
Turkish students, like the aforementioned Turkish entrepreneurs, are aware of the fact that only if they can communicate in English, they will have an advantage over the other candidates when applying for a job. This encourages them to learn English, which even leads them to go to English courses on weekends or in the evenings. What's striking about them is their interaction and warm conversations with the expatriate teachers whose main duty, most often, is to teach speaking. To illustrate, I remember a hot discussion between the two people on whether Washington apples or Amasya ones (a city in Turkey) are more scrumptious. Students even brought into the class some apples to add to the discussion. What I am trying to get at is, once you call their attention, they can blow your mind with their participation.
State schools are not as lucky as the private ones, though. Due to the economic crisis the whole country is suffering from, they cannot afford to employ expatriate teachers to teach their students. They have to make do with enthusiastic Turkish teachers of English. Yet, the new policy of the Ministry of Education seems to contribute to the significance of English in Turkish education curriculum. The Ministry is planning to teach first year students in the high schools 20-25 hours of English a week – not 2-3 hours as it used to be. This means more students needing to learn English, and, accordingly, more demand for teachers and English materials. Maybe, as a requirement of the new policy, the Ministry will agree to employ foreign teachers soon. Who knows?
In brief, the status of English in the Turkish Education Curriculum and also in the commercial arena is gaining more importance every day. It is now an imperative that each and every Turkish citizen learn to communicate in this language. If you are a person that loves teaching, that enjoys sharing and dealing with young learners, then Turkey is the right place to be.
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TEFL Zorritos: What could be better?  Study in a beautiful Peruvian beach town at our outdoor beach-front training centre with great accommodations available, including delicious local food.  Fully accredited 120 Hour TEFL course with a practical approach that provides you with 10 advanced certifications at absolutely no extra cost!  And guaranteed job when you finish the course.
Class sizes are limited, so don't wait, make your reservation today!

Saturday 20 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 25

Kate - Italy
The Italians call Mantova La Bella Adormentata, or 'the Sleeping Beauty' because this town gets so deathly quiet, especially at night. Mantova's high school students are the exception to the rule. They are most definitely wide awake and full of prodigious energy.
I'm teaching conversation at Liceo Virgilio, the classical and linguistic high school in the centre of the oldest part of town. The school itself is also very old, and built as a gift to the town from Marie Antoinette's mother, Maria Theresa of the Habsburgs. The ceilings are frescoed and 30 feet high but not much has happened since the 1700s by way of renovation. The gym, for example, must have been an old ballroom. Now a flimsy net on the ceiling protects the paintings from basketballs. Technology is almost as scarce as it was Maria Theresa's day, making my teaching tools varied out of necessity – YouTube clips in one classroom and chalk in the next.
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Study a TEFL course with TEFL Zorritos in Peru, South America and travel the world, live abroad and enrich people's lives by teaching them English. A TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) Certificate is an internationally accredited and accepted qualification to teach English to people from non-English speaking countries. More questions? Head to our What is TEFL? page
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I am the first conversational teacher the school has ever had, and since it is the program's first year there is no set structure so I am free to approach teaching anyway I choose. Through a little trial and error, I think I have found ways to spark conversation among each group of students.
My first class this morning is a second-year class from the classical school. They study French, English, Latin and Greek, as well as all the other necessary topics. Despite the ambitious curriculum, they are not overly bookish and retiring. Quite the contrary. As I approach the classroom, I hear the hum of chatter. When I walk in, there is an audible spike in the energy level. "Kate is here! We don't have to work!" I can practically hear them thinking. The secret is to help them learn without them realizing they are doing some heavy lifting.
Today they are going to partner up and describe the perfect job for each other. I ask them to list different kinds of jobs, and I write them on the board. "Furrier!" "Mafiosa!" "Astronaut!" "Housewife!" With the list as their inspiration, they're off. They must consider their friend. What is she good at? What characteristics does he have? Then they put the pieces of the puzzle together. "Mario would be a good president of Italy because he is lazy and does not like to work, but he wants to make lots of money easily and be a leader." Everybody agrees that they have been accurately judged, except for the girl who was told she would be a policewoman.
Next class: older students from the linguistic high school. They're too sophisticated for games, so I ask them to consider stereotypes. I came up with this approach because the students constantly ask me what Americans think of Italians. Jersey Shore comes up a lot. "Do Americans think we are like the Italian Americans on Jersey Shore?" I've realized that I've never really had to think about how Americans generally perceive Italy. As we talk, I realize this country probably conjures up visions of pizza, wine, Tuscan villas, the seaside and beautiful people.
Now I turn the table on them. I ask them what they think of Americans. Most of the students at the school are girls, so Gossip Girl and the The OC are their reference points. "You are rich!" "You live beautiful lives!" "You have expensive cars!" "Big houses!" And, of course, "You are fat!"
I respond by showing them a clip from Eat Pray Love. Julia Roberts is talking to some caricature of a man in a barber shop in Rome. His last name is Spaghetti. He is saying, "You Americans, you don't know how to enjoy yourselves! The point of life is not to work but to pursue la dolce vita. Relax and don't worry so much all the time." I ask the students if this is a true depiction of how Italians approach life.
"No! We work all the time!" they say. Given their multitude of classes, I believe them. To keep up with so many languages, they must have to study all the time.
The school day finishes early here. When we spill out onto the cobblestone streets, sunlight is pouring down from the tile roofs of the stone buildings. Down the street, I can see the blue cathedral dome and the old, empty towers of the medieval city. The laziness inherent in the la dolce vita philosophy might be a myth, but it is certainly sweet to live here.
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TEFL Zorritos: What could be better?  Study in a beautiful Peruvian beach town at our outdoor beach-front training centre with great accommodations available, including delicious local food.  Fully accredited 120 Hour TEFL course with a practical approach that provides you with 10 advanced certifications at absolutely no extra cost!  And guaranteed job when you finish the course.
Class sizes are limited, so don't wait, make your reservation today!

Friday 19 September 2014

TEFL Success Stories - Part 24

Mark - Mexico
I arrived in Mexico in the summer of 2000 fresh from a TESL course. I'd taken a job in the city of Queretaro in central Mexico after a 20-minute telephone interview with the school's Swiss owner. I didn't really know what to expect but was just looking forward to something new…something different.
On arrival in Queretaro I was amazed. I found myself in one of the most beautiful cities I'd ever been in - full of beautiful Spanish colonial architecture, terrace bars and restaurants, plazas with ample seating and beautiful fountains full of families in the evenings, narrow winding streets with vendors selling all kinds food and local handcrafts and grand old houses with beautiful, open "patios". With so much history around me, it felt like I was walking around a movie set. I felt incredibly lucky to have ended up in such a place but was soon to find out that Mexico is full of equally wonderful cities.
At 7am Monday morning however, I remembered that I was here to work. The school was smaller than I'd expected as was the system of teaching. I was told that I'd be teaching classes of no more than 4 students of more or less the same level but that they'd probably each be doing a different chapter from the book. Later, I came to realize that buzz words or phrases in the marketing English institutes in Mexico are "native teachers" and "small classes" and that various other schools in the city offered very similar systems.
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Study a TEFL course with TEFL Zorritos in Peru, South America and travel the world, live abroad and enrich people's lives by teaching them English. A TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) Certificate is an internationally accredited and accepted qualification to teach English to people from non-English speaking countries. More questions? Head to our What is TEFL? page
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The first few weeks flew by trying to teach 3 or 4 different grammar topics in one hour. After a month it felt like I'd taught everything in the book. I realized that in fact it was impossible for a student to possibly understand how we use, for example, the present perfect simple after their 15 minute explanation from me but that this wasn't my problem. Too keep myself motivated I started trying to think of imaginative, "student centred" ways to present the topics and thus keep the students engaged even if they weren't exactly learning what I was supposed to teach them.
Within the first month the school converted my FMT tourist visa to an FM3 working visa and paid the $1700 pesos to the immigration department. I would just say to anyone whose thinking of coming here to get your TEFL certificate, birth certificate and degree certificate notarized back home first otherwise you won't get the visa.
Furthermore, I was getting paid my $6000 pesos per month on time and occasionally received a bonus. The pay was enough to rent a room in a house in a good neighborhood, eat out several times a week and go out at the weekends. I couldn't save too much and couldn't travel very far, but that didn't matter too much as I had no time to go anywhere.
The students were great and I made some good friends. They ranged from business professionals, university and high school students to bored housewives. The small classes meant that I was able to get to know some of them quite well. I found myself invited to all kinds of parties and celebrations and got a great insight into Mexican life (at least an affluent, middle class version).
In general my students seemed quite motivated – most of them needed English to find good jobs or to enhance their chances of promotion in their existing jobs. The demand for English as a foreign language in Mexico stems the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994. NAFTA meant that many north American companies set up plants the in industrial areas of Mexico such as Monterrey in the north, Mexico City, and the Bajio region in central Mexico which encompasses the cities of Queretaro, Leon and Celaya.
The only problem was that I was exhausted after teaching 8 hours a day plus Saturday mornings. The shifts were split; the mornings began at 7am and the afternoons ran until 9pm. I also began to notice that the morale amongst the staff was pretty low. Everyone felt the same about the system and the hours. As the months went by, teachers came and went…few stuck out their year contracts. I kept working, realizing that the system at the school wasn't the greatest but that I was learning a bit of Spanish, traveling a little and getting to know the local area and its people. I'd taken a risk going there, my relationship with my boss was good and I was enjoying life.
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After a year, strangely, I found myself as the most experienced teacher in the school just because I'd stuck it out. My boss offered the opportunity to become the academic director of one of his new schools in the smaller city of Celaya which is about 45 minutes from Queretaro. My pay was doubled but the hours got longer. More money meant I could rent my own apartment and live more like I would back in England. It also meant that my Spanish got a kick start as I suddenly became responsible for selling courses when people came in for information and dealing with my secretary who didn't speak any English. On the plus side, it gave me an opportunity to shape the teaching system and change some of the materials and more generally develop a more effective learning environment.
Another year went by and things were good. My boss asked me to move to Morelia, another beautiful colonial city 3 hours away, and open a new school for him. I got another pay rise. Once again I found myself in another beautiful place, this time closer to the pacific coast. Things were good. I realized that I'd got lucky in Mexico.
After a year in Morelia I returned to Queretaro, back where I'd started. This time I was to work as a teacher trainer. I did for 6 months but realized that my heart was still in Morelia. In February 2004 I returned to Morelia and started working freelance, teaching business English in-company and running TOEFL preparation courses in the evening. Mexico has been good to me and is a wonderful country to live and work in. The historic cities have beautiful colonial architecture, there are mountain ranges, forests, jungle and desert like climates. There are beaches to cater for all tastes from undeveloped virgin stretches of coasts to luxury resorts. Traveling long distance in Mexico by bus is cheap and comfortable, although not always fast, which means that teachers here are able to really enjoy what Mexico has to offer. Mexican culture is rich in variety which manifests itself in the countless festivals and national holidays such as the Day of the Dead and Independence Day. The people are warm and friendly although more conservative and religious than I'd imagined and are very family-centered. Sadly, there is a deep divide between the rich and the poor. English classes in private institutes are obviously for the better off and this means that living and working in affluent neighbourhoods, where most institutes are situated gives you a rather unbalanced view of life here.
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TEFL Zorritos: What could be better?  Study in a beautiful Peruvian beach town at our outdoor beach-front training centre with great accommodations available, including delicious local food.  Fully accredited 120 Hour TEFL course with a practical approach that provides you with 10 advanced certifications at absolutely no extra cost!  And a guaranteed job waiting for you when you complete the course.
Class sizes are limited, so don't wait, make your reservation today!teachin