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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