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james wrote:the jet / alt programme is one of the biggest boondoggles going on in this country after the construction industry. i've heard from first-hand sources that the expenditure for a jet for the first year amounts to at least 6 million yen (obviously not all of this being salary).
i reside in a recently amalgamated municipality of roughly 16,000 people (and dropping precipitously). my pre-amalgamation town has seen the population plummet from slightly over 9,000 people to under 7,400 in the span of 10 years. while the number of children continues to decrease, the young people leave and the old people die off (3 funerals in my neighbourhood just in the last few weeks), the b.o.e does absolutely nothing to rein in costs. our municipality has no fewer than 11 elementary schools, some of which have as few as 14 students and a ratio of adults to children close to 1:1. we have one elementary alt here and they have him going to all 11 schools so he sees each group of students maybe once every two months. completely ineffective.
the moral - at least out here - is not that money doesn't exist, it's just misappropriated. if i were running things here, we'd have two or three schools, a bus or two and the savings made from closing the other eight schools could be allocated to better opportunites for all students out here. such pragmatism of course would amount to heresy.
it's also frustrating that as a taxpayer, i see them continue to waste this money when i have offered myself for full-time work to teach a comprehensive english curriculum that would have these kids really learning and speaking the language with decent pronunciation - likely at a fraction of the cost. i guess having been here going on 10 years now, there's no novelty involved in having me go to these schools.
until japan and the monbusho change their attitude of wanting little more than a fresh gaijin face every couple of years to do jikoshoukai for two months out of the year, they're just going to continue to wallow in this ineffective paradigm that leads to a national attitude of "eigo ga dekinai".
besides, they should be learning chinese.
Big Booger wrote:Instead of ALTs... they need fucking ESL teachers who are certified and trained to teach kids English. They don't need 20 something retards who are here for booze and flooze.
Each school should hire a full-time permanently placed teacher with the proper skills and education.
Mock Cockpit wrote: Personally, I'd love to teach at the local primary schools, much prefer that than older kids but you're pissing in the wind to get anyone to see any benefit in it. They'll get some crusty old biddy who has spent 3 weeks in "gaikoku" and is a self styled expert. I can just imagine my kids there wondering what the fuck she's cackling on about.
The teachers understand. One said to me "MC, how am I supposed to teach your kids English when they already speak better than I do"....all I could was shrug my shoulders, repeat my offer of help and say "good fucking luck, you'll need it".*SIGH*
Big Booger wrote:What qualification do you need to teach kids as an ALT.... it's a bollocked scheme.
Instead of ALTs... they need fucking ESL teachers who are certified and trained to teach kids English. They don't need 20 something retards who are here for booze and flooze.
james wrote:yup. deal with that bullshit here too. i've been running my school for some time now and many of my students have *excellent* pronunciation - far better than the 60 year old fuckwit they have "teaching". it irks me no end to hear them coming back to me, telling me their teacher has been "correcting" their pronunciation. it's hard not to just say "fuck it" and not give a shit anymore.
james wrote:yup. deal with that bullshit here too. i've been running my school for some time now and many of my students have *excellent* pronunciation - far better than the 60 year old fuckwit they have "teaching". it irks me no end to hear them coming back to me, telling me their teacher has been "correcting" their pronunciation. it's hard not to just say "fuck it" and not give a shit anymore.
Mock Cockpit wrote:some crusty old biddy who has spent 3 weeks in "gaikoku" and is a self styled expert.
canman wrote:I know a teacher who is working at a local school with a grand total of 6 students. There are two teachers and one principle. What a fucking waste of resources. And I have to feel for the kids. When it comes to sports days and other events they get ferried over to a bigger school, that has 26 students, so they have enough people to have a few races etc. I asked why don't they close the school and combine the classes, but was told that Japanese children are suppossed to be able to walk to school. So, it must remain open. What a crock.
canman wrote:When he informed them that he had asked me to set up the program, and it was mostly my input with some from him, they summerarily dismissed it, as it wasn't written by someone within the Japanese education system. The teacher came back to me and apologized for all the hard work, and nothing to show for it, but what could he do. I guess he should have lied and said he made it all himself.
About 40 percent of parents of primary and middle school students have low expectations regarding the effectiveness of English classes for fifth- and sixth-grade primary schoolers, which will be made compulsory in the 2011 academic year, according to a survey by the National Congress of Parents and Teachers Associations of Japan. The survey showed many parents are concerned primary school teachers lack necessary English-teaching skills, with about 70 percent of the respondents saying professional English teachers are needed to ensure the language is taught effectively. "In past surveys, most parents supported the idea [of making English compulsory at primary school level], but from the results of the latest survey, I feel parents really want primary schools to have suitable teachers in charge of English classes and introduce effective English-teaching methods," said Masahiro Konno, vice president of the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, who analyzed the survey results.
The survey was conducted in November and December on 4,800 parents of students in the fifth grade of primary school and in the second year of middle school. A combined 59 percent of parents of primary school students said they had "high expectations" or "fairly high expectations" for the English lessons. Of these, 18 percent said they had "high expectations." However, 37 percent said they expected either "little" or "nothing" from the classes; of which 33 percent said they did not expect "very much." The survey also showed disparities between parents' expectations and the government's education policy. Asked what they felt were the necessary requirements for English to be taught effectively, 71 percent cited professional English teachers; 67 percent said it was necessary to introduce teaching methods appropriate for primary school education; and 58 percent said they wanted native English speakers to teach at primary schools. On the other hand, less than 20 percent of respondents supported measures the Education, Science and Technology Ministry is considering introducing, such as educational CDs and DVDs and English-speaking volunteers who would act in a supporting role.
On the other hand, less than 20 percent of respondents supported measures the Education, Science and Technology Ministry is considering introducing, such as educational CDs and DVDs and English-speaking volunteers who would act in a supporting role
The budget for English-learning materials for primary schoolers, which the Education, Science and Technology Ministry has provided for free, may be scrapped following a decision by the government panel tasked with identifying wasteful spending. The decision has caused dismay among teachers across the country. There is no set English textbook for primary schoolers, and the two-booklet study guide being used, called Eigo Noto (English notebook), is regarded as one of the few useful English-language tools available to teachers. Primary school principals and authorities have urged the education ministry to continue issuing the booklets. The ministry also has received 350 phone calls and e-mails, many of them opposing the decision to cut the budget.
The ministry started distributing about 2.5 million copies of booklets to primary schools across the country this spring. Most publicly run primary schools have moved to introduce English classes prior to foreign-language-related activities being made mandatory for fifth- and sixth-graders in 2011, but many teachers remain unsure how best to teach the subject at primary level. There also is no established method for teaching English at primary school level. The purpose of the booklets was to ease teachers' concerns and ensure a degree of standardization regarding the teaching of English to this age group across the nation. When used with an electronic blackboard and the necessary software, the material can even let students to hear a recorded native English pronunciation of words. The budget requested for the booklets was 850 million yen.
But members of the Government Revitalization Unit's screening team came out against the project, even raising the fundamental question of why English should be taught at primary schools. Some said the material should be digitalized so schools could print the materials. After about 30 minutes of deliberation the panel scrapped the budget. Since Nov. 11, the day the panel reached the decision, the ministry has been inundated with inquiries from boards of education all over the country. In all, the ministry has received 350 opinions on the decision via phone calls and e-mail. About 300 of them were against the decision. English is taught at primary schools in China, South Korea and other Asian nations. In Japan, the government decided to make foreign-language-related activities mandatory after the Central Education Council submitted a report on the issue.
"After lengthy discussion, it was decided English should be taught at primary school. Why do they have to start all over again, asking why it's necessary?" said Reiko Matsukawa of the Gifu Prefectural Board of Education, who submitted a letter to the ministry asking for the program to be continued. She said she is angry that some panel members raised questions about the value of primary school English education. "The material is a must for teachers who have never taught English," said Yukio Mukoyama, the chairman of the Japan Federation of Primary School Principals Association, who made a plea for the continuation of the project to Toichi Sakata, the administrative vice education minister. "It is very important in regional areas, where it has proven an important guide [for teachers]."
"The effect [of scrapping the budget] would be immense," he said, speaking on behalf of teachers across the country.
" wrote:"In past surveys, most parents supported the idea [of making English compulsory at primary school level], but from the results of the latest survey, I feel parents really want primary schools to have suitable teachers in charge of English classes and introduce effective English-teaching methods,"
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Though I do think that they should start teaching English at primary school if they really want kids to learn it, I can understand why the government thinks that having people who don't speak the language or know how to teach it do the teaching is a waste of resources.
Mock Cockpit wrote: I've seen colouring books that are more difficult.
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