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Posted

First there not UK teachers there probably teaching to be able to stay in Thailand.

The rest of what you observe is normal everyday life in many areas if not all.

Maybe you should move somewhere that would suit you.

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Posted

As ever in Thailand, there is no oversight. The best way to maintain any standards is any sort of organisation is to have external, independent, continuous oversight with strong regulatory powers.

 

Private international schools in Thailand self-regulate. This means the teaching performance and discipline situation is opaque and one of the very strong incentives to maintain standards is not present.

 

This means there is no external oversight other than the parents who lack auditing powers. Parents only have one really strong lever with the school. That is to take their children and money elsewhere.

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Posted
13 minutes ago, thesetat2013 said:

you will be hard pressed to find quality teachers regardless of the school here in thailand. best to homeschool if you really want your kids to grow up educated and with a good set of moral values and respinsibility. 

Agreed, we tried international school but was very disappointed so now I home school our son with  a Thai teacher coming in twice a week to teach Thai language.

Posted
18 minutes ago, thesetat2013 said:

you will be hard pressed to find quality teachers regardless of the school here in thailand. best to homeschool if you really want your kids to grow up educated and with a good set of moral values and respinsibility. 

Agreed

Posted

Unfortuantely I think you will only be seeing more of this as the 'good' teachers have mostly all left in the last 3 or so years. I remember the days when I had to actually compete for a job and do a demo in front of the Thai teachers. They made it so difficult with us who have all the proper credentials, BA, MBA and TEFL that most of us decided to move back to our home countries. Now the schools are filled with expats who are bored and just want a job for something to do, or the jobs were filled by less desirable because the schools were desperate. It's really too bad but the government and education department, along with the stagnant salaries left us no choic. 

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Posted

I am more than happy with the standard of teaching in my daughters school in Banglamung excellent facilities and a good level of teaching staff.

However at a other school my son went to it was terrible took him out and he was so far behind had to send him to Australia where he was put back 2 years to catch up.

 

 

Posted

My kids go to a bilingual school and the teachers are good. What I have seen however is a couple of foreign parents dropping off their kids on motorbikes, parent and child not wearing helmets. Teaching begins at home, so if the parents aren’t doing the correct things what chance do the teachers have with them. 

Posted
38 minutes ago, khunPer said:

Apart from British teacher's motorbike skills, and upbringing of their own children, how are their education skills..?

Why do you think they are in Thailand exactly

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Posted
On 8/14/2018 at 1:40 PM, Kwasaki said:

First there not UK teachers there probably teaching to be able to stay in Thailand.

The rest of what you observe is normal everyday life in many areas if not all.

Maybe you should move somewhere that would suit you.

How is it you know there are, " . . . not UK teachers there . . . "? 

 

I realize you may be talking about teachers qualified to teach in the UK. However, if they are hired as teachers and they come from the UK, or even have a UK passport; they are UK teachers and I believe that is what the OP was saying.

 

I tend to agree with you that the OP's complaints are rather common here, even with farangs.

 

Consequently, I am afraid moving somewhere else in Thailand would not necessarily alleviate the issues of concern.

Posted
4 hours ago, jimcarr65 said:

Unfortuantely I think you will only be seeing more of this as the 'good' teachers have mostly all left in the last 3 or so years. I remember the days when I had to actually compete for a job and do a demo in front of the Thai teachers. They made it so difficult with us who have all the proper credentials, BA, MBA and TEFL that most of us decided to move back to our home countries. Now the schools are filled with expats who are bored and just want a job for something to do, or the jobs were filled by less desirable because the schools were desperate. It's really too bad but the government and education department, along with the stagnant salaries left us no choic. 

Certainly, at least part of, what you say is correct. I have been approached on several occasions to teach English and I have declined every time, I am simply not qualified to teach English Language. I did once help with English conversation but I 'knocked that on the head' when students and teachers began to take advantage. Two TEFL (I think) teachers from Cameroon took my place and though I had nothing against them personally their English pronunciation left a lot to be desired.

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Posted
3 hours ago, TravelerEastWest said:

Strongly disagree - you have to pay a good Western salary with medical care and home visits etc then you will find good teachers the top half dozen or so International schools in Thailand are all fine.

 

But you need to pay for them.

 

 

and what is the monthly wage at these top schools?

Posted
On 8/14/2018 at 1:32 PM, bowerboy said:

 I know the salaries and they are low and the town is a bit rubbish in general. I wonder if it is kind of a school of last resort for those wanting a holiday rather than wanting to  educate kids.

 

Should I be concerned?

 

 

when did you realize thailand is not an IQ magnet?

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Posted (edited)
41 minutes ago, atyclb said:

 

 

100K thai baht (3k usd) . or 100K eu or usd ??  

 

 

"average teacher salary in America (non-starting) is $58,950."      https://www.niche.com/blog/teacher-salaries-in-america/

I think you are correct that if you compare salaries straight across American salaries are higher.

 

But as you know salaries vary quite a bit in America - because of the cost of living.

 

So if we take that into account Thai top International schools are probably paying a similar amount to American schools.

 

But doing a bit of online research the top schools pay 150,000+ baht per month plus perks plus a lower cost of living so actually the best teachers may be getting more money in Thailand plus of course the travel experience

 

https://tastythailand.com/whats-the-salary-at-a-bangkok-thailand-international-school/

Edited by TravelerEastWest
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Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, smotherb said:

How is it you know there are, " . . . not UK teachers there . . . "? 

 

I realize you may be talking about teachers qualified to teach in the UK. However, if they are hired as teachers and they come from the UK, or even have a UK passport; they are UK teachers and I believe that is what the OP was saying.

 

Your correct I am only assuming from a common sense view mainly because having had friends teaching all over Thailand they would say the only place you may find a qualified UK teacher would be in a university in Bkk,  unless his/she is some kind of weirdo or likes being out of the frame.

Edited by Kwasaki
Posted

My wife's 16 year old son, has passed grade after grade, and had English classes for many years. I sat down with him soon after marrying his mother, and quickly saw he could not make it through his ABC's. In comparison, if there can be one, I have a young Thai friend back in the US. She is 10. She reads at a high school level, with comprehension to boot.

Thai schools will pass a kid to the next class, proficient in the studies or not. That is the root of the problem. Most parents, at least in the country, might have not made it past the first 5 years of school, so are none-the-wiser. The system, which employs the teachers, is broke.

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Posted

Not all International Schools are created equal. Some just use the name "International" to make themselves look better than they are. 

Now that the "English Program" offering (dubious as it may be) has saturated the market, they're moving on to having "International Programs". 

Homeschooling sounds like the best option. And with all the money you save, you can give them real learning experiences like travel.

I'm sure there are exceptions, but what's known as "education" here is highly questionable.

Posted

My daughter started this year at a very expensive school which supposedly only employs highly qualified experienced foreign teachers. Her British Home Room teacher has been having inappropriate Line and phone chats with my wife and trying very hard to persuade her to have sex with him! Completely unconcerned about the disaster for her family or his pupil!

 

And he's the Home Room teacher for a class containing 16 teenage girls! Low morals and not here for the salary.

 

 

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