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Thailand falls to 74th place in EF English Proficiency Index 2019


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Posted
2 hours ago, nickstav said:

I found English proficiency to be quite good in Cambodia, but I've only been to tourist areas. But in those areas I actually thought they were more proficient than Thais.

Agreed. I would say the same from when I went to Myanmar, both of which rank lower than Thailand on that study. 

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Posted
1 hour ago, spidermike007 said:

Thailand needs to get it's act together, hire 25,000 foreign, native English speakers, and just suck it up and admit that they have failed miserably, their educational system is hopelessly broken, their kids are not learning much, and they are so far behind the curve, it is astonishing. Man up! Do the right thing! Help your people! For once, do something that actually benefits the common people. 

 

Also, during my trips to Indonesia, I found the locals spoke far better english than most Thais. 

Yes, I agree, but if the digonells are well educated, then they can think. If they can think, then they have opinions. If they have opinions, then they are going to speak up. If they speak up, they will depose the politicians and vote using their brains!

 

Now, does Thailand and the elites want this? Definitely not, and so the circus continues. ????

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Posted
6 hours ago, Langkawee said:

The English are not good at English. Even the Dutch score better on these proficiency tests. 

Yeah, they speak British. Near incomprehensible. 

 

There's a de facto "international English" language now. Very little accent, clearly spoken and mostly based on US English. 

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Posted
11 hours ago, Thaiwrath said:

However, the wealth of school directors has probably reached number 1 !

Their wealth comes well before bringing the best out of the students, by paying for proper teachers, especially in Government schools.

But also their 'rules' take precedence over finding teachers with good skills - focusing almost entirely on processing paperwork and eliminating candidates by the bucketload.

Posted
2 hours ago, ramrod711 said:

Thais are not stupid,

When I hear the same sentence used to say ''' I am going to eat'' or ''I am going home'' or ''your child is smart"" etc etc etc without fail each and every time, by every single thai person, regardless of their education , I know one thing,thai language is ''limited'',''boring '', ''primitive'' and ''repetitive'' .......it is a totally ''function based language'' if the speaker is ok with that small vocabulary ,then fine for them..  I am not ,and I want better for my thai children...

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Posted

I can't believe this myth of a NES teacher as being the paragon of English still persists. I can't think of any country, be it in Europe or elsewhere, that bases teaching English at schools on NES. It's such an absurd and obtuse notion. 

It's obvious that Thailand desperately needs qualified THAI teachers of English, the same way it works in every other country, where natives teacher English as a foreign language at schools in their own countries.

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Posted
10 hours ago, EricTh said:

Ironically, most Thai schools actually hire native English speakers to teach English unlike the schools in Singapore and Malaysia which hire non-native English speakers i.e. locals.

 

       I think most of the non native English speaking teachers in Singapore , have spent a considerable amount of time studying in western countries , unlike the average Thai teachers who teach English here . Less need for native speakers under those circumstances .

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Posted

I have stopped caring if the Thai can English.
I have a picture book with me. I'm just pointing to a picture.
Should I have beer and smoke, I point to the picture of a bottle of beer and a pack of smoke.
I have a shirt with maps on where I live. It says on the back it drives me home if I sleep outside

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Posted
59 minutes ago, mok199 said:

When I hear the same sentence used to say ''' I am going to eat'' or ''I am going home'' or ''your child is smart"" etc etc etc without fail each and every time, by every single thai person, regardless of their education , I know one thing,thai language is ''limited'',''boring '', ''primitive'' and ''repetitive'' .......it is a totally ''function based language'' if the speaker is ok with that small vocabulary ,then fine for them..  I am not ,and I want better for my thai children...

It fits well with their 'boring' life: "'What do you like to drink?' - 'Water.'", "'What are your hobbies?' - 'Sleeping...'", "'If you could choose the age at which you die...' - '60.'", "'What do you want to be/do when you grow up/leave school?' (questions for high school students) - '...'" (shrug)...

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Posted
4 hours ago, DrTuner said:

Yeah, they speak British. Near incomprehensible. 

 

There's a de facto "international English" language now. Very little accent, clearly spoken and mostly based on US English. 

I agree. Went today with wife and kid to a kindergarden ("campus") in Sathorn (BKK), and there was this teacher from the UK with a horrible British accent. I myself speak a very clear international version of English that is very easy for everyone to understand, and would prefer the teacher to speak the 'international English' as you pointed out. Her British English (can you call it like that?) sounded very low class, surely she was none. But I notice that native English speakers soon drop their accents (UK) or their overly loud use of voice (US) or both (AUS hehe) once they move e.g. to Northern or Central Europe, and start to speak more "international English". To be honest (don't want to intimidate anyone), they sound much smarter in the IT / business world once they do that. The same applies in many countries domestically (drop Isaan dialect, drop Bavarian accent, etc.)

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Posted
45 minutes ago, gimo said:

       I think most of the non native English speaking teachers in Singapore , have spent a considerable amount of time studying in western countries , unlike the average Thai teachers who teach English here . Less need for native speakers under those circumstances .

 

Can you give me a percentage as to how many native English teachers versus Thai teachers teach English in Thailand?

 

Wherever I go in Chiang Mai city, I only see native English teachers. Not sure about the rest of the country.

 

Posted
12 hours ago, Langkawee said:

The hearts of the elite will be overjoyed that English is getting worse. Native speakers don't speak English very well these days so that's no longer the solution. Philippinos speak better English than most native speakers from my observations. 

troll

Posted
21 minutes ago, emptypockets said:

Bit of a slap in the face to the many English teachers who are members of this forum.

More than 90% of Thai students have Thai english teachers, especially outside of laege cities. Nothing to do with native speaking teachers. 

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Posted
11 hours ago, nasa123 said:

Look and listen to all these Generals and State employees who hold high positions, most of them pointing out that they have high education from the US and England but cannot speak a word English.

I know many civil servants who did postgraduate studies overseas (colleagues of the wife). They all speak english very well. 

Posted

In Panama recently, would have to say it seems like Thailand is much further ahead of them in English proficiency.  They are less reliant on tourism, but even in international commerce the standards seem much lower.

 

In Thailand I might not be able to carry out a conversation in Broken Thai/Bad English, but I never feel like I am unable to communicate my needs.  In Panama my Spanglish could help with some chit-chat, but my communication needs were rarely met without Google Translate...

Posted
1 hour ago, StayinThailand2much said:

'boring' life

I prefer to call it ''the simple life'',with a heap of denial ,sprinkled with superstition and defiance.

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Posted
3 hours ago, EricTh said:

 

Can you give me a percentage as to how many native English teachers versus Thai teachers teach English in Thailand?

 

Wherever I go in Chiang Mai city, I only see native English teachers. Not sure about the rest of the country.

 

      No , I can't . From my  experience in Isaan public schools , it's about 8 Thais ti 1 farang . There are many schools with no native teachers . Perhaps you are basing your assessment on Language schools and international schools only . 

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Posted

The old worn out: You can lead a horse to water ... My hypothesis is that it's a matter of desire. Most of the passable English speakers, even one or two excellent ones just picked it up here and there on their own - books, internet, movies, etc.

 

 

 

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