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Thailand's need for foreign teachers and the spread of Covid-19 a "balancing act" - Thai media


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Thailand's need for foreign teachers and the spread of Covid-19 a "balancing act" - Thai media

 

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Image: Manager

 

Thai media Manager has said in a commentary piece that Thailand's need for more foreign teachers and the importance of keeping out Covid-19 infections brought in from abroad is a "balancing act". 

 

On the one hand the Thai education system is desperately in need of foreigners to improve standards in English.

 

On the other the kingdom needs to think about the spread of the virus. 

 

Already 165 Filipinos have been allowed in and they must quarantine. Comments made in a Thai Rath headline drew ire from the Philippines Consul General who complained to the editor. 

 

The letter outlined the fact that the Filipino teachers were complying with all Thai virus regulations. The exact nature of the headline that caused "deep dissatisfaction" to "brothers and sisters in ASEAN" was not articulated.

 

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Manager noted that the Philippines had the worst Covid-19 infection rate in all of ASEAN. 

 

Meanwhile the media said that 3,000 foreigners were waiting in the wings for final approval to come to schools in Thailand.

 

However this is just a  fraction of the number of foreign teachers that are required - and that assessment came from the Education Minister himself. 

 

Manager said that at the turn of the year before the pandemic took hold Nataphol Teepsuwan had put the figure of foreign teachers required at between 10,000 and 28,000. 

 

Whether the Thais can get anywhere near that number in the pandemic era is now a hot debate. 

 

Do the Thais accept that their standards in subjects like English have to be put on hold or do they let foreigners in to teach and risk the possibility that they might bring the virus with them despite stringent measures put in place to prevent its spread?

 

That is the question.

 

Source: Manager

 

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-- © Copyright Thai Visa News 2020-08-15
 
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When they enforced the "must have a degree" in anything to teach (for a work permit), they greatly reduced their access to good teachers. To compensate for low applications many dropped the requirement, must of an English language teaching certificate and relied only on a degree in anything. So getting teachers without qualifications. Our kids go to good schools in a big city and the teachers they have teaching English are at best a 5 out of 10.

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Just what I was thinking, ask the teachers to hold on and hopefully force the Thai schools to increase the salaries and benefits, as it has been going down, or staying the same for at least 15 years! 15 years ago I got paid 45K and now even those schools have reduced the money to 33-35K

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1 hour ago, Grumpy John said:

A smart Thai in power would ask for help from the ex-pat community to get qualified English speakers into schools...just for one year till the Wuhan China virus silliness is over. Immigration and Educators work together to smooth the way.  There would be enough Aussie's and British ex-pats out there in the community.  No sense in bringing in Flippers who speak American English, all those lovely kiddies need to learn the Queens English so they can get ahead in life.  

 

Geez talk about a British redneck hick. You are so ahead in life that you have to post here rather than in some British expat post or newspaper... wanna bee buzzzzzzzz

Edited by LazySlipper
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22 minutes ago, nobodysfriend said:

 

 

 

So , the Philippines can ' export ' english teachers while Thailand need to ' import them ?

What is the fundamental difference between those 2 countries ...?

The Philippine education system seems to work much better than Thailands ...

 

Better reread your history book.  I believe that from 1900 (Spanish American War) to 1946 the Philippines' were basically a colony of USA.  That is where the English ability started.  

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5 hours ago, rooster59 said:

On the one hand the Thai education system is desperately in need of foreigners to improve standards in English.

I don't think bringing in Philippine teachers is going to help that... accept keep the costs down.

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19 hours ago, rooster59 said:

On the one hand the Thai education system is desperately in need of foreigners to improve standards in English.

 

Before Thailand employed big numbers of foreigners to teach English ,  Thailands ranking was one of the worst in Asia for the standard of English spoken.

 

It still is.  You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink.

 

The very idea that if you have a native speaker at the front of the classroom the students will be more interested in the subject and their English will improve has not been born out by results.

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5 hours ago, rooster59 said:

On the one hand the Thai education system is desperately in need of foreigners to improve standards in English.

All they are looking for are native English speakers who are willing to work long hours for little compensation in a job market where they are still paying their NES teachers no more than they did over a decade ago.
What they want are obedient backpackers who are ignorant of how they are being used, abused, and then jettisoned.
But now that market has dried up as the government places restrictions on foreigners entering the country.  The average backpacker-type isn't going to negotiate that regulatory gauntlet as well as paying the additional costs of insurance and quarantine just to come and teach at a low-paying job with absolutely no job security for an employer who treats them like livestock or house-pets. 
It's no big deal.  The average Thai really doesn't want to learn English. 

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3 hours ago, Bender Rodriguez said:

was there not a wonderful project to teach the teachers so farang english teachers would never be needed again ?

 

wait, I got a thai solution to this problem :  NO MORE ENGLISH teaching in schools allowed, only THAI

I seem to remember that the PM wanted the World to have Thai as its second language instead of English, but maybe I just dreamt it!

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4 hours ago, Grumpy John said:

A smart Thai in power would ask for help from the ex-pat community to get qualified English speakers into schools...just for one year till the Wuhan China virus silliness is over. Immigration and Educators work together to smooth the way.  There would be enough Aussie's and British ex-pats out there in the community.  No sense in bringing in Flippers who speak American English, all those lovely kiddies need to learn the Queens English so they can get ahead in life.  

Philipinos speak American English wish a Spanish like accent mixed in with their native Tagalong tones.  Just so you know it's actually Canadian "North American dialect" which is the most sought after in the world of ESL. The Canucks have very clear pronunciation ( unlike us Americans), , and they have a North American accent which is clearer to the Non Native English speaker unlike Queen's English.

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