Popular Post decline Posted February 25 Popular Post Share Posted February 25 (Saw this on Facebook, thought it might be of interest...) "Foreign teachers are no longer required to have Bachelor/Master/Diploma in Education to get permanent teaching license. Instead, you can use bachelor degree in ANY discipline to apply for one and you need to attend the “ONLINE theoretical and practical training; 7 modules” held by Kurusapha (ONLY for those who are holding a “waiver” temporary teaching license for at least 1 year and still working at the current school mention in that waiver). Moreover, the ‘temporary teaching license’ will soon no longer be given to those non-education degree holders who wanted to be a teacher, but instead “P-license” (2 years license), “B-license” (5 years license), and “A-license” (7 years license) are going to be implemented soon. No need to attend and spend TONS of money for the “diploma” and “master” is probably a really good news for many of us. NB: you may ask your Thai teachers at your school regarding this news and let them translate it for you for better understanding. Though, you CAN still take the ‘diploma’ or ‘master’ that are accepted by Khurusapa to get the permanent teaching license, but, if I were you, I wouldn’t even bother to spend money for things that are no longer a must." Sources: https://www.ksp.or.th/ksp2018/2023/01/42355/ https://vt.tiktok.com/ZS8uaaug3/ https://www.dailynews.co.th/news/2024364/ 2 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CrunchWrapSupreme Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 Great news. Indeed, that Philippine "diploma" many were getting to fulfill the requirement was merely a scam to fatten someone's pockets. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stubuzz Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 To qualify for obtaining a license to practice teaching profession, amounting to 420 hours in 7 modules, namely 1. Changing the context of the world, society and the concept of the Sufficiency Economy Philosophy 2. developmental psychology educational psychology and counseling psychology to analyze and develop learners according to their potential. 3. Contents of subjects taught, curriculum, teaching science, and digital technology in learning management. 4. Measurement, evaluation of learning outcomes. and research for problem solving and student development 5. Use of Thai language English for Communication and using digital technology for education 6. Design and implementation of educational quality assurance and 7. Teacher spirit and professional ethics. These 7 modules answer the question of being a teacher that will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools. design and implementation of educational quality assurance; and 7. teacher's spirit and professional ethics. will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools. design and implementation of educational quality assurance; and 7. teacher's spirit and professional ethics. will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools.... สามารถติดตามต่อได้ที่ : https://www.dailynews.co.th/news/2024364/ Increasing the stagnant salary would help the teacher shortage. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post mommysboy Posted February 25 Popular Post Share Posted February 25 At your expense no doubt, for a whopping 35k a month! 1 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
connda Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 I've taught here for 3 years in a private school. I wouldn't teach in a public school. The wages suck and there are other countries where the requirements are less of a hassle and the money is significantly better. Teaching in a private school was more like a hobby where I could make 40K a month. Thai public schools. <head shake> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
markclover Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 Being Filipino and accepting 10,000 a month seems to work as well. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callmeishmael Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 I just finished renewing my 5 year license! Great timing.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
puchooay Posted February 25 Share Posted February 25 (edited) 10 hours ago, connda said: I've taught here for 3 years in a private school. I wouldn't teach in a public school. The wages suck and there are other countries where the requirements are less of a hassle and the money is significantly better. Teaching in a private school was more like a hobby where I could make 40K a month. Thai public schools. <head shake> The salary difference between private and public is not as clear cut you make out. I've known public school salaries easily above the 40k salary you quote. Edited February 25 by puchooay 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post thaibeachlovers Posted February 25 Popular Post Share Posted February 25 14 hours ago, decline said: "Foreign teachers are no longer required to have Bachelor/Master/Diploma in Education to get permanent teaching license. Instead, you can use bachelor degree in ANY discipline I see still need the charade of a degree ( whatever it's for ) to teach in LOS. Long time ago I was going to do a TEFL or TESOL ( forget which it was exactly ) so I could stay in LOS, but the need for a degree stymied that. Back then I don't remember it as having to be an education degree, so is this a return to what it used to be? I'm sure there are a lot of guys out there that would make great teachers, but don't have a degree. I never went to uni, because I had to earn a living, but I'm sure that compared to some of the teachers ( with degrees ) that I had in school, I'd do just fine as a teacher. 4 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callmeishmael Posted February 26 Share Posted February 26 (edited) 21 hours ago, stubuzz said: To qualify for obtaining a license to practice teaching profession, amounting to 420 hours in 7 modules, namely 1. Changing the context of the world, society and the concept of the Sufficiency Economy Philosophy 2. developmental psychology educational psychology and counseling psychology to analyze and develop learners according to their potential. 3. Contents of subjects taught, curriculum, teaching science, and digital technology in learning management. 4. Measurement, evaluation of learning outcomes. and research for problem solving and student development 5. Use of Thai language English for Communication and using digital technology for education 6. Design and implementation of educational quality assurance and 7. Teacher spirit and professional ethics. These 7 modules answer the question of being a teacher that will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools. design and implementation of educational quality assurance; and 7. teacher's spirit and professional ethics. will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools. design and implementation of educational quality assurance; and 7. teacher's spirit and professional ethics. will there be any standards It also helps solve the teacher shortage problem in private and vocational schools.... สามารถติดตามต่อได้ที่ : https://www.dailynews.co.th/news/2024364/ Increasing the stagnant salary would help the teacher shortage. While this is good news for many teachers, before celebrating too much I would like to see more information about these 7 modules... Who is going to teach them? How much will they cost and where will classes be held? Will those of us who already have Teaching Licenses be grandfathered into the system or will we be bumped down to the 2 year P class license? It sounds like the KSP decided to muscle in on the Philippine Diploma/PGCEi action and substitute their own equivalent courses. Edited February 26 by Callmeishmael 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2009 Posted February 26 Share Posted February 26 Krusapa spends more time moving goal posts than anything else. Maybe they are just acting busy . ???? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zzaa09 Posted February 26 Share Posted February 26 Mediocre is what they're looking for. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callmeishmael Posted March 5 Share Posted March 5 5 months after I started the process, I have succeeded in renewing my Thai Teaching License. I was going to post some helpful hints about how to do the process, but since the entire process seems to be changing, I don't think that will be particularly useful. I haven't received my card and printed license from the KSP yet, but I have printed out a copy from their website. It is for the full five years, so I will be able to teach unit 2028. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike123ca Posted March 5 Share Posted March 5 2 hours ago, Callmeishmael said: 5 months after I started the process, I have succeeded in renewing my Thai Teaching License. I was going to post some helpful hints about how to do the process, but since the entire process seems to be changing, I don't think that will be particularly useful. I haven't received my card and printed license from the KSP yet, but I have printed out a copy from their website. It is for the full five years, so I will be able to teach unit 2028. I did the same thing 3 months ago, they no longer make the id cards. The paper they give you stating that you are now licensed will have a barcode. When you scan it, the link is shown and when you visit it, a pdf file will open up showing KSP details about you for everyone to see. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stubuzz Posted March 5 Share Posted March 5 5 hours ago, mike123ca said: did the same thing 3 months ago, they no longer make the id cards. The paper they give you stating that you are now licensed will have a barcode. When you scan it, the link is shown and when you visit it, a pdf file will open up showing KSP details about you for everyone to see. If you renew online, you can download a copy of your license. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post DrJack54 Posted March 5 Popular Post Share Posted March 5 On 2/26/2023 at 3:08 AM, thaibeachlovers said: I never went to uni, because I had to earn a living, but I'm sure that compared to some of the teachers ( with degrees ) that I had in school, I'd do just fine as a teacher Oh please. Cry me a river. 1 4 1 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post youreavinalaff Posted March 5 Popular Post Share Posted March 5 1 hour ago, DrJack54 said: Oh please. Cry me a river. Be careful what you wish for. You might drown in it. 1 1 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post DrJack54 Posted March 5 Popular Post Share Posted March 5 10 minutes ago, youreavinalaff said: Be careful what you wish for. You might drown in it. Not clever. Just a throw away line from you. The guy I quoted complains that he never obtained a degree as he had to work for a living. Then complains that he had inadequate teachers when at school. Just another fella playing the "someone's else's fault" card. 3 1 4 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post BananaStrong Posted March 5 Popular Post Share Posted March 5 On 2/26/2023 at 3:08 AM, thaibeachlovers said: I'm sure there are a lot of guys out there that would make great teachers, but don't have a degree. I never went to uni, because I had to earn a living, but I'm sure that compared to some of the teachers ( with degrees ) that I had in school, I'd do just fine as a teacher. Sorry, I cannot agree with you. Teachers should be ROLE MODELS!!!! Oh, hi student, I'm here to "educate" you but I felt education wasn't important in my life. You need a degree, but, as your teacher, I don't. A degree, IMO, is worthless, but I'll make a great teacher!!! I'll probably lie to you and tell you I have a degree, but I'm sure I'm better than everyone else. Compared to teachers who actually didn't quit their education, I'm better!!!! I'm a failure and couldn't finish school, but I'm telling you I'm better!!! Yes, I'm your teacher. lol Hey, look at Bill Gates!!! He dropped out of school!! He got into Harvard, one of the hardest universities in the world to get accepted at, but I'm the same!!! NO, NO, NO, NO, NO.....................................NO< NO< NO> NO!!! lol 1 1 3 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Scott Posted March 5 Popular Post Share Posted March 5 13 minutes ago, BananaStrong said: Sorry, I cannot agree with you. Teachers should be ROLE MODELS!!!! Oh, hi student, I'm here to "educate" you but I felt education wasn't important in my life. You need a degree, but, as your teacher, I don't. A degree, IMO, is worthless, but I'll make a great teacher!!! I'll probably lie to you and tell you I have a degree, but I'm sure I'm better than everyone else. Compared to teachers who actually didn't quit their education, I'm better!!!! I'm a failure and couldn't finish school, but I'm telling you I'm better!!! Yes, I'm your teacher. lol Hey, look at Bill Gates!!! He dropped out of school!! He got into Harvard, one of the hardest universities in the world to get accepted at, but I'm the same!!! NO, NO, NO, NO, NO.....................................NO< NO< NO> NO!!! lol I think a lot of people think that all there is to teaching is standing in front of a class and telling students what you know about a subject. It takes some level of knowledge to understand how students learn, what they are capable of understanding at any particular age. Many of the concepts of math, for example, require both a basic understanding of arithmetic and a certain developmental level before they can be taught. A fair number of students have learning disabilities that aren't serious, but they do get stuck on certain concepts or tasks. It takes training in education to get them through. Of course, these same people couldn't be bothered to write a lesson plan, help develop a a curriculum or, heaven forbid, actually write a test that is an accurate assessment of what has been taught. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post puchooay Posted March 6 Popular Post Share Posted March 6 (edited) 1 hour ago, BananaStrong said: Sorry, I cannot agree with you. Teachers should be ROLE MODELS!!!! Oh, hi student, I'm here to "educate" you but I felt education wasn't important in my life. You need a degree, but, as your teacher, I don't. A degree, IMO, is worthless, but I'll make a great teacher!!! I'll probably lie to you and tell you I have a degree, but I'm sure I'm better than everyone else. Compared to teachers who actually didn't quit their education, I'm better!!!! I'm a failure and couldn't finish school, but I'm telling you I'm better!!! Yes, I'm your teacher. lol Hey, look at Bill Gates!!! He dropped out of school!! He got into Harvard, one of the hardest universities in the world to get accepted at, but I'm the same!!! NO, NO, NO, NO, NO.....................................NO< NO< NO> NO!!! lol A gross generalisation. Firstly, I've never known any teacher feel the need to introduce themselves to class with an in depth history regarding their education. Secondly, my father was and still is a great role model. He left school at 16. Thirdly, I challenge anyone, when faced with 5 teachers with degrees and five without, in a demonstration class, to successfully put them into the correct group. Lastly, but not least, I started teaching in Thailand in 1998. I did not have a degree. I studied online when the rules of needing a degree for work permits were more rigorously enforced. I graduated in 2012. Did the degree make me a better teacher? No. Did the 14 years of experience I had make me a better teacher? Yes, immensely. Did I become a better role model to the students? No, as they had no knowledge of my recent graduation or the fact I had been teaching previously without a degree. Students, colleagues and parents were equally happy with me both pre and post graduation. Edited March 6 by puchooay 1 2 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post BritManToo Posted March 6 Popular Post Share Posted March 6 1 hour ago, puchooay said: Lastly, but not least, I started teaching in Thailand in 1998. I did not have a degree. I studied online when the rules of needing a degree for work permits were more rigorously enforced. I graduated in 2012. Did the degree make me a better teacher? No. Of course an online degree is worthless for teaching. 1 2 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post puchooay Posted March 6 Popular Post Share Posted March 6 (edited) 5 hours ago, BritManToo said: Of course an online degree is worthless for teaching. Without knowing how the course was set up. What contact and interaction I had with teachers and other students, what mentoring I received and how the course was completed, you wouldn't know. Besides, as I have already pointed out. At time of graduation I had already been teaching for 14 years and my skills were warmly appreciated by all concerned. The degree was to remain on the right side of the requirements. Edited March 6 by puchooay 2 1 1 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted March 7 Share Posted March 7 On 3/6/2023 at 12:36 PM, BananaStrong said: Sorry, I cannot agree with you. Teachers should be ROLE MODELS!!!! Oh, hi student, I'm here to "educate" you but I felt education wasn't important in my life. You need a degree, but, as your teacher, I don't. A degree, IMO, is worthless, but I'll make a great teacher!!! I'll probably lie to you and tell you I have a degree, but I'm sure I'm better than everyone else. Compared to teachers who actually didn't quit their education, I'm better!!!! I'm a failure and couldn't finish school, but I'm telling you I'm better!!! Yes, I'm your teacher. lol Hey, look at Bill Gates!!! He dropped out of school!! He got into Harvard, one of the hardest universities in the world to get accepted at, but I'm the same!!! NO, NO, NO, NO, NO.....................................NO< NO< NO> NO!!! lol That little rant didn't exactly improve the image of university graduates, . I thought university taught you to develop comprehension skills, but you apparently missed where I was going to do a TEFL, and because you chose to have a rant rather than ask me why I feel I could be a teacher, I never told you that I'm a qualified instructor, which uses the same skills as scott mentioned On 3/6/2023 at 12:58 PM, Scott said: write a lesson plan, help develop a a curriculum or, heaven forbid, actually write a test that is an accurate assessment of what has been taught. Also, all my teachers were qualified teachers, some of which had degrees, and none of which instilled a love of learning, none of which taught me much, and some of which taught by fear of caning. None took a personal interest in any students, and none tried to assist pupils struggling to understand the subject. So don't give me the old "teachers care" thing. Back when I was thinking about it, the degree didn't have to be in education- it just had to be a degree in anything, so relevance to teaching beats me. Also, I didn't drop out of school, and I finished secondary education at 18 years old I also qualified in 3 different careers, all of which required study and written work, and my longest career involved teaching my juniors. BTW, back when I would have gone to uni, it wasn't a place for subjects like media studies etc LOL, and the one person I knew that went to uni ( most didn't back then ) described in detail the lifestyle, including the "chunder games", so I had no actual desire to waste 3 years of my life in debauchery and drunkeness. Had I wanted to be a teacher back then I wouldn't have gone to uni anyway, as it was a teacher's training college course to go teaching. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post aarontendo Posted March 7 Popular Post Share Posted March 7 Teaching is a profession, and any sort of profession has educational and licensure requirements. I realize that Thailand has a ton of teaching jobs that aren't really that professional. I get a lot of use out of my undergraduate and graduate studies when I'm working with my students at my school. I suppose it depends on what one is teaching too. I teach subject matter up through AP and so the material goes fairly in-depth. I still remember years back when I was asked to teach business and economics, and a friend of mine was upset that he didn't get a chance to apply for the job because he didn't have a degree in the subject matter, or hell even a degree for that matter. He then went on to say he could teach it just fine because he had taught "Business English" in the evenings. Cool, I threw him a napkin and a pencil and asked him to draw a simple supply and demand curve. He just told me to "f-off" heh. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted March 7 Share Posted March 7 18 hours ago, puchooay said: Without knowing how the course was set up. What contact and interaction I had with teachers and other students, what mentoring I received and how the course was completed, you wouldn't know. Besides, as I have already pointed out. At time of graduation I had already been teaching for 14 years and my skills were warmly appreciated by all concerned. The degree was to remain on the right side of the requirements. I was taught by a few that had done degrees, but they were rubbish compared to the ones that had teachers training college qualifications. It was obvious which ones were better teachers, and which were only there for the money. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted March 7 Share Posted March 7 (edited) On 2/27/2023 at 3:44 AM, zzaa09 said: Mediocre is what they're looking for. That was all that was available when I went to school. Given the level of education that today's pupils achieve ( apparently some can't even read or write properly when they leave school ) times have not changed much in teaching. Edited March 7 by thaibeachlovers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thaibeachlovers Posted March 7 Share Posted March 7 On 3/6/2023 at 12:58 PM, Scott said: I think a lot of people think that all there is to teaching is standing in front of a class and telling students what you know about a subject. That describes every teacher I had during my school years. Didn't stop me learning after I left school. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aarontendo Posted March 7 Share Posted March 7 3 minutes ago, thaibeachlovers said: That was all that was available when I went to school. Given the level of education that today's pupils achieve ( apparently some can't even read or write properly when they leave school ) times have not changed much in teaching. Less to do with the teachers themselves and more to do with the system in place, including apathy from policy makers and parents. We're in an age where members of society simply feel the need to blame others for their own shortcomings. Teaching as a profession will always end up criticized because as a governmental service policy makers can directly make changes to it. In essence, it's a lot easier to blame teachers and to implement "No Child Left Behind" type policies than to get parents to raise their children better. Many children cannot read and write properly, even given every technological advantage and innovation in education, because they simply don't care to and parents do not act as a disciplinarian to them. Schools are also pressure to actually reduce discipline in many cases, as instances of being sent for such are recorded and make a school (and thus principal) look bad. I'll fully admit that there are teachers in the field who might not be the best, and that having a license and degree isn't a guarantee of any quality beyond a simple baseline standard to start or continue to work in the field. However, I feel that many deficiencies in education today aren't necessarily due to the quality of teachers but has much more to do with the number of distractions in kids' lives. It also doesn't help that in places such as America kids aspire to be influencers, Youtubers, and Tik-Tok'ers. I don't know how to teach kids how to sing and dance on a camera, sadly heh. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post BananaStrong Posted March 7 Popular Post Share Posted March 7 On 3/6/2023 at 7:46 AM, puchooay said: Thirdly, I challenge anyone, when faced with 5 teachers with degrees and five without, in a demonstration class, to successfully put them into the correct group. Each person knows if the finished school. Completed their education (formal) and are abiding by Thai laws. You must have a degree. The frauds know they are frauds and shouldn’t be in a school. I’ve met some who lied to kids about their education and told me the truth. They also lacked general knowledge, loved to drink, and I couldn’t trust them. Oh, you want to teach basketball but quit your team and never did anything on the basketball court? No. I don’t care how good we all think they are. They are frauds. Lying to themselves and their kids. A failure in academia shouldn’t teach. They can choose a Zillow other careers. I don’t want a doctor who quit medical school. 1 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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