No, thank you
|Greetings,
How and why it happened to briefly consider teaching a Speaking-Listening class at a Kampot university. It's existed for three years. 700 students.
I met a man at lunch. He called his friend the director. I pedaled over at 1430 to meet him. The impatient head of English jumped in, "Yes. We will hire you."
They needed a native speaker for six hours on Saturday and three hours on Sunday once a month. Students also take core, writing, reading and culture classes with local teachers.
"Do you have books for the class?"
"No. In Cambodia teachers provide the materials."
"I see. What levels?"
"Pre-intermediate to intermediate." The teacher took me to a class of first year foundation students. It reminded me of teaching at the Chinese university. Hopeful, bored, alert, expectant faces. It was a beginning. Introductions, eliciting questions. Exposure to a new tongue with clarity and humor. Simple.
After class I gave the teacher some ideas for textbooks; New Interchange, Cutting Edge, Let's Go.
"Can you find them in Phnom Penh?"
"You should go to Phnom Penh and find them," he said.
I laughed. "That's not my job. My job is to teach. I need materials. The students need books. I will come back next week and see what you found."
Yesterday I returned to see him. "Did you find books for the class?" He showed me a 1-2-3 Listening book with CDs.
"Ok. It's a start. Where are the student textbooks for speaking and listening?"
"I couldn't find them Phnom Penh."
"Why?"
"Not available. We don't have the money."
"I see."
I kept it simple. "I am a professional teacher. I need materials. Students need books. Students are my customers. I'm afraid this isn't going to meet the needs of the students. I understand the nature of education here. How it works. I appreciate you and the director offering me the opportunity. However, I won't be teaching here."
"What! You're not going to teach the class?"
"That's right. Thank you for the opportunity. Please give my regards to the director. Good-bye."
I rode my bike to the river. The situation had offered students and I the chance to learn, play and explore together. Reality check. The system was ineffective. I assembled my small frustration, sadness and disappointment into a collective breath and let it go. It floated away, on, over, around and through a wide blue river. So it goes.
Metta.
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