• teaching in Korea

    Abjuration

    by  • October 14, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 2 Comments

    The wailing, the howling at every doorway, At every face seen, “Oh, sallow-cheeked bastard, Obeisances, now, I demand of you!” and amid Hundreds of books, all read, you deign to lecture Me thus? That I may do this, that I oughtn’t to say That? That you have decided this defect of my blood– In...

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    Whose Fault Is It?

    by  • October 5, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 6 Comments

    Chris in South Korea calls Korea’s English education system psychotic, and his post here ends with some very sensible ideas on what needs to happen for it to become not-psychotic: Make English tests related to actual speaking and comprehension ability, not the ‘ability’ to pass a test. These are the hardest things to test,...

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    I Don’t Get It Yet? Pal…

    by  • September 24, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 7 Comments

    Just before Chuseok I met this guy on the subway; I was in a bad mood, because I’d wasted a bunch of time (because not one but two institutions were completely and utterly disorganized and inconsiderate). I was on the way home from that, and this guy introduced himself to me on the train....

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    What The Zen Cowboy Said

    by  • August 27, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 0 Comments

    Caveat: I know zilch about horses. But I think this says something worth saying, just the same. Been a long time in coming, too. # You wonder, how could a cowboy be so much like the zen monk in that strange book your auntie from San Francisco sent you? He rides up as the...

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    “Hakwon Teachers”

    by  • August 26, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 0 Comments

    In a recent post, I made a disparaging comment about being talked to like some hakwon teacher: And it’s even worse when it’s nine at night and a couple of people come in wanting to sample the beer, just see what it’s like, and they’ve clearly just eaten dinner and tell you so, and...

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    Chew on This…

    by  • August 20, 2010 • teaching in Korea • 2 Comments

    A teacher is a man who must talk for an hour. – Ezra Pound, in (I think it was) Guide to Kulchur. And he is, gender-exclusivity aside — plenty of women must talk for an hour too — quite right in this observation. The teacher must talk whether talking educates, or does not educate....

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