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A disgruntled foreign teacher recently logged onto
an EFL forum and posted a list of twenty-five 'problems' that existed at his
current school. It was a very well-written list and I have no doubt that most of
the entries are true and can probably be verified. The overall message to any
new teacher thinking of working at this school was simply DON'T.
The list got me thinking. I thought back to the
longest teaching job I've ever had in Thailand - the five years at ELS in the
mid-90s. Armed with pen and paper, I set about compiling a list of the 25 things
that really used to bug me. Here they are in no particular order,
1) The school's key-holder sometimes arrived
late leaving a group of teachers, eager to prepare their morning lessons,
standing outside in the hot sun.
2) Important issues were raised at meetings but little was ever resolved.
3) It was easier to take the receptionist's virginity than it was to get a new
board marker off her.
4) There were some appalling management hires.
5) Many of the teachers had no qualifications or experience and were constantly
asking the more experienced teachers for guidance. They became 'time thieves'.
6) The maid often failed to wash up the coffee cups.
7) The maid sometimes forgot to buy coffee.
8) The air-conditioning in most classrooms was ancient and frequently broke
down.
9) The school allowed students to take TOEFL prep courses when they clearly
weren't good enough.
10) We only had one decent-sized classroom.
11) There was nowhere to have a smoke.
12) The teachers shared toilets with students.
13) The elevator never worked and teachers often had to climb five flights of
stairs to get to their lesson.
14) Teachers had to do evening classes where students showed up tired or didn't
show up at all.
15) The photocopier frequently ran out of ink.
16) The reception staff were bone idle and often forgot to pass on important
messages.
17) On the day you wanted to use the solitary TV set, four other teachers wanted
to use it as well.
18) The school smelled of cheap disinfectant.
19) Pay was sometimes late as the school encountered cash-flow problems.
20) The conversation classes were filled with mixed level students because no
one got turned away.
21) The listening equipment in the sound lab was pre-war.
22) There were frequent power-cuts.
23) There was a teacher sign-in book to record the time you arrived and left.
Many teachers found this a little degrading.
24) The breaks between lessons weren't long enough.
25) We sometimes ran out of A4 paper.
So there you have it - twenty five problems or
'grievances' that I can recall effortlessly from all those years ago. It sounds
like the school from hell doesn't it? ......................................I
loved every single minute of working there.
The fact is that every job has 25 things wrong with it. Every
house or apartment has 25 things wrong with it. Every childhood, every
parent, every journey to work. You may need some time to think about them
but they are there. Provided the 25 don't all happen on the same day, you'll
muddle through. It's how you react to these 'inconveniences' that will make or
break your time in Thailand.
Henry Holmes writes about the notion of not
letting these things get to you in his excellent book 'Working With the Thais'.
Much of the book is a little dated but certain sections are still as relevant
today. He calls it the 'perception barrier'
"A European lady moves to Bangkok. At first
she's appalled by the trash she sees on the road near her apartment. For some
time she can't help looking at it as she walks along. And then one day, by
accident, her eyes drift upward and she notices there are beautiful,
multi-colored bougainvillea billowing over some walls in the neighborhood. From
now on, it's going to be a question of where she rests her eyes during these
walks. This decision will to some extent affect her morale, vis-a-vis her stay
in Thailand"
A lot of the problems in my list of 25 really used to bother me. It took me a
long time to realize that you will invariably never change things so you may as
well just get on with it. But the photocopier breaking down, the lack of storage
lockers, and the meeting that gets cancelled at the last minute are not enough
to recommend other teachers give the school a wide berth. This is not about
being pro-teacher or pro-employer, it's about realizing that sometimes you just
have to go with the flow.
I remember a female teacher weeping loudly in
the teachers room because her whole lesson relied on flashcards that needed to
be cut out in readiness for the next class. Ten minutes before the lesson is due
to start and she can't find the staffroom scissors. Either one of the teachers
had taken and not returned them or one of the 'bitches from hell' (a term she
used for the office girls downstairs) had 'stolen' them. "What am I going to
do?" she howled through strands of saliva and snot.
One of her colleagues looked up from his paperwork and said "why not do
something else?"
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