Archive for the 'korea' Category

Aug 25 2010

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Travel Light 2: Rural vs. Urban

Filed under andeok,epik,esl,hm,korea

This is the second of my posts about ESL teaching in Korea. ( The first is here.)

What sparked my desire to write these was a friend saying they were considering teaching abroad. What follows came out of that conversation and like most advice it comes from having made mistakes. This part will focus on the application process and the second part will focus on the first six months.

A few things to state up front: I’m a straight, American, Caucasian male, in my mid-30s, posted to a rural county, and without an education or teaching background. I’m married to a Korean woman who has herself lived abroad for close to twenty years. I enjoy taking long walks, Fritz Leiber novels, and . . . er, wait, what? OK, back to my point, all of the previous colors my perspective on teaching in Korea. I don’t know how my situation would be different if I were a woman or from another English-speaking country or of non-white ancestry or if I lived in a city.

I teach at three Elementary schools, and my largest class is about 30 students. My smallest class has two students. I also live in the town where my main school is. Every teacher’s experience here is different, but I’ve tried to take into account what other teachers have told me of their experiences.

The one decision that’s likely to make the most difference is whether you decide to take a Rural or Urban post (and by saying, “It doesn’t matter, I’ll teach anywhere”, you are pretty much saying, “Yes, please, I’d like that rural post.”)

Since I have a rural post, here’s what I’ve found that to mean:

- In the EPIK program you are paid more if you decide to take a rural post over an urban one. I’m not sure how EPIK determines rural/urban, but if there’s one thing that happens pretty quick is that you learn to tell the difference between a village of 300 and a village of 5,000 despite both being labeled rural (“But, wait, how can you call your town small? You have a Paris Baguette and everything”).

- In a rural post your classes will be smaller, but this can be a drawback since you might then be called upon to teach at more than one school (the most I’ve hear of is 10, which the guy oddly didn’t mind).

- As in most countries there’s a prejudice against the countryside with those who live in rural places being considered backwards and stupid. (The standard mentality of “If they were smarter they wouldn’t live there”.) A number of my students live with their grandparents because their parents work in one of the bigger cities. You might be the first foreigner to either teach at the school or live in the town. There are two big drawbacks to this. One, which I'll touch on in the next post, is the fact that the people will have nothing but stereotypes to base your character upon and, frankly, these can be pretty racist. The second is that your fellow teachers might not know what to do with you and would rather you weren’t there because they perceive your presence as somehow disturbing the “good thing” they have going on.

- If you wind up living in the small town where you teach, you’re likely to become something of a celebrity. This’ll mean students might follow you home, people will ask where you’re going, you will see your students and their parents everyday outside of school, and the mailman will track you down to hand you your mail personally instead of leaving it at your home. Parts of this can be uncomfortable (being asked to go to church), but there are some perks. Ask yourself how much being THE FOREIGNER bothers you. (If you don’t live in the town where you teach you need to ask yourself if you mind a 45-minute bus ride each way everyday. On the plus side you might then be in a city and be able to enjoy those benefits.) Ultimately being THE FOREIGNER means paying attention to what you say and do in town at all times. If you've never lived with this, can you?

Other things to consider:
- If you want to have a social life and hang out with other foreigners, you might want to select an urban post.

- Worship. I’m an atheist, and I find the particular brand of Charismatic Christianity that’s prevalent in Korea to be unnerving. I admit this might be a personal hang-up. But if being devout in your religious practice is important to you, you might look into where there are places of worship that offer an English language service (or simply where such places of worship exist).

- If you’re a vegetarian, every meal you eat at school or with your coworkers or neighbors will require that you explain yourself. Actually, maybe not so much at school after the first few weeks, if you’re cafeteria crew winds up being anything like mine, they’d make something special for you or at least insure that there’s enough for you to eat. (I’d say the same if you wanted to keep Kosher, but you might have more options.) Koreans pride themselves on their food. Unfortunately almost all of it has meat in it. An urban post is likely to have the same problem, however if the city is big enough you may be lucky to have a vegetarian restaurant (though it might be cult affiliated) or a daily market with a great selection of produce.

- Eat the kimchi. If you’re even considering teaching in Korea next year, start eating kimchi now. Learn to like it.

- Along with the above learn Hangul, the Korean alphabet. It’s fairly easy to learn as it was designed for ease of use and it has a cool history. In the decades after Sejong the Great implemented it, most of the Confucian scholars were upset because the populace was using it to write dirty limericks and pulp novels.

- Plan for the worst. I’ll go into this more in the next installment, but seriously: Plan for the worst. The glimpse of what to expect during the training courses can be very different from what your reality turns out to be. Think of worst-case scenarios and what to do if/when you encounter them.

That's it for now. Next installment is going to focus on the first six months.

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Aug 20 2010

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Travel Light: The Metaphysical Post

Filed under hm,korea,travel light



This is the first in a (at least three part) series of posts on teaching English in Korea.

When I told one of my closest friends I planned on moving to South Korea, her first reaction was to call me crazy, her second was to say: "People like you don't do that." That's when I knew I was making a good decision.

Travel’s not the answer. It’s too easy to travel and never leave one’s comfort zone, to stay on the tour bus, going from sanctioned tourist site, to sanctioned restaurant, and back again. The comfort zone never breached; the new experience never encountered except within a sanitized boundary where it can be limited, made safe, and consumed.

Travel can become an inoculation against having an open mind. We can see the world and remain as mired in our own preconceptions as before. Possibly even more so: “Been there, done that. I’m glad I don’t have to live there.”

The real answer is to get beyond the comfort zone. To go beyond one’s assumptions and safe spaces and enter that area where the boundaries aren’t fixed and there’s no scaffolding supporting our preconceptions. A space where we’re likely to grow but we’re also likely to get burnt.

It can be painful to watch our preconceived notions crumble beneath the weight of their own unsupported crufted-on bullshit.

Some people come away from the experience lessened, still attached to the broken pieces of their assumptions but unable to trust them again. Bitterness and cynicism set in, and a wounded pride takes over. For others it can be a weight removed, a pressure done away with, not collapse but liberation.

The goal is not to travel. It’s not to have “adventures” or “see the world”. These can be too easily transformed into consumables, the stereotypical endlessly backpacking globetrotter. Rootlessness and the excitement of new places can be as deep a rut as the familiar treadmill. But the ruts aren’t deepest in our environment, they're deepest in our own heads.

Travel and living abroad are two ways to encounter the unknown. They’re not the only ways. Nor is the comfort zone to be made an enemy. Our desire for a place where we can feel safe is hardwired, but like much that’s hardwired, it can be made a luxury and abused. When that place starts to resemble a cage, we need to find our way out and stretch past its confines.

I used to haul around this Francis Bacon quote which I unfortunately can’t source but will nevertheless paraphrase: “One’s mind should be broadened to meet the grandeur of the mysteries, and not the mysteries shrunk to fit the narrowness of the mind.”

That’s the perspective required. Travel’s one way to learn it, but it’s not the only way.

(The painting's by Nicholas Roerich.)

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