Jan 4, 2012

Vietnam - The Art of teaching 3: Experience and Inexperience



“The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires.” William Arthur Ward.

Modern teachers are expected to adapt and learn and improve their craft almost by themselves. Easy for someone to say and another to do…

Across Vietnam, from the village teachers in the mountains coping with a hard life and difficult teaching conditions to the well-paid Lecturers of the major cities; the pressure is on to increase the quality of their personal teaching as well as lift the nation as a whole into a new world…

The problems are well known – salary, recognition, status, class numbers, poor training and so the list goes on. So what is it really going to take to raise Vietnam’s educational future?

First, overhaul the Cirriculum, MOET (Ministry of Education) has long known about the problem and has already begun this process. It is not yet clear to many Vietnamese professionals if this will be adequately addressed. However the curriculum must cover a broader awareness of the world outside Vietnam, particularly modern ways of studying, research and training techniques.

Another sore point of the curriculum is the lack of soft skills education – communication, working together, planning and negotiating and inspiring creativity. There is also a strong need to include ‘emotional education’ – making friends, preventing bullying and health education. At the secondary/high school, also include some form of sex education and coping with relationships. This can be very effectively and quickly introduced using Peer group and Case study projects.

Secondly, create a truly national professional association of teachers that monitors, regulates and sets standards for all teachers nationwide. This would be more effective than relying on state encouragement. This is a controversial subject due to the many outside influences and pressures on teachers however such an association would also be able to design and distribute quality mentoring and professional skills material specifically for regions and demographic groups.

Thirdly, legalize private teaching but ban teachers from linking extra classes to exams. Private lessons should be designed to offer remedial tuition and assistance with theory such as math’s and physics and particularly for English teaching, time to speak – not copy. Both Singapore and Japan struggled for a long time to deal excessive exams and tests that didn’t really enhance student’s ability to think about the world around them. In a lot of Asian countries educators have noticed the high degree of ignorance about local regional issues such as climate change, regional politics, pollution, water and industrial resources. Critical issues for the future leaders of the region.

Fourth, a National Educational Qualification Framework that must by Vietnamese law be complied with by all educational institutions regardless of whether they are private, public, government or business oriented. This should also apply to all businesses hiring employees. The framework would set the standard for work related training and education nationwide.

Finally, establish a fast method of issuing work permits and visas for foreign teachers to assist local teachers. Vietnam has a sensitive problem with foreign institutions operating in Vietnam and the quality of education they are claiming to provide. To provide the same level of education as the home country institutions means those institutions have to provide better teachers and materials than local institutions and that’s very difficult to prove.

Vietnam should require all foreign educational providers to offer some proportion of assistance to local teachers and institutions as a compulsory means boosting the needs of the local system, not creating two separate educational streams.

As I said at the beginning, the issue is how to boost experience for local teachers – raising the quality of the local system should be the overriding priority. Getting overseas teachers to help the locals would very quickly reveal the quality of the foreigner’s skills and the institutions that they represent.

There are thousands of dedicated, skilled, knowledgeable and conscientious teachers in the Vietnamese educational system. We owe it to them and their students to support them forward for the benefit of Vietnam – not foreign institutions, not government agencies or bureaucratic administrators who hold on to ‘territory’ and status at the expense of the nation.

* Stivi Cooke is  a qualified teacher of English and a workplace trainer in hospitality in Hoi An.



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