Then And Now
Things have changed in the realm of English language teaching. Here is my short take.
“Where is the life we have lost in living?”
– T.S. Eliot
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As a teacher trainer and workshopper, I have had the honor and pleasure to interact with a lot of new teachers over the last few decades. Energizing and invigorating.
One thing however that seems impossible to convey to them is just how much teaching abroad has changed over the last 20 or so years. It has changed dramatically (and for the better, for the most part!).
I go back 30 years, starting my teaching career in 1990 in Karlovy Vary, the Czech Republic, just after the Iron Curtain fell with a loud thud. But I’ve talked with even “deeper” veterans, like Thomas Farrell who was teaching in Korea when it wasn’t even on the radar of anyone (and go listen to his plenary if attending IATEFL – he’ll be a breath of fresh air from across the Atlantic!). He has stories that even make my own seem “modern”.
It seems that there are now fewer and fewer – isolated spots. The world is truly a village for all but a few teachers. Teachers now can consider themselves so lucky, in many ways. Here are just a few that come to mind.
1. English is everywhere.
These days, I light up my computer and stream Al Jazeera in English. In 1990 in Karlovy Vary, I used to wait anxiously every Sunday outside the “Tabak” for the one copy of Maxwell’s superb “The European”. Often it didn’t come and I had zero English unless an English movie came to town. Even on TV, nic, nothing in English. (and even then, remember watching “Trainspotting” when it came to town and not understanding a thing – like it was a foreign language!)
2. Technology helps teachers.
Back in 1990, I didn’t have any ELT Buzz, a place to get resources with a click of a button. Not even a photocopier! We did have a machine (for which the name escapes me) that you’d crank and get some ink-smeared copies if desperate. Textbooks were one of two kinds. Cambridge or Oxford – that was it. No computers, no projectors or IWBs. No context to reinforce the teaching. It wasn’t easy and you had to learn how to chalk talk or else. I am surprised I haven’t lost my health due to all the chalk dust I used to inhale!
3. No more isolation.
Nowadays, teachers can phone their family and friends very easily. There is Facebook and Zoom and Viber. You can keep in touch easily. Back in 1990, it cost almost a week’s salary to make a call home! Suffice it to say, I wrote letters and went 6 months without hearing my parent’s voices. It was a lot tougher. It was, go native or go home. Knedlicky and smazene syr (dumplings and fried cheese). No Starbucks and TGIFs offering Western tastings. I remember hearing the news Tesco had opened in Prague (maybe 1993?) and was amazed when I went there to get peanut butter! OMG. Finished a jar right outside the small shop.
And let’s mention here that professional development is so much easier. You even don’t have to leave school or your home! Twitter, SNs, Facebook – ideas come to you, the talk comes to you. I remember the first professional development conference I ever went to – in Liberec. It was an exhausting 2 day's journey for an afternoon of a few workshops.
4. English suffices.
English is now a true “lingua franca”. These days, there are always enough English speakers abroad – that there is little need to learn the local language. Of course, I think every teacher should (depending on the context) but it is no longer a requirement in order to survive your year(s) teaching abroad. I had to learn Czech – otherwise, I’d have gone stir-crazy. So I did learn. And perhaps that’s one of the upsides to teaching yesteryear. That and the crazy low prices that everything cost (I’m thinking of the .25 cent Czech beers when I first went there!).
There are some great memories – “how well we remember our happy days in hell” – said Dante. I remember throwing my jug down to the gypsy boys who’d for a few crowns would fill it at the corner pub. I remember Thanksgiving dinners at my place where teachers from all over the C.R. somehow miraculously found out I had got “real” turkey and cranberries and would turn up yearly in ever larger numbers. Great memories of running miles of pristine forest trails. Memories of singing with my good friend Drew in many pubs, late into the night. Ah…. there was an upside to the isolation – the suffering made me suck longer and harder on the joys therein.
I know there are probably still a number of teachers teaching in conditions like I did years ago. I’m generalizing but I think the point is valid – our teaching environments have changed considerably. Some for the better. A lot has changed.
What about the other old-timers out there? Any comments about the “Then” and “Now”?
Still, want more Then and Now? – no better photos on this theme than those of Irina Werning. Amazing and a must see.
Here is my own version.
LOL. Those were the days! This machine looks high tech compared to the manual one I had to use!
Ahh, getting high on memeograph fluid! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccYLLzpeVnU