Friday, March 12, 2004

Finished the HS gig


my cats enjoying a sunny day

Finished that teaching gig at the high school. One interesting development is that the teachers have decided that the texts required by the Education Ministry are not appropriate for their situation. They have the luxury of using it or choosing not to. They are going to visit me on Tuesday and explore other options.

Don't you love him

He's not just a racist anymore. The Governor of Tokyo, Shintaro Ishihara, fired all of the teaching staff at the Shuto Metropolitan University, set out to restructure the institution, and is considering rehiring some academics, with conditions attached, in 2005. Thisis an article about the university. It is interesting that they are having a hard time finding teachers right now.

I met one of the professors affected by Ishihara's putsch. He just decided that he didn't want to work there, and probably would have a hard time swallowing the conditions that Ishihara makes. He's out looking for another position. He won't have a hard time. He is well qualified and dynamic, an asset to any university.

My prediction is that the university will open in 2005, and that the metropolitan government will find all the profs they need, hardly any better than scabs. Students will attend, because the school will be cheaper than schools who hire quality academes.

Ministry of Education, "Japanese with English Abilities"

The Japan Ministry of Education issued a statement in 2003. Regarding the Establishment of an Action Plan to Cultivate “Japanese with English Abilities”

It is a relief that the country still states that English is important for their people. It is also good to see that they are still willing to insitute programs and revise their objectives, and make their objectives more accessable to the world by putting them in English.

There are some points which concern me, though. First, their reliance on commercial tests to measure student and teacher proficiency. Second, their insistance on refering to non-Japanese people as "foreigners" or "native speakers." Third, their willingness to ignore fundamental flaws in the system that make most or all of these policies immaterial.

In this policy statement, the Ministry says that it will use commercially available English tests, STEP, TOEIC, and TOEFL for measuring both student and teacher proficiency levels. For example, in the "Goals" section there is the statement

"On graduation from a junior high school, students can conduct basic communication with regard to areas such as greetings, responses, or topics relating to daily life. (English-language abilities for graduates should be the third level of the Society for Testing English Proficiency (STEP) on average.)"

Why have they even brought the STEP test into the picture? The Ministry has their own objectives that they have set for English classes all over the country. They control the publication and use of texts with iron rule. What do those objectives and materials have to do with the STEP test?

Will this test be a standard, and what if a teacher/student/school/prefecture doesn't meet this standard? Will there be sanctions? My guess is that there will not be. That in turn means that aside from some of the other programs that they have already started to implement, like the "Super School" scheme, it holds little meaning.

As for teacher language proficiency, the Minstry says, " Almost all English teachers will acquire English skills (STEP pre-first level, TOEFL 550, TOEIC 730 or over) and the teaching ability to be able to conduct classes to cultivate communication abilities through the repetition of activities making using of English."

Almost all teachers? Who will be exempt? Why? Won' their students suffer if this kind of teacher proficiency is important? Again, as a goal it can't be more than hollow words. Teachers participate in training courses in their first, and eleventh years now, but there is little chance that communities will pay enough money for a majority of the English teachers to develop that kind of proficiency. It may be possible with new hires, but not with teachers who are already in the schools. They are setting the bar very high for people entering the profession. Will teachers of other disciplines be held to these kinds of standards?

Another question is how do the scores on these tests relate? The STEP test includes a speaking test, as well as the multiple choise paper test. TOEIC offers an optional speaking test for test takers who score higher than 700. TOEFL does not offer a speaking test as such. The formats are different. STEP is a paper test and an interview. TOEIC is a paper test, with an optional speaking test which is taped. TOEFL is an online exam entirely now. Do any of these tests claim to make tests that certify teachers' ability or inability to teach? Is there any relationship with the contents of the exams and the content the teachers are expected to impart to their students? And again, will boards of education be responsible for teacher development and assessment in these areas? I doubt it, so again, the goal is mute.
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The Use of "Foreign(er)" to Describe All People Aside from the 150 Million who Call Themselves Japanese.

This is the number of times these words are used in the report to describe potential communication partners.
Foreign - 5
Foreigner- 1
Native- 9


There is an assumption that learners will necessarily be using Japanese with Japanese and English with non-Japanese. I have found that most of the English used in a school/university context is with other Japanese. For example in the course for English teachers that we do at Yokkaichi University, the Yokkaichi Teachers' Initiative, the teachers communicate with the coordinators during the class, but most often communicate with each other in English. That's simple math. If there are a dozen teachers and two non-Japanese coordinators, the odds are that they will be using the language with other Japanese.

I suggest less of a focus on the nationality of the interlocutor, and more on the functions of language.

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The ministry isn't addressing the fundamental problems of why learners aren't literate in a second language. It is a test driven system, with students who are assertively competing for a limited number of spots in prestigeous schools and students who are not and who do not benefit from a curriculum with goals that say that communicative ability is important, and course of study that proves just the opposite. The curriculum progresses at a rate that very few students can keep up with. Most are disillusioned and frustrated enough by the time they reach college that they have given up.

The Ministry must develop reasonable goals for achievement, and must make allowances for students who are gifted with languages and those who are normal. To treat a class of 40 students like they are all the same breeds frustration and resentment.

Thursday, March 11, 2004

The police are all over foreign crime...or fear mongering

Yes, our constabulary has the situation in hand and they are doing their bit to clamp down on the foreign crime...aren't they?

The headline reads "No. of crimes involving foreigners in 2003 tops 40,000." The Japanese headlinereads "来日外国人犯罪、過去最多 就学・留学は5年で2.4倍" (Arrests of Foreign Criminals in Japan, Trade Schools Students・Exchange Students Rise 2.4 Times in 5 Years.) According to these fine papers, the number of crimes is up. And it is. The problem is that they only tell part of the story. The whole story is that the percentage of crimes that foreigners commit is down. The total number of foreigners is up. Foreigners are being arrested for visa violations in record numbers, crimes only foreigners can commit. Check out this from the Guardian. The title of the article is "Suspicious minds."

Suspicious indeed. It's clear that there's some fear mongering going on, but who profits from it? Haven't figured that out yet.

Wednesday, March 10, 2004

More on the high school gig

There was a new preoccupation at the high school, listening to music during class. We divided the class into groups and had them work on listening, writing, and speaking tasks in smaller groups. There were three teachers working in one class. We were hoping that would give them some individualized attention, and they could see how recycling vocabulary in various contexts would help them remember words.

The majority of the students profited from a little more attention. Some of the kids who usually don't participate with the whole class got a chance to show what they can do.

The rest did their best to ignore me. One way they did that was by putting on their headphones and listening to music. That was a first. My guess is that since they have so few other options, they choose to tune in to tunes rather than learning. That is their choice, and I am not offending by it. They chose to opt out of participation, and they weren't disturbing others. I couldn't hear their music, if it was music they were listening to. Maybe it was English learning materials. I doubt it, though.

Some of the students were adorable in their attempts to show their non-participation. They put on a good show of not participating, but they were interested nonetheless.


Monday, March 08, 2004

US War College

Dr. Jeffrey Record, Professor at the US War College, wrote an article critical of the Bush Doctrine and the US policies on the "War on Terrorism."

If he is correct, the implications are frightening.

Teaching at a high school

Today was the first day of a three-day stint at a local high school. It is a real eye opener. I enjoy some of the kids and can take some of the others. I have mentioned before that I'd like to get ahold of their curriculum. I'd also like to get the students some self determination. They are supposed to be training young people to be functional adults, but I'm not sure where that maturation is supposed to happen. Tomorrow is another long one. More on the high school situation later.