Postby Belton » May 23rd, 2007 9:52 am
People on the JET program are ALTs. Classroom Assistants not teachers. The teacher takes the responsibility for how the class is run, lesson plans, how things are taught etc.
Mind you the smart ALTs should go away with valuable classroom experience.
(3 whole days? I can see why there was talk in some areas of using the resources spent on JET on training indigenous English teachers instead. )
I'd suggest Japanese adult learners might be better off cutting out the middleman, getting a CD course and book, listening to podcasts and getting a language partner who would have a similar knowledge and ability to most untrained native speakers.
But yeah, it seems it's a fairly big market, so you can just hang up your shingle and off you go. I guess it's for rent and beer money rather than a career choice.
I'd also say this. People will be handing over their presumably hard earned cash and their time. They deserve value.
When you went looking for a language teacher what were you looking for? What abilities and qualities did you expect them to have? What were you paying for? Why did you seek out a teacher rather than do it yourself? Did you experience the difference between a teacher and a native speaker friend trying to teach you?
The people you've met that are good teachers, why did they make that impression on you? And I suppose what made the bad teachers such poor teachers?
The good teachers I've met are enthusiastic about their subject and can infect others with this enthusiasm. They don't make things up as they go along, they have a plan and are prepared. Their enthusiasm for teaching, as distinct from their subject, means they try to find good ways to teach. It might be training, it might be reading, it might be by being a pupil themselves.
Here's another idea. Have a go at teaching English to someone while you're still in Australia. It might help you figure out what you might or might not need to do to be an itinerant language teacher. And how difficult or easy it is to teach.
Good luck in your plans for Japan.