ELT World » russia Your local friendly TEFL blog Fri, 04 Jun 2010 05:32:55 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.9.1 en hourly 1 Russia: Kicked out of school? /2009/08/russia-kicked-out-of-school/ /2009/08/russia-kicked-out-of-school/#comments Tue, 04 Aug 2009 15:03:56 +0000 david /news/?p=457 Moscow’s City Duma has suggested an amendment to a new law that would require all teachers to apply for work permits… in addition to the work visas which currently allow them to teach here. Also, according to the amendment’s author, Tatyana Potyayeva, the deputy head of the City Duma’s Science and Education committee, the move is necessary after some foreign teachers were responsible for “inciting ethnic and religious strife” in educational centres.

In practical terms, notes NM Weekly, the proposal means that schools and colleges have to spend up to three months processing the paperwork for new recruits, compared with about one month at present. English language schools, which have enjoyed years of growth, often recruit staff with either the Cambridge Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults (CELTA) or the Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) certificate, which might now become insufficient for would-be teachers in Russia.

Read the full story…

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Reasons not to Drive in Russia /2008/05/reasons-not-to-drive-in-russia/ /2008/05/reasons-not-to-drive-in-russia/#comments Mon, 05 May 2008 07:34:00 +0000 david /2008/05/reasons-not-to-drive-in-russia/ Any TEFLers lucky enough to be enjoying the high life in Russia should nevertheless think twice before driving in the country if this clip of a junction in St. Petersburg is anything to go by!

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More European TEFL News than you can Stomach /2008/03/more-european-tefl-news-than-you-can-stomach/ /2008/03/more-european-tefl-news-than-you-can-stomach/#comments Thu, 27 Mar 2008 12:23:05 +0000 david /news/?p=11 Just in case you’re short of something to do today, take a look at this lot. Is it really possible that all these people around the world are having to deal with our language? It just doesn’t seem right, does it?

Surprising as it may seem, schools are struggling to cope with an influx of students from abroad, with many teachers facing classes in which a third of pupils do not speak English as their first language, teachers’ representatives told the Times Online. The number of pupils who did not have English as their mother tongue had risen by 66,000 in a year, the conference of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers was told.

Read the full story…

Switzerland: English seen as “most useful” foreign language

Not just British tourists, also a majority of, er, Swiss reckon that English is the most useful foreign language in the country, although it is not Switzerland’s “lingua franca” as commonly believed.

Read the full story…

United Kingdom: Not Enough Cash to Teach English

Whoooaaaa… you misread, the headline doesn’t in fact read not enough cash to teachers of English. Headteachers have said the £2-million spent on teaching English to immigrant children in North Lincolnshire is inadequate, according to the ever influential This is Scunthorpe website. Schools say they have less to spend, even though the number of students whose first language is not English has risen.

Read the full story…

Estonia fears English too dominant in its schools

Education authorities in Estonia Thursday warned that the hands-down dominance of English in its schools is depriving the Baltic state of the language specialists it will need in the future.

Read the full story…

Turkey: English Time Celebrates Its 10th Year

Scourge of English teachers throughout Istanbul, the English Time language school celebrated its 10th anniversary recently with a reception held at Istanbul’s Divan Kuruçesme. Speaking at the reception English Time founder Fethi Şimşek stated that when they established English Time 10 years ago their concern was to raise the quality level of English education in Turkey (no, really, that’s what he said). He said they have been achieving this aim without making any concessions since 1998.

Read the full story…

United Kingdom: £10m Bill to Teach Migrants English

Town halls in Greater Manchester are spending more than £10m a year teaching immigrants to speak English, the Manchester Evening News declares. The Department for Schools says a growing amount of taxpayers’ money is being spent on teaching English as a second language. Your point?

Read the full story …

Scotland: International Rescue for City School Pupils

Language specialists (and not the Thunderbirds) are helping non-native speakers improve English as different cultures get along: excited chatter fills the room as the pupils work on their science project. What isn’t immediately obvious is how many youngsters discussing a recent visit to a butterfly farm are not fluent in English. They are all reading the same books, but alongside some sits a specialist teacher – armed with flashcards picturing insects and their name in English – ready to prompt when necessary.

Read the full story …

United Kingdom: The Primary School Where Every Child Learns to Speak 40 Languages

Welcome to Newbury Park Primary School in Redbridge, north-east London, where its 850 pupils will have learnt phrases in 40 languages by the time they transfer to secondary school, notes the Independent. The school has adopted a policy of teaching each language spoken by the 40 ethnic groups among its pupils.

Read the full story …

Iceland: Bilingualism: Why Not?

Last week it was reported that the fabulously named Bifröst University in west Iceland would become the first university in the country to offer a Bachelor’s degree in business taught exclusively in English. While there is already a range of courses offered in English at several of Iceland’s universities, Bifröst says that by offering the degree in English, it is responding to the needs of students planning to work in the international arena.

Read the full story …

Russia: Language Learning Popular as Ever

In a statement that may well bemuse anyone who’s ever taught there, the St. Petersburg Times reports that the thirst for learning English and other foreign languages continues as Russians travel more and seek international business partners.

Read the full story …

Some Soviet language learners
Stick poking remains a national pastime in Russia

Belgium: Language director defends EU’s costly translations

A high official in the European Commission’s translation branch has said that despite discussions and fears in recent years about mushrooming costs for translations and interpretations in the EU, the principle of granting each citizen the right to communicate with Brussels in their own language should not be altered, no matter the number of member states in the future. Mmmm… there be money in that there Brussels.

Read the full story …

Ukraine: All in English

When foreigners visited Kyiv some ten years ago, language was the main problem in adapting to the local environment. The situation is now somewhat different, proclaims the Kyiv Post. Although not everyone can freely chat with you in English, the majority of citizens can understand you and will try to help you in any way possible. Apparently.

Read the full story …

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More Euro TEFL News than you can Shake a Stick at /2008/03/more-euro-tefl-news-than-you-can-shake-a-stick-at/ /2008/03/more-euro-tefl-news-than-you-can-shake-a-stick-at/#comments Thu, 27 Mar 2008 12:16:00 +0000 david /2008/03/more-euro-tefl-news-than-you-can-shake-a-stick-at/ Just in case you’re short of something to do today, take a look at this lot. Is it really possible that all these people around the world are having to deal with our language? It just doesn’t seem right, does it?

United Kingdom: The Struggle to Cope When Children Do Not Speak Any English

Surprising as it may seem, schools are struggling to cope with an influx of students from abroad, with many teachers facing classes in which a third of pupils do not speak English as their first language, teachers’ representatives told the Times Online. The number of pupils who did not have English as their mother tongue had risen by 66,000 in a year, the conference of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers was told.

Read the full story…

Switzerland: English seen as “most useful” foreign language

Not just British tourists, also a majority of, er, Swiss reckon that English is the most useful foreign language in the country, although it is not Switzerland’s “lingua franca” as commonly believed.

Read the full story…

United Kingdom: Not Enough Cash to Teach English

Whoooaaaa… you misread, the headline doesn’t in fact read not enough cash to teachers of English. Headteachers have said the £2-million spent on teaching English to immigrant children in North Lincolnshire is inadequate, according to the ever influential This is Scunthorpe website. Schools say they have less to spend, even though the number of students whose first language is not English has risen.

Read the full story…

Estonia fears English too dominant in its schools

Education authorities in Estonia Thursday warned that the hands-down dominance of English in its schools is depriving the Baltic state of the language specialists it will need in the future.

Read the full story…

Turkey: English Time Celebrates Its 10th Year

Scourge of English teachers throughout Istanbul, the English Time language school celebrated its 10th anniversary recently with a reception held at Istanbul’s Divan Kuruçesme. Speaking at the reception English Time founder Fethi Şimşek stated that when they established English Time 10 years ago their concern was to raise the quality level of English education in Turkey (no, really, that’s what he said). He said they have been achieving this aim without making any concessions since 1998.

Read the full story…

United Kingdom: £10m Bill to Teach Migrants English

Town halls in Greater Manchester are spending more than £10m a year teaching immigrants to speak English, the Manchester Evening News declares. The Department for Schools says a growing amount of taxpayers’ money is being spent on teaching English as a second language. Your point?

Read the full story …

Scotland: International Rescue for City School Pupils

Language specialists (and not the Thunderbirds) are helping non-native speakers improve English as different cultures get along: excited chatter fills the room as the pupils work on their science project. What isn’t immediately obvious is how many youngsters discussing a recent visit to a butterfly farm are not fluent in English. They are all reading the same books, but alongside some sits a specialist teacher – armed with flashcards picturing insects and their name in English – ready to prompt when necessary.

Read the full story …

United Kingdom: The Primary School Where Every Child Learns to Speak 40 Languages

Welcome to Newbury Park Primary School in Redbridge, north-east London, where its 850 pupils will have learnt phrases in 40 languages by the time they transfer to secondary school, notes the Independent. The school has adopted a policy of teaching each language spoken by the 40 ethnic groups among its pupils.

Read the full story …

Iceland: Bilingualism: Why Not?

Last week it was reported that the fabulously named Bifröst University in west Iceland would become the first university in the country to offer a Bachelor’s degree in business taught exclusively in English. While there is already a range of courses offered in English at several of Iceland’s universities, Bifröst says that by offering the degree in English, it is responding to the needs of students planning to work in the international arena.

Read the full story …

Russia: Language Learning Popular as Ever

In a statement that may well bemuse anyone who’s ever taught there, the St. Petersburg Times reports that the thirst for learning English and other foreign languages continues as Russians travel more and seek international business partners.

Read the full story …

Some Soviet language learners
Stick poking remains a national pastime in Russia

Belgium: Language director defends EU’s costly translations

A high official in the European Commission’s translation branch has said that despite discussions and fears in recent years about mushrooming costs for translations and interpretations in the EU, the principle of granting each citizen the right to communicate with Brussels in their own language should not be altered, no matter the number of member states in the future. Mmmm… there be money in that there Brussels.

Read the full story …

Ukraine: All in English

When foreigners visited Kyiv some ten years ago, language was the main problem in adapting to the local environment. The situation is now somewhat different, proclaims the Kyiv Post. Although not everyone can freely chat with you in English, the majority of citizens can understand you and will try to help you in any way possible. Apparently.

Read the full story …

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Life in mid Volga Russia /2008/03/life-in-mid-volga-russia/ /2008/03/life-in-mid-volga-russia/#comments Sat, 22 Mar 2008 12:19:00 +0000 david /2008/03/life-in-mid-volga-russia/ Larry Paradine offers the following information on the mid Volga region over on the Russia and Ukraine forum:

I’ve lived and worked in Russia for most of the last ten years but, although I’ve spent short periods of time in the capital and the western Urals, my stamping ground is the riverine area from Nizhny Novgorod (the city of Gorky, after whose suspicious death, Stalin named it in 1935 and notorious as Andrei Zakharov’s place of exile in the Brezhnev era) to Samara (known in communist times as Kuibishchev after a local alcoholic who led the local bolsheviks in 1917-18, and which has the distinction of being the only big city in Russia to elect a mayor who was opposed by the whole political establishment including “Putin’s Party” in 2006), taking in the cities of Cheboksary (my wife’s hometown and my adoptive радной город), Novocheboksarsk (now a satellite town with it’s own distinctive character, but soon to be merged with Cheboksary if our Chuvash President Fyodorov gets the “yes” vote he wanted in the referendum that he craftily tacked on to the ballot in Sunday’s Federal presidential elections), Kazan (where the recently erected great Mosque dominates the visitor’s view of the city’s Kremlin, almost eclipsing the churches that Ivan Grozny and his successors built on the ruins of the razed mosques of the Kazan Khanate), Ulyanovsk-Simbirsk (the archietypal compromise in the flurry of town naming referendums in the 1990s, combining Lenin’s real surname with the tsarist era name, and one of the most unpleasant cities I’ve had the misfortune to be mugged in), and, of course, Togliatti (named after the long -time Italian communist leader who achieved distinction by surviving Stalin’s decimation of European communist parties and being photographed among the grieving, or subtly dissembling, nomenklatura at Stalin’s funeral wearing a broad smile, and whose compromise with capitalism presented the city named after him with a giant automobile factory churning out second rate copies of the Fiat car).

Learn more about ELT in Russia and Ukraine.

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Teaching in Kazakhstan /2007/11/teaching-in-kazakhstan/ /2007/11/teaching-in-kazakhstan/#comments Thu, 22 Nov 2007 12:24:00 +0000 david /2007/11/teaching-in-kazakhstan/ I previously featured Kazakhstan as a teaching destination in an excellent article by Paul Bartlett entitled The Real Kazakhstan: Eager to Attract Foreign Expertise. Paul has been hard at work spreading the word in another article, this time in the Guardian: Teaching in Kazakhstan .

From the TEFL point of view, Kazakhstan is still largely an unknown market. Almaty offers the best hopes for less experienced teachers, as it is home to a number of private language schools who are always looking for native-speaker teachers. An initial TEFL qualification will enhance your chances.

The pay is not great – rent and prices in Almaty have risen significantly in recent years – so before accepting a deal, check that it includes enough to cover your rent and other outgoings.

Although Paul does a pretty good job of breaking the Borat stereotyping of this country, he still hasn’t convinced met hat this should be my next teaching destination! Learn more about teaching English in Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan at the teaching English in Russia and Ukraine website and at the forum.

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