Punctuation is the Key to Development: WHY?
A failure to communicate
At the beginning of the school year, Mony Vutha was handed a
new, mandatory addition to the grade four curriculum that neither he nor
any of his colleagues were trained to teach: English.
Vutha’s two years of English lessons more than a decade ago made him
the only teacher at Mondulkiri’s Poula Primary School who could even
read the new textbook.
“This is the first time English has been introduced in primary
school. I have never taught English before,” he said, adding that he has
no idea how the other grade four teachers at his school could possibly
implement the new language requirement.
Looking to boost English fluency and reap a corresponding economic
boon, the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport began rolling out an
initiative this year to expand the language program from lower secondary
schools into primary schools, starting with grade four.
“We are thinking about the skills needed for the ASEAN integration,
and we want to expand English into grade one. But that’s impossible
right now, our human resources are too limited, so we will start step by
step,” Lim Sotharith, director of the Education Ministry’s textbook
department, said.
But the government’s first step at expanding English education may have already taken a leap too far.
Vutha’s school isn’t the only one where the newly printed English
textbooks were delivered to tongue-tied educators unprepared to teach
the foreign language.
Already experiencing a critical shortage of primary school teachers,
the classroom personnel gap is only set to widen as the government looks
to add grade five English classes next school year, with grade six to
follow in 2015-2016.
The language program alone could require retraining and recruiting as
many as 6,000 to 7,000 additional instructors, Sotharith said, almost
triple the annual 2,000 primary school recruits needed just to replace
teachers who retire, die or leave the workforce.
“We are doing research now to locate the number of teachers who can
currently teach English; we’re not sure exactly how many we’ll need to
add yet,” he said.
Meanwhile, grade four teachers are already plunging their classes
into the ABCs as best as they can with limited training and once-a-week
lessons.
“At the moment, the secondary school English curriculum assumes a
certain level of proficiency in the language, so it’s absolutely
essential for students to start learning the basics early,” said Pamela
Hughes, a volunteer at VSO International, which assisted the ministry in
developing the new language curriculum.
For many parents, the promise of English classes in public schools is
welcome news, sparing them private lessons that in the provinces can
top $80 per month and in the capital can run upwards of $20 an hour for
one-on-one tutoring.
“Even the poorest families still try to send their children to
English classes. The perception is that it’s a skill that more than
anything else can lead to good jobs,” said Lim Sophea, executive
director of PKO, a Battambang-based NGO helping to train primary school
English teachers.
But before the pupils can benefit from mastering English, the
government will first have to start by equipping teachers with the
bilingual basics, Sophea said.
“They have the curriculum, but no way to implement it right now,” he said.
“We will be helping to recruit volunteers who can train the teachers.
It will take time, but we want to make sure we can successfully offer
all students the opportunity to learn English, not just the wealthy
ones.”
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