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September 02, 2011

My point of view

Dear students,

Sorry to say that the new course starts badly. 3,000 teachers are missing, they are not going to work in the class this year. We will have to start school without them. How can it be that nothing in the schools will change?

On the other hand, Esperanza Aguirre says we only work 20 hours a week. What not many people know is that we work in theory 37,5 hours a week. I would say even more. In fact, UNESCO says that 1 teaching hour corresponds to 3 working hours:

I'll speak of what I personally do in September. I have to:
- Administer and grade exams of NB1, NB2, NI1, NI2, NA1 and NA2, After having students do the exams it's time to grade, even at the weekends.
- I have to choose and go through the books to teach next year
- I have to prepare syllabuses of the courses I'm teaching next year
- Help organize the library and materials I want to use during the school year
- Read books, magazines, materials that might be of your interest
- Attend school and department meetings

During the year, apart from teaching in class I:

- Go through internet to catch up with the current news to try to incorporate them in class in English
- Update this eblog
- Think of activities that will help you understand and practice language better
- Select the best materials to use in class and to review in the blog
- Do courses in the morning as they are necessary to be updated and they are required by law as well.
- Know about the new technologies to apply in class
- Attend school and department meetings
- Correct compositions
- Attend to your needs and questions in the school of by email
- Evaluate your progress outside the class
- Elaborate exams and tests
- Participate in the school cultural events
- Guide your learning outside the class (opportunities to use English, links, meeting, penpals...)
- Read legislation applied to education

Saying that teachers only work 20 hours is like saying Casillas only works 90 minutes.

I am a firm believer in the opportunity and right of anybody to study languages and progress. And that nobody can take the right to learn away from us. Nobody!

For a public, universal education with freedom of thought!!

For more information:
http://www.soseducacionpublica.es/

3 comments:

Pedro said...

Of course you are completly right.
But I'm afraid mi opinion is not valuable because I'm a teacher too.
Anyway as a student in that language school thanks a lot for your work.

Anonymous said...

I'm sorry Mª Jose, You and your workmate are doing an excellent teaching work

In my opinion it isn't fair for your and us.

I want to said you thanks very much for a lot of you work harder for us.

I'm happy that you follow teaching.

See you next Monday and Tuesday.

The best wishes

Rosario Guerrero

Anonymous said...

¡Hola Maria José!

Soy Ana Saiz alumna de NI1 de este curso pasado.
Te escribo en español para expresar mejor lo que te quiero decir, espero que me pases por alto esta licencia que me permito.
¡MUCHÍSIMAS GRACIAS POR SER TAN BUEN PROFE!
Me acabo de enterar que ya no vas a estar en EOI Embajadores, lo siento mucho porque los alumnos se van a peder una gran profesora de inglés.
Gracias por habernos motivado tanto, enseñarnos y por haber tenido tanto interés por nosotros para que aprendamos inglés.
Te deseo que donde te manden te encuentres lo mejor posible y sé que tus nuevos alumnos serán afortunados.
Gracias por tu labor como profesora de una escuela pública.
Un abrazo muy grande, cuídate mucho y siempre te recordaré.

Ana
:)

ESCUELA PÚBLICA DE TOD@S PARA TOD@S