Today was the second day of Summer School activities at i-Talk Language Centre.
I made a small video of the art class in the park. To see it just click below.
I ho pe you enjoy it.
Don’t forget your free gift at
Today was the second day of Summer School activities at i-Talk Language Centre.
I made a small video of the art class in the park. To see it just click below.
I ho pe you enjoy it.
Don’t forget your free gift at
is an updated revision of The Little EFL Book.
I have included more information on how to teach literacy as an EFL teacher.
The price has also been dropped a little (for a while).
http://www.lulu.com/content/e-book/the-actions-of-successful-second-language-teachers/13897514
This book makes EFL teaching fun again.
I hope you enjoy the book.
Paul Rowe
Yesterday I uploaded a small video clip of myself demonstrating how to do Dialogue Streaming. Dialogue Streaming can be used to teach ‘sounds’, ‘words’ and sentence patterns. In other words, EVERYTHING an EFL teach needs to teach.
It is my gift to you. Use it and share it with other EFL teachers.
This is going to sound strange coming from someone is so insistent that EFL teaching is fun, but at the moment I am advising NOT to teach in Vietnam.
Every week I have people contacting me and asking for advice about finding work as a teacher in Viet Nam. As of this week I am suggesting that EFL teachers can find better quality work in almost any other country at the moment.
Don’t shoot me I am only the messenger.
I live here. I own a school and another business here, so I am staying and will weather this downturn out. However, if I really had a choice I would head almost anywhere else.
In a nutshell, there are too many low quality EFL teachers in Vietnam.
China needed 1,000s of English teachers prior to the 2008 Olympic Games. Those “teachers” needed next-to-no qualifications and agreed to work for peanuts. Once the games were over those “teachers” flooded out of China and into the rest of the world. Vietnam is on China’s doorstep and is only a bus ride away.
They were happy to work for peanuts in China and they have been happy to accept lower than usual hourly rates from greedy English school owners. A few months ago I heard of an experienced teacher here in Vung Tau having to work for 3 dollars an hour!!!!!!
Cambodia and Myanmar pay more than that! And while I am specifically mentioning Vung Tau, I have noticed that I see almost NO English teachers at restaurants, pubs, the beach and parties anymore. They are being paid so little, that they need to work seven days a week/eight hours a day to either get by, or save some money.
However, Vietnam has other unique reasons why it should be avoided by EFL teachers.
So if you still want to do EFL teaching, and you still want it to be a fun experience, then cross Vietnam off the map and look else where.
Leave a comment in relation to the best countries to do EFL teaching at the moment. It might help some people out.
What an absolute hoot!! I have just staggered home from a morning of soccer with the kids from the English school.
I didn’t think it was necessary for Sen to do this activity. How wrong could I be? It turned out that this was just what the school, Sen and I really needed. We had soooo much fun :)).
Sen booked a small soccer field for an hour. It was a first class facility within walking distance of the school.
We turned up to the miniature field a bit too early, so Tina, Thu and I went and explored a nearby abandoned French army barracks building. We took some pictures, decided it was haunted and barely escaped with our lives!!
Maybe I will let the photos do to the talking.

The girls were quite reluctant to play until I showed them how to ‘shoulder’ the boys out of the way!

There are very FEW public spaces for Vietnamese kids to play. No wonder they appreciated the activity as much as they did!
So the next time your students say “Teacher! teacher! Game please?”, may I suggest soccer.
On Thursday the 23rd the English School had its first xmas party. The classroom has been decorated for a month now, so it was simply a matter of folding away the chairs, blowing up the balloons, down loading some Christmas music, and ordering in the pizzas.
We started the fun with the food and drinks. Some of the kids had never tried pizza, and thought it was yucky. I noticed they ate it anyway.
Next came the singing competition. We were delighted to find that Hanh has an exceptional voice, and her diction was spot on.
Next a game (this took a lot longer than we planned, but the kids seemed to enjoy it so we let it run). About 30 balloons had been blown up. Inside each balloon was a line of The Night Before Christmas, which we had been studying for the past week. The party was divided into boys vs girls. They had to pop the balloons (bedlam), find the lines, and then paste them in order to make the finished poem. Extra mayhem resulted from each balloon being filled with confetti.
The party wound down with Sen presenting a gift and a card to each student.
The card was The Night Before Christmas poem. I had shortened the story, simplified the lines, and added illustrations for meaning. If any EFL teacher wants an e-copy (for next year) just send me an email paulsstuff@fastmail.fm .
Last Saturday was Teachers Day in Vietnam. During the week best wishes, presents, flowers and money appeared on my desk. Here are some photos of the orchards one class gave me. And to think, I am wanting to give this up!
On Teachers Day the class tried teaching me!
The last half of each lesson lesson (for high schoolers) this week was used to decorate the class room and tree. They had fun (so did I) and did a good job. It looks good. It looks like xmas is here. 🙂 The only things I want to add are the lights. Electric products, sockets and high schoolers don’t mix. I will try and add a few photos for you see.
If you like the decorations leave us a comment. The kids will love it.
Yesterday Christmas started at Sen’s cute little English school. I had two high school classes. I used We Wish You a Merry Christmas as a listening exercise. Initially the students wrote down any words they recognised, then any sounds they heard, then guessed the rest. It was a solid 45 minutes work and fun. Christmas carols are ideal for listening, because many of the lines are repeated. Many of the songs are also sung slowly and clearly. I’ve promised another carol tomorrow.
I am finalizing a deal to print and sell an IELTS book from a Hong Kong author, through the school. I will let you know how that goes.
Anyway, two adult classes tonight. A bit light on numbers in one class, while the other is full to over flowing.
As this blog is going to focus on and around Sen’s cute little English school, maybe a quick description is required.
It is a small EFL school located in a house. To be more exact, it is located in what was once my living room. The one classroom is at ground level, which means the sounds of motorbikes, motorbike horns, buses, bus horns, the piercing shrieks of vendors, dogs barking, and almost any other noise you can think of easily penetrates into the classroom space. Nobody seems to notice this, except me.
Sen’s English school is so humble, that I think it doesn’t even has an official name. Everyone in the neighbourhood just calls it “Sen’s school”. There are four afternoon/evening classes across ten time slots, from Monday to Friday. Occasionally, there might be a 30 minute one-to-one class earlier in the afternoon.
Even though Sen’s school is humble in the extreme, very little happens here by accident. I’ve been teaching for nearly 25 years now, and this school is set up in a very precise way. But more about the mechanics of running a one room school another day.
Anyway, Xmas is just around the corner. I’m happy to drag out the decorations and the carols asap. For a communist country Viet Nam celebrates Christmas well. I want our place to be first up with the decorations this year.
Paul Rowe