All my schools have winter camp, and on those days where I'm not doing camps, I have to do zoom classes.Basically, they've ensured that I have 22 lessons a week even when school is not officially in session. My zoom classes are going to be based on online gaming, texting, memes, and webtoons. Each "chapter" will be 3 lessons. 1st lesson I will have a ppt video that I post on my youtube channel that they ave to watch. It includes the vocabulary they will need to know, will include examples of the topic that will be discussed, and will contain a small flipgrid assignment that they will need to complete. They also have to leave a comment on the youtube video. 2nd class we'll be using the introduced vocab and grammar to discuss the topic. Students will bring in examples their personal favourites, and I'll have a couple popular examples to discuss in case the students didn't bother with bringing their own. 3rd class will be a more in depth discussion of the media we looked at using vocab and grammar.This is for middle school 1,2, and 3, as well as primary 5 and 6. Each lesson is 90 minutes long, but realistically, it'll be 35ish minutes of class, 20 minute break, and then 35 more minutes.
All my schools have winter camp, and on those days where I'm not doing camps, I have to do zoom classes.Basically, they've ensured that I have 22 lessons a week even when school is not officially in session.
Oh wow! That is a really dedicated set of schools you got there! Is this in Seoul or Daejeon by any chance? I heard those two can be quite strict when it comes to camp and classes. >.< And do they just not give you any downtime/ desk warming days at all?
The Offices of Education need to re-start paying for camps again 500,000 per week (5 days), 1.0 mill per 2 weeks (10 days), and if there are schools requiring a whole month of winter camp or even as much as 6 weeks that need to be an extra (2.0 mill). And any extra phone/ zoom classes done during school vacations need to be compensated for at the same rate as regular paid after-school classes during the semester... (20,000 ~ 30,000 per class period).
Yeah, the idea is that when we're not actually using our vacation days, we're still being paid the same wages as during the school year, and should therefor be doing the same amount of work.I live in a somewhat more rural area inGyeongsangbuk-do, and over the last 5 or 6 years they've been increasingly gung-ho about having the NETs do some kind of supplementary work when regular school is not in session. I'm not sure if this is true just for my own region, or if it's true for all the teachers in my province, but this has been the first year where they've arranged that I do the full 22 teaching hours , which really sucks. Yes, I remember that, and it was awesome!I guess they figure we're getting paid anyway, and we're contractually obligated to do up to 22 hours a week, so they may as well get their money's worth out of us.Pretty sad though: I remember a decade ago regularly going home at around lunch time during desk warming, and being told by the principal to not bother coming for a week etc etc. And of course, no online classes or the like. Ah, the good ol' days!
I live in a somewhat more rural area inGyeongsangbuk-do, and over the last 5 or 6 years they've been increasingly gung-ho about having the NETs do some kind of supplementary work when regular school is not in session. I'm not sure if this is true just for my own region, or if it's true for all the teachers in my province, but this has been the first year where they've arranged that I do the full 22 teaching hours , which really sucks.
Are they forcing the students to attend the classes?
My coteacher showed me the memo from the POE, they were quite clear in their emphasis that we must fulfill our 22 hours a week this time round. Even on weeks with camp I have to do additional hours. I'll be doing a split of in person at my main school and zoom classes at the high school. It feels punitive but I guess they want us to make up for the Covid slack on previous vacation periods.
I'm not really 100% sure, but in middle school, i think the KET/homeroom teachers ask for volunteers (and twist some arms, I'm guessing). There might also be a bit of bribing in the way of points (students in our province (all of South Korea?) get points for extracurricular activities and lessons that go in their student portfolios which are considered when determining which schools they can apply for when they graduate).For the elementary schools, I'm sure that it's the parents who volunteer: the home room teachers send out a notice to the parents about the vacation programmes that will be available, and the parents sign the kids up for the ones they want.Sounds very similar to what's going on at my schools. They say that there'll even be some representative from the POE coming around to check whether or not the schools are actually having us do what the paperwork is saying that we're doing.
When are East Asians going to learn the meaning for the word 'vacation'?When I arrived in Korea in 2008 the school closed on December 24th for vacation but of course I had to go in to desk warm after Christmas day, I arrived at school and all the students and teachers were there and classes were going on as usual. I was totally confused and asked 'isn't it vacation?' I was told yes, but the students and teachers come to school for lessons as normal since it makes the principal happy. Unbelievable.
That isn't the norm though. Kids do come in for extra-curricular programs/camps, whether they are forced to by parents (elementary) or volunteer/are coerced to (middle/high). However 90% of the students will not be there. Don't make it into a weird 'East Asians are backwards' thing.
Also, I would not be beneath just letting the students watch movies or episodes from an approved series. The way I see it, camps are a major waste of everyone's time, it's just busy work and micromanagement for the most part. If they don't care enough to provide me with a coteacher, especially if it's all online and with low level students, then I can't be arsed. I don't get paid enough for that, and I'm not a ****** work horse. They either need to pay me more, or they need to provide me with the same level of support as they would a normal class. This includes telling me how many students there's going to be and what levels I'll be working with well in advance. If they don't want to do any of that, then the kids are getting a movie.