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Japanese TV news reports on poor working conditions of foreign English teachers

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    NTV’s “Real Time News” sometimes airs some pretty dumb special reports, but it also devotes considerable time to serious issues. Here’s a very good report on how using dispatch companies to employ foreign English teachers is killing the quality of English education in Japanese public schools and making foreigners endure poor working conditions (subtitled in English):
    Part 1


    Part 2

    These videos were originally uploaded by the General Union, which seems to be doing some good work fighting for better working conditions and posting the latest news on this issue.

    41 comments - What do you think?  Posted by James - July 30, 2009 at 8:31 am

    Categories: Foreigners in Japan, Teaching English

    Osaka City Government Cutting Budget: Foreign English Teachers Losing Their Jobs?

    Some of the most experienced foreign English teachers at Osaka public schools may soon lose their jobs:

    Nearly three dozen native English teachers called Monday on Osaka Gov. Toru Hashimoto not to cancel an education program that places native speakers of English in the prefecture’s schools and expressed concern that the teachers have only been offered four-month contracts.

    The Osaka Fu Special English Teachers Union (OFSET), which represents the 34 native English speakers working at prefectural-run high schools and special education schools, hand-delivered a letter to representatives in the governor’s office in the afternoon and requested a meeting as soon as possible.

    “The Osaka Prefectural NET (Native English Teachers) Program is currently under threat of cancellation due to budget concerns. NETs, working closely with Japanese teachers of English, have spent years developing sophisticated English programs at schools throughout Osaka Prefecture. Without NET teachers, these programs would become unsustainable and simply vanish,” the letter says.

    After taking office in February, Hashimoto announced that the prefecture would enact a four-month emergency budget to run from April to July.

    By then, two special project teams, appointed by the governor to review all prefectural spending, are expected to have their final recommendations on what should be cut. Osaka Prefecture has nearly ¥5 trillion in outstanding debts and is nearly bankrupt.

    Many NET teachers are very unhappy about their four-month contracts, fearing that it may be a sign that their jobs will cease to exist under the new city budget:

    At a press conference attended by about 15 union members, Steven Thompson, general secretary of the union said: “A four-month contract [for teaching work that requires long-term planning] is just crazy. It’s a terrible problem.”

    For more details on the situation, check out the OFSET Union’s homepage.

    5 comments - What do you think?  Posted by James - April 8, 2008 at 1:26 pm

    Categories: Foreigners in Japan, Teaching English