Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Filipino teachers exchange homeland for jobs in America

The Philippines has an abundance of good teachers who qualify to teach in the U.S. and we have a shortage of teachers in certain subjects. - - Donna Poisl

More than 100 school districts, including at least 20 in California, are recruiting in the Philippines to fill teacher shortages in math, science and special education.

By Teresa Watanabe

Filipino exchange teacher Ferdinand Nakila landed in Los Angeles expecting "Pretty Woman" scenes of swank Beverly Hills boulevards and glittering celebrities. What he got was Inglewood, where he stayed for two weeks in temporary housing and encountered drunkards, beggars, trash-filled streets and nightly police sirens.

It got worse. In training sessions about American classrooms he received in the Philippines, he was told his students might not be quite as polite and respectful as those in his homeland. Nothing, however, prepared him for the furious brawl that broke out in one of his Los Angeles classrooms, where two girls rolled around on the floor clawing at each other while the other students jumped on the desks and cheered.

But Nakila said his American sojourn has transformed him into a far better educator than when he arrived in August 2007. In the Philippines, he was imperious and demanding, throwing students out of his classroom for inadequate preparation with little thought of their plight.
Be sure to read the rest of this story! This is only a small part of it.

1 comment:

vishnuprasath said...

Now top companies are hiring jobs in Pune, Quickly post your resume and get your higher postion job.