SeoulPodcast #30: Hole-y Marmot, Fatman!
Podcast November 21st, 2008SPONSOR
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Adobe Photoshop - North Korea Edition
Put a healthy Kim Jong-il in all your pictures. See? Look. He’s healthy.
Everything’s fine. Really.
PANELISTS
Robert Koehler (The Marmot’s Hole)
Kim Hogg (Socius)
Derek (The Midnight Runner Podcast)
Robert Wicks
Jennifer Flinn (Fatman Seoul)
MAIN TOPIC
Have the baffling headaches in Korean English education gone unchanged in forty years? Are schools reliable windows into Korean society?
A must-read: an account of teaching English in South Korea in the sixties.
Wall Street Journal on South Korea’s college entrance exams.
EXPAT COMMUNITY
Dong-A Ilbo: Xenophobia on the Rise
Major Crackdown on Foreigner ‘Slums’
Derek’s Dad
Americans can stay here visa-free for 90 days. (Wow, I feel almost Canadian)
Seoul High Court: HIV Not Justifiable Reason for Deportation
THINGS THAT MAKE YOU GO, “WHAA?”
Anonymity fail. Moon Geun-young’s much talked about secret Santa behavior
PLUGS
Survey
Buy Us a Beer (Thanks Aaron, again)
GoToMyPC
Ex-Pat Living (The Korea Herald)
ESL Planet Recruiting
SEOUL Magazine
ZenKimchi.com
KOTESOL
NEXT WEEK
Topic: 크레지!
Panelist: Grace Park (Crazy Korean Cooking)
MUSIC
Main Theme — Ben McPherson - “2wksnyc”
Job of the Week — Bit Rationale - “Orthodox Pleasure”
ExPat Community — Deyo - “Retro90210fun”
Things That Make You Go Whaa? — cjacks - “Candyland”
Bit Rationale
Brolax Bones
Byron Scullin
DJ Topshelf
Conconquidore Truidore
Darryl
Jennifer Logue
Mark Jungers
Kathy Reynolds
Michael Martin
Michael Stephens
Outside
Sundown Caffeine
Tea Leaves
Crush
Seraphic Panoply



November 22nd, 2008 at 10:45 am
Hey…just listened to this episode. Lots of good stuff to think about. I responded to something that was mentioned in passing on my blog about there being too many unis in Korea.
“So I was just listening to the most recent episode of the Seoul Podcast and they had some interesting thoughts about education in Korea and about universities more specifically. There’s one thing that I’d like to mention here.
One person talked about how too many people in Korea go to university. At home, in North America there were plenty of people that I finished high school with that didn’t go to university. This was really okay…they found jobs, did a more practical thing at a community college or learned a trade or just traveled for a while or whatever.
In Korea however, this is not okay. EVERYONE MUST go to university, even if they are not academically inclined at all in any shape or form. There are way too many unis here that even the very worst of students who probably struggled to pass their high school courses can get in somewhere. You can even go to university for 4 years to study flower arrangement or archery. Aspiring professional golfers and movie stars and singers waste their time at uni instead of just trying to make it big in whatever they aspire to. I’m sure you could find a 4 year program in basking weaving if hard-pressed.
Anyway…the result is, I have to teach dumb-asses (for lack of a more appropriate description). While I am the queen of exaggeration this is no lie for about 5-10 % of my students depending on the major. These people have no business being anywhere near an academic setting and their time would perhaps be much better spent doing just about anything else. But the pressure in Confucian Korea to conform to a certain little mold of what a “successful life” looks like is just too great to resist. And in many ways I feel sad for a lot of my students. They hate studying, I hate teaching them but they don’t appear to really have any other options. I think it’s time for change in Korea.”
November 25th, 2008 at 3:38 am
Last minute of the podcast had to be the best ! lol
November 26th, 2008 at 4:43 pm
[...] if you’re really desperate for some podcasting, I’ve been on the Seoul Podcast once again . . [...]
December 19th, 2008 at 5:48 am
As for sticking the Yyut on the school gate, Korean word for passing an exam and to adhere/stick is the same. And since Yyut precedes duct tape by several hundred if not thousand years, that’s why Koreans stick on the gate.