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BEIJING, April 1, (Xinhuanet) -- A casual observer might be forgiven for thinking that the first English phrase learners are taught in Shanghai is, "My English is poor." But as Shanghai is forced into contact with the English-speaking world, fluency in English is perceived to be not just advantageous but even necessary for a lucrative career. No
surprise then that with demand growing faster than supply, English language
training means big money for the trainers as well as the students.
Last year, compulsory English
tuition was implemented from primary grade one and there are plans to establish
100 bilingual schools throughout the city. But where the serious money is being
made is in private training centres. It is estimated that the market for English
lessons outside the formal school curriculum is growing at 60 per cent per year
and determined learners are spending thousands of RMB each year on courses to
develop their English skills.
Along with the cash injection, overall standards of
teaching have risen. Ten years ago the industry might have been characterised by
the image of fresh-faced foreign teachers taking time off from backpacking,
crammed into classrooms after a minimum of training. That phenomenon has not
gone away, as one ex-teacher admits: "I wanted to travel and teaching was just a
means for me to get a free ticket out here and work for three or four months to
make enough money so that I could continue on to Southeast Asia."
Fortunately for English learners, if not for the
schools, the situation is changing. With some 1,000 schools providing English
training in Shanghai, there's fierce competition between institutions. "All out
war in fact," says Ken Carroll of Kai En English Training Centre. It's an apt
metaphor. Schools spy on each other, sign up for courses at rival institutions
in order to sabotage classes, and use guerilla tactics to grab students.
Aggressive discounting is also common. At press time,
Wall Street is publishing RMB 2,900 coupons in newspapers, to be used against a
15-month English-learning programme. They'll even throw in a free course in
business English. Meanwhile, ABC offered two weeks of free lectures to lure
students. Buy-one-get-one-free, get three free months when you sign up for a
year, second course half price - all these are offers made by English training
centres in the last year. Not the kind of marketing you would expect from an
educational institution, perhaps, but a mark of how intense the competition has
become.
While bigger brands are anxious to maintain their
reputation, smaller concerns are just struggling to survive. "We advertised in
the newspaper," says a spokeswoman for a traditional English training centre
quoted in China Youth Daily, "but found that the ads of another organisation
took up almost the whole page, while ours was squeezed into a corner."
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A mastery of English can be a pusher on
one's career ladders in big cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Xi'an. With
the number of English learners expands, The English training has grown
into a promising business in China. [file
photo] | Smaller
schools like this one face enormous pressure from big international
organisations with huge advertising budgets - between RMB 1-2 million in some
cases.
Another way organisations can fight the competition
is by specialising. Schools now offer courses as diverse as business and baby
English, and even TEFL and TESOL teaching certification for English native
speakers. Broadly, though, the market has divided itself into three sectors,
catering to different students' needs and income brackets.
Traditional language centres - teachers and students
in classrooms, complete with blackboards, pads and pencil cases - are still
popular, particularly with middle manager types in their twenties who need to
function in an English speaking workplace or aspire to join joint venture
companies. University students eager for more speaking practice can also find
these kind of language centres attractive, as can bored housewives looking for
ways to boost their social circle or burn some of their copious spare time. In
Shanghai, schools like English First and Kai En offer fluency-focussed learning
for groups of up to 16 pupils. Teachers employ a variety of resources to create
their own lesson plans, typical TEFL style, with textbooks, film, television,
roleplay and game simulations used to encourage student participation. The
prices at these centres could not be described as cheap - a course could cost as
much as a month's salary - but compared with trendier options, they begin to
look almost affordable.
One trendier sector of the industry which is becoming
increasingly dominant is assisted learning. This combines interactive multimedia
software with native speaker encounters. Students must first complete modules in
multimedia labs and then practice and revise the content in small groups with a
foreign teacher. Global heavyweight Wall Street is one such enterprise, boasting
440 centres in 22 countries around the world. They entered the Shanghai market
with an initial investment of RMB 40 million, setting up plush offices in grade
A space like Jinmao Tower, Westgate Mall and Xintiandi. Charging up to RMB
124,100 for a complete set of courses, Wall Street pays its teachers five-figure
monthly salaries and targets top-end executives with convenient, first-rate
facilities and modules that can be completed at the student's own pace. Not only
that but "you get to know many rich people here, successful businessmen in
particular," says one Wall Street student, Chen, quoted in People's Daily. "They
might be of help to you in the long run."
The third market is not so much English teaching as
test preparation. This method is dominated by local operators and is geared
toward students preparing for English proficiency tests like GRE, TOEFL and
IELTS, which qualify them for further studies abroad. The Beijing-based New
Oriental Education Group hit the industry a decade ago and has achieved almost
cult status in this sector. It branched out to Shanghai in September 2000 and
over 200,000 students have been through the school here in the past four years.
Test preparation is not focussed on reading English so much as reading between
the lines, learning what to expect in various exams and mastering the systems,
patterns and probabilities of specific test papers. It's the ultimate antithesis
to learning English for its own sake. "Some teachers would have almost ethical
problems with this," points out Ken Carroll.
The Beijing No 1 Intermediate Peoples' Court had
ethical problems with it too. After a trial that lasted two years, New Oriental
was fined RMB 10 million in compensation for copyright and trademark
infringement and ordered by the court to stop copying TOEFL, GRE and GMAT exam
papers developed by the US-based Education Testing Service (ETS) and Graduate
Management Admission Council (GMAC).
Though the industry still has its seamier side, it
also boasts world-class training institutions and cutting edge teaching methods.
Naturally, students are well advised to carefully research the market in order
to find a reputable institution that suits their individual needs, capabilities
and interests. After all, ABC isn't as easy as 123. It is also, believe it or
not, about communicating and sharing different cultures and opinions. Maybe one
day Shanghai's proud English speakers will greet visitors with a confident, "My
English is poor, but do you want to go back to my place and talk about grammar?"
Enditem
(That's Shanghai) |