KZBlog is going down (2)
After some thought, I have decided not to renew KZBLog’s lease. As you may have noticed, I don’t do a lot of posting here anymore. I don’t have time to blog regularly. Thus I am taking the site down–it does generate some ad revenue but not as much as it costs to keep it up. […]
Autumn has come to Astana. It … (1)
Autumn has come to Astana. It is cold outside. Wish we had hot water. That is all.
Teachers in Kazakhstan (6)
Kazakhnomad has a series of interesting pieces up on teaching and teachers in Kazakhstan. She did a survey of students, teachers and people who have studied abroad on their opinions about how education should be and also had some teachers write essays about why they are teachers and how they can help their country. If you start with this post on the survey results, and keep reading up to the present, you’ll hit all the posts.
One major theme of this little series is how to change the attitude of teachers and students from teacher-centered instruction methods to student-centered methods. Personally when I work with teachers, I find that most of them want to change their teaching styles but they literally do not know how to. No one has ever told them. The teacher’s colleges still teach the old traditional methods of drilling, memorizing and making students feel stupid. Amazingly enough, a lot of them teach in schools that are too cheap to buy the teacher’s edition of textbooks–which tend to have lots of teaching methodologies and suggestions for diverse ways to approach the subject matter. So the first problem is just that teachers don’t know how to teach in a way oriented to the students.
Another problem is that teachers tend to teach the way they were taught. That is, teachers remember what our past teachers were like and teach in the same way because they feel that that is what being a teacher means. So it’s a cyclical problem. Our future teachers are learning in a very strict, controlled and teacher-oriented classroom meaning that they will also construct their classrooms in the same way. Until teachers learn how to give students autonomy and focus less on grading and more on educating, future teachers won’t embrace these new ideas.
Also, the fact is that a lot of decisions for education in this country are made at the Ministry of Education in Astana. The system is still very centralized and closely controlled. Textbooks are ordered and designed by the Ministry, hiring practices are also centralized as is the syllabus and accreditation of schools. So we need to educate the policymakers too. Otherwise they create systems in which teachers have no room to inspire students or adjust to different learning styles.
Finally, we need to hire more teachers and raise their salaries. Why? Many teachers don’t make enough money to live on. So they have to get other jobs (some of them write papers for students for money) or take bribes. Meaning they don’t have enough time to work a full day as a teacher, work their second job and read up on the latest teaching methodologies. In fact, some teachers need to work both shifts of the school day (8am-1:30pm and 1:45-7 or 8pm). These teachers don’t even have time to plan their lessons. I know one young teacher who says that she never knows what she is going to teach until she walks into the room and opens the textbook. Of course she is unable to go off the book or incorporate more creative ways to teach the subject matter. There’s no time. So teachers need to be guaranteed a living wage so that they have free time to improve themselves. Related to this, I don’t think universities here teach non-degree classes or continuing ed. It’s be nice if there were some seminars or short-term classes teachers could take to improve their teaching without having to go back and study full-time for a graduate degree.
So those are my thoughts on teaching in Kazakhstan. Be sure to look at Kazakhnomad’s as well.
Happy Ait! (1)
For the end of Ramadan, a nice video by Lena Khan, a Muslim American director. She asked 2000 American Muslims what message they wanted to send to the world and this is the result. A beautiful and funny film/music video set to a wonderful song by Kareem Salama.
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Better Than a Guard Dog (1)
An old story that I never got around to posting about:
Apparently a circus owner from Kostanai came to Karaganda to buy a lion for his circus. That’s not unusual; there’s a zoo in Karaganda. He picked him up in a Gazelle, which is a big moving van style truck. And the lion was locked in a cage in the back of the Gazelle. It’s kind of funny to find a lion inside a gazelle instead of the other way around, but that’s still not newsworthy. The circus owner came home with the lion late, which is also not interesting. Karaganda is a good drive away from Kostanai, so it might be expected that the driver wouldn’t be able to do it all in one day and get home for dinner time. Now dear reader, take a minute and think what you would do in this situation. You have a lion in the back of your truck and you come home late at night. Would you park the truck, leaving the lion in the back, and just go home?. Because that’s what happened. The lion was discovered the next day by another car owner who alerted the police. It is unclear whether the owner of the parking lot will be charged for the extra security.
Interestingly, a spokesperson for the Ministry of the Interior said, “The cage containing the predator was locked, and the lion was calm,” and there is no indication that the circus owner will face any kind of punishment. So I guess it’s not illegal to leave wild animals out all night unmonitored.
Painful (4)
I heard that prison conditions are bad in Kazakhstan, but seriously? You’d rather castrate yourself than be extradited back to Kazakhstan?
Can we follow this Eurostandar… (Comments Off on Can we follow this Eurostandar…)
Can we follow this Eurostandard please? Less work, more productivity, more free time in Germany than the US: http://bit.ly/9YQpK2
Killing the Future – Transitio… (Comments Off on Killing the Future – Transitio…)
Killing the Future – Transitions Online Uzbek and Turkemn education http://t.co/RyNQYfj via @AddThis
Old post but I’ve heard of thi… (Comments Off on Old post but I’ve heard of thi…)
Old post but I’ve heard of this happening to friends. DHL charges extra to “get things through customs” http://bit.ly/9enUqW
Controversial and Ambitious (Comments Off on Controversial and Ambitious)
A couple of articles came out recently about Beibut Shumenov, Kazakhstan’s boxing champion. In an interview with Fight Hype, Gabriel Campillo says he was robbed of victory over Shumenov in the title fight in Las Vegas and wants a rematch. Both the Spanish boxer and the interviewer seem to agree that Campillo clearly won the January fight, which was itself a rematch after a scandal in Kazakhstan last year. According to Campillo, Shumenov starts out strong and throws a lot of punches but tires himself out quickly.
Apparently though Shumenov has no desire to defend his past and is looking to the future to win another world title:
“I want a unification fight next,” Shumenov said. “I’m ready to fight any of the other champions now. (Jean) Pascal and (Tavoris) Cloud are both good champions and I’d love to fight either one. Throw in world champion Jurgen Brahmer, too. My goal is to unify the titles. I have a lot of respect for all of the other champions but I want their titles.”
“It’s unheard of, a fighter that wants one challenge after another so early in their career,” said Dan Goossen of Goossen Tutor Promotions. “But this is what boxing needs, the most competitive and biggest fights that can be made. The networks should ONLY be looking at these young champions to be facing off with one another. Beibut wants to give the fans want they want to see.”
Ambitious, shameless or crazy? In any case, Shumenov is the only Kazakh world champion in history. Aratoly Alexandrov, Oleg “Big O’ Maskaev and Vassily “The Tiger” Jirov are all from Kazakhstan, according to gazeta.kz but I assume by their names that they are ethnicaly not Kazakh. So Shumenov will probably have to screw up royally before Kazakhstan stops cheering for him.
RT @robertsreport: USAID shoul… (Comments Off on RT @robertsreport: USAID shoul…)
RT @robertsreport: USAID should fund tea party activists to go to Kyrgyzstan and test theory of how to develop a country without government
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