Korea's dismal placing on a British-sponsored English test was only the latest of repeated confirmation that its education methodology has problems. The time seems to be well past for all parties concerned ― the government, schools and people ― to stop for a while and think why do Koreans fare so poorly while their fervor to master the lingua franca is the hottest in the world.
The three countries in Northeast Asia have long been regarded as belonging to the poorest learners of English in the world. So many Koreans might have been disappointed with their ranking placed even lower than those of the Chinese and Japanese. And this is happening in a country, where the people spend $15 billion a year just on studying English, pregnant women teach English to their fetuses and mothers and children live abroad mainly for mastering English, leaving a number of ``lone-goose'' fathers at home.
All the fuss even begs the question: Are the Korean people not cut out for English or is this because this country was a ``land of hermits'' as recently as a century ago? Both don't seem to be the answer, which brings one back to question of the right methodology.

