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19 Apr 09

Fuming S. Korea looking for way to punish Google | ZDNet Government | ZDNet.com

Funny. Good for Google. I live in Korea, and their govt web policies are whacked in a million discriminatory and privacy-invasive ways.

At the same time, their netizens are so venomous, they've caused the suicides of several thin-skinned celebrities in recent months.

government.zdnet.com/?p=4631 - Preview

korea censorship google privacy

  • After Google issued an official raspberry to South Korea - by sidestepping its “real name” law by simply disabling comments and uploads - the Korean government has taken to pounding the table and turning beet red.
09 Nov 08

40% of Foreigners in Korea Feel Discrimination

  • The survey, conducted by Korea Gallup for the Ministry of Justice, was meant to look into foreigners' life here and find out what needs to be changed to help upgrade their living standards.
  • According to the survey, 42.7 percent of the investors and 43.1 percent of the professionals felt they had been discriminated against.



    A total 32.5 percent of investors and 30.9 percent of professionals said Koreans had a hostile attitude toward foreigners.



    In the survey, ``foreign investor'' referred to holders of D-8 visas who have invested at least 50 million won here ($38,160) and ``foreign professional'' referred to those holding E1-E8 visas. They include professors, teachers and researchers but exclude entertainers, artists and industrial trainees.



    The discrimination they felt here made them reluctant to live in Korea.



    Asked whether Korea is a better place to live than their homeland, 39 percent of investors and 42.3 percent of professionals said ``no.''



    The language barrier was the No. 1 culprit for their difficulties in Korea, followed by the high cost of living, lack of multinational foods and discrimination.
17 Aug 08

Private tutoring is outrageous in South Korea « Living & Working in Korea Guide in English | The Real “South” Korea

  • The private think tank affiliated with the Hyundai Group said each household sets aside an average of 646,000 won for private tutoring, or 381,700 won per child. What’s astonishing is that the total volume of South Korea’s private tutoring market is estimated at 33.5 trillion won, accounting for 3.95 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP). The sum exceeds the government’s entire education budget of 31 trillion won. The burden is much higher than that of other countries belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
17 Jun 08

Blind Devotion?

Koreans' Fervor to Master English Gets Nowhere

www.koreatimes.co.kr/...202_25442.html - Preview

seocho efl korea assessment pedagogy

  • 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.
  • The problem before was mostly with the speaking, as most students focused on reading, grammar and vocabulary. These days, however, many college, or secondary and even elementary school students, speak better than their parents, but their reading and writing skills seem to have improved little, if not got worse.



    As in everything, English education here seems to be influenced too much by specific fads of the times ― from one extreme to the other. If learning a foreign tongue is not for just mastering the street language or simple daily life but for understanding high levels of foreign culture and academic achievement, the current conversation-oriented method should give way to a more balanced study of reading, writing and speaking.



    Provided the government keeps certain points in mind and makes due preparation, the ``English immersion'' program is a worthy attempt. Most of all, the education ministry should ensure that students' level of understanding of their subjects should be the same whether they are taught in English or in Korean, and that their ability in their mother tongue should not be impaired.



    With the launch of pilot programs with qualified native speakers, the government needs to start the cultivation of capable local teachers en masse to expand the immersion program.



    Most countries that placed high in the test results, such as Finland, did little more than implement immersion programs on a selected basis and created an English-friendly atmosphere in overall society, including major network broadcasters.
15 Jun 08

KEDI

Gov't thinktank on Korean educational issues. Give them a visit.

eng.kedi.re.kr - Preview

korea seocho education research

For English Studies, Koreans Say Goodbye to Dad - NYTimes.com

  • The mothers, members of the largest group of foreigners at the public school, were part of what are known in South Korea as “wild geese,” families living separately, sometimes for years, to school their children in English-speaking countries like New Zealand and the United States. The mothers and children live overseas while the fathers live and work in South Korea, flying over to visit a couple of times a year.

    Driven by a shared dissatisfaction with South Korea’s rigid educational system, parents in rapidly expanding numbers are seeking to give their children an edge by helping them become fluent in English while sparing them, and themselves, the stress of South Korea’s notorious educational pressure cooker.

    • So some families are radical here, critical of Korean stress. - on 2008-06-15
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  • More than 40,000 South Korean schoolchildren are believed to be living outside South Korea with their mothers in what experts say is an outgrowth of a new era of globalized education.

    The phenomenon is the first time that South Korean parents’ famous focus on education has split wives from husbands and children from fathers. It has also upended traditional migration patterns by which men went overseas temporarily while their wives and children stayed home, straining marriages and the Confucian ideal of the traditional Korean family. The cost of maintaining two households has stretched family budgets since most wives cannot work outside South Korea because of visa restrictions.

    • Wouldn't it be more economical to start alternative schools here? - on 2008-06-15
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For English Studies, Koreans Say Goodbye to Dad - NYTimes.com

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www.nytimes.com/...08geese.html - Preview

seocho korea stress education

08 May 08

Korean Job Discussion Forums :: View topic - How long after E-2 expires before you have to leave?

  • If you want to clarify all this confusion check www.g4f.go.kr it is the immigration website for foreigners. You can in fact extend your visa for travel purposes on this site too without having to go to the immigration office. They law states that you must be out within 24 hours. Don't believe anything else. I know a few people who believed this whole 2 weeks grace period garbage, one of which is teaching in Japan now, because he is banned from teaching here for visa violations. It is crap. There is no 2 week grace period. Your visa is from one year from the day you got off that plane and stepped onto Korean soil, not from the day you got it issued at the embassy. If you look at that paper in you passport it gives you three months to enter Korea before it expires. Then when your passport is stamped there is a date on the stamp and it is one year from that date that your visa expires. I got a letter from Immmigration a few weeks ago, and if you read that letter it tells you that you need to make arrangements for your flight or to extend your visa before that date. It also had that website on it, so I went there, and extended my visa in a matter of an hour and am done.
  • To get the extension you need to show your passport, ARC and exit ticket. The extension is free.

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Korean Job Discussion Forums :: View topic - How long after E-2 expires before you have to leave?

  • But you can file for an extension to the visa to allow up to 30 days I believe, or maybe 90. BUT, YOU MUST do it prior to the expiration ... at least 30 days in advance is enough
  • Talk to and request a copy of the law, the immigration policy, and a copy of E Class Visa Departure procedures for Immigration employees at the airport. They all clearly state the LAW. Ask EFL-Law, as any immigration attorney ... and have them show you the documents.

Korean Job Discussion Forums :: View topic - teach privates on an F-2 visa

  • With the F2-1 you can get a tutoring certificate from the local Education department and teach privates English....legal.


    I have one, and my wife and I run a small study room.
  • Immigration does control who can work and who can't..the F2-1 (different than the F2) does allow you to work. But not as an Englsih teacher. I got a tutoring permit ;not a permit to teach..maybe there is a difference to Koreans, as high school students can get a tutor permit.. but even Koreans are supposed to have degrees to teach at Hogwan...so again MAYBE there is a difference?

  • 2 more annotations...

Korean Job Discussion Forums :: View topic - Marrying a Korean / Legal Issues / F-2 Visa

  • My wife and I did all of the things quoted by Juggertha about 2 months ago.





    The whole process took a few weeks and then getting the actual F2 only took one afternoon at Immigration. Actually took Immigration 1 week but after the week I just picked it up, no problems.





    It's a bit of a pain to travel back and forth. Make sure you have two witnesses with their ID cards and their name stamps to go to the Gu Office with you. Witnesses have to be present, you can't just bring their Stamps and IDs. At least, we couldn't.

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