Mimasaka City, Okayama Prefecture.

After the past few days I got up this morning thinking “Please let this school be good, please let this school be good.” And they certainly were!

The head teacher picked me up at 7:00 for the hour long drive into the mountains and we had a really good chat on the way. He’d been in business before becoming a teacher so was well versed on the problems of the public system like we had yesterday. He was also very into Japanese culture, but not the sort of thing you see in the “kokusai rikai” books, but real made in Japan stuff like haiku or old stories.

“Good Japanese” speak…

One of the tools I’ve been using to combat the “children must be perfect in Japanese before they learn English” reason for banning elementary school English is to use the Goethe line that “Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own.” I, somewhat cheekily, suggest that the reason Japanese kids are so bad at Japanese these days is because they don’t speak any other languages. Then I illustrate it with the most famous Japanese writers, nearly all of whom spoke English or German or Chinese e.g. Natsume Soseki who studied in the UK, or even the people who wrote katakana took it from Chinese kanji. The head teacher today rolled off a huge list of important Japanese writers all of whom spoke other languages.

Eye contact is Japanese…

Plus we also talked about how eye contact is a traditional part of Japanese culture. In martial arts you bow whilst making eye contact, and one of the old tenants of teaching in Japan was to “teach in the students’ eyeline”. It was only in Samurai times that lower caste people were told to lower their gaze when the Samurai passed them by. It just goes to show that many aspects of culture aren’t what they are always thought to be.

Full speed…

Anyway, this school is again a government pilot school and they have to teach from next term (i.e. next week!) so were really motivated! They got warmed up in two minutes, gave me full respect from the start and asked loads and loads and loads of questions! We ran through two demo lessons, one with me teaching, one with them and did tons of stuff to illustrate all the solutions. They were loving it, seemed hyper relieved by what we did and I only just made my bus back in time because there were asking so many questions! Excellent.

They have to teach the Eigo Note in 5th and 6th grades, which is fair enough (they’ll expand on it using the GE songs etc. like I describe here), then they’ll use the GE Curriculum in years 1 and 2. In years 3 and 4 they’re not allowed to teach “English” as such unless it’s for a reason.

So they came up with the idea of doing projects or “video letters” ; ) , working out what language the kids will need and then working the curriculum back from there. Things like “how to grow rice” I think are great projects to exchange with kids in other Asian countries. (It’s coming up to rice harvest time in Japan)

So I’m now sat on the train heading home to Imabari feeling very, very happy. Usually I start my Japan tour being shocked by how low level the teachers are compared with teachers overseas. This time the Summer Tour started with really amazing teachers in Ehime, Osaka, Tokyo and Okinawa. It did tail off a bit this week, but mainly because of the people in charge rather than the teachers, so it was really nice to finish with such a high energy fantastic bunch of teachers. I’ve certainly learnt a lot this Summer and I now have a big new list of requests for new materials to make!

And that, ladies and gentlemen is the end of my Japan Tour 2008. I’ll be around for another couple of weeks before heading off to the schools in India once Ramadan has finished, then workshops in Cambodia, lectures at the University of Newcastle in the UK and Lulea in Sweden and then finish the year off with my first workshops in Beijing, China!



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Today was a workshop for the Okayama City Education Center. I know lots of the teachers here, it’s the 7th year they’ve invited me and I was really looking forward to presenting lots of new things for them, as they are always really keen and probably the best teachers in Japan!

I’d put together a brand spanking new presentation for them going through all the new materials they’ve been asking me about, talking about the Private Schools for the Poor in India, blasting through all the new songs from CD8 and finishing off with a big Q&A session about some of the higher level problems they’re be having. All the stuff the teachers from here are really into. I was really looking forward to doing something new.

There’s always a but…

But … this year they’ve changed the system. Instead of teachers choosing to come, last year we had loads, this year one teacher from each of the 92 schools has been assigned to be in charge of the English implementation. No problem I thought, there are more good teachers here than any other city in Japan. But … just as I’m about to start they tell me that just about all the teachers were chosen almost at random by the head teachers, hardly any of them are experienced teachers and they really have no idea what they are doing. “They’re totally newbies and totally petrified of having to teach English” I was told.

Ah lovely. So instead of my nicely crafted brand new workshop they basically said I had to do my “from the beginning” workshop again, for the umpteenth time this month. If I’d have know that I’d have simply told them to play my “Basics Workshop” DVD!

But I was here and had to do the most basic of basic level stuff because these teachers seriously did not want to be here! It took them 20 minutes to get the idea that they had to do something and not just sleep, then another 20 minutes to get them to respect what I was saying, then another 20 minutes to get them relaxed enough to ask honest questions, plus a break. Then we had hardly any time left, and all the questions were the basic same things that they could have looked up anywhere. It was not fun at all!

I could have just gone with the new workshop, but last year the few new teachers got lost when I just jumped straight into activities and stuff. You, I and every kid in the world knows the CD8 is dead easy, but for your average Japanese teacher, they see it as something akin to brain surgery or rocket science.

I had a look at the reports at the end, and as I thought I got my worst evaluation ever! The newbies all gave me A’s, but the few old timers that were there gave me B’s and even C’s for not doing anything new! I know the path to failure is to try and please all the people all the time, but I just wish they had told me and I would have insisted on making two groups, one for beginners and one for experienced teachers. I should have suspected something was up when some of the really good teachers in the city said they weren’t allowed to attend. This is one place where they don’t pay my fee, they just pay travel expenses which was a deal I worked out with the guy who used to work here, today they really did take advantage of that hospitality.

I must also apologise to the ALTs, I really did want to do some good stuff for you today as well, sorry.

Okayama is also the place I champion to everyone else, I say “Look at the great teachers here, look at the really cool stuff they are doing and look how good their kids are!”. But what is the point in having so many really good, really well trained teachers if you then put total newbies in as the co-ordinators for each school? Make no wonder parents are complaining!

School roof & video letters

In the afternoon they had another workshop by a teacher who was talking about what she was doing in classes. So I stuck around to she what she would do as I thought you might appreciate some new ideas. It was actually really, really good. She was using lots of videos of the kids doing stuff. They weren’t actually doing much new English, which the teachers seemed very happy about (no effort required on their part!), but she had some really cool projects, calling them “Video Letters” which I think is a much better name. For example the kids would go to the top of their school roof, ask “What’s that?” and explain the landmarks they could see. They also did things like playing instruments (sing “I can play the ….?“) and some other really good ideas which I really should have written down.


She also showed a good activity using the picture book “The World in a Supermarket”. She gave the kids some food cards and flag cards and they had to guess which foods came from which countries. Great idea! Then she read the picture book to see if they got the right foods in the right places. Then the kids did their own version of the book showing where they get their own food from.

The only bad point was that the teacher was fluent in (accentless) English so could do such stuff. I doubt if any of the teachers today could re-do the same type of lesson, but as usual they enjoyed just being the students!

Also as usual in Japanese workshops some of the teachers were sleeping in the afternoon. Personally I don’t let teachers get away with that and make sure to change the pace of what I’m doing well before then, but here the back few rows were happily snoozing away, all paid for with our tax money of course! Then they have the cheek to turn round and say ALTs are unprofessional and I was like “Dude, you’re paid to be here and you’re sleeping”. Some aspects of Japanese culture don’t need spreading to the rest of the world!

Then one of the older ladies from the Education Center gave me a lift to the station and was apologising profusely for what happened this morning. She seemed just as upset by the new system as I was disappointed. Well, at least they know something’s wrong. And in the current transition period where no-one really knows what will happen even next year then I guess it’s sort of understandable. I just hope the really good teachers in Okayama will keep on being just as good as they have been for the last few years, even if they aren’t the ones in charge!



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Kagawa, Japan.  Workshop for the prefectural Education Center.

I should start reading my own blog. Last time I was in this prefecture one teacher came from every school and they did really well. But then they had a series of other workshops that just demolarised them and defeated everything I did.

So what happens today? Exactly the same thing!

They were great in the morning. Although I only had 100 minutes with the same content done twice (as they couldn’t find a room big enough, why didn’t they just take out the desks and leave the chairs?) they did really well, and I even had the second group of teachers say “Challenge!” when asked if they wanted it easy or challenging. Cool. I added in lots of new bits and got everything down in 105 minutes.

The whole thrust of my workshops are to take away their stress. I find out what they are worried about and give them, often really simple, solutions that make them go “ooooo”. They’re overworked and underpaid so don’t need the extra hassle of having to learn too much English before they teach (they can learn with the kids) or to have to spend hours making materials and lesson plans (we’ve already done that for them). They’re teachers and that’s what they do best. So needless to say by the end they were revved up and totally ready to go!

Then in the afternoon it was a model of exactly how not to do a training session. They just completely contradicted and ignored everything I had done by putting the teachers in groups, giving them a (photocopied!) “Eigo Note” book and told them to plan their own lessons.

Surely it would be better to give them lesson plans and get them to practice teaching them? After all, that’s what will happen when they go back to their classes!

Making a lesson plan from scratch is hard. Making a good one is even harder. And finding what the kids want to say, choosing the correct English for it, then creating fun activities and materials to make a child centered effective lesson that covers all the bases takes months of feedback and practice. I know because that’s what I do everyday in the Winter! There’s no way in a million years they could have done that. And there’s no way that that is necessary. Even if they did go with the Eigo Note instead of the much easier to teach Genki English lesson plans, there is a full teacher’s guide book, but they weren’t allowed to use it!

Without knowing how to teach English (they’re all beginners at this) or even speak it they were supposed to give model lessons in front of everyone else. I wondered round and it was appalling. They were inventing mistaken English left right and center (it doesn’t help that the Eigo Note contains lots of irregular items as examples). One group even had the funky idea of going to Kyoto, picking out the white people and introducing Kagawa to them. I think they heard my jaw drop on the floor, but the teacher insisted it was fine and racial profiling is quite a natural thing to teach in school!

The lady in charge gave a demo class where the ALT introduced himself and she was saying “Just pick up on a few words he says and repeat them to the class. It will make you sound like an English teacher.” Ah dear.

Luckily one group had a computer so I slipped them a copy of CD 1 and the lesson plan book. They were over the moon saying “Hang on, this is so easy? Why weren’t we given these anyway?” Why indeed!

This is certainly another place on my “not to visit again list”, because there’s no point me motivating the teachers just to have them brought back down. The teacher in charge basically gave the insinuation that “you just want to promote your stuff”. Well yes, because it works! I didn’t spend 10 years developing it for the good of my health, I did it to solve the teachers’ problems. There’s no point asking teachers to re-invent the wheel when a) they don’t have the skills to do it and b) they don’t have the time to do it. Real teachers aren’t going to spend 3 hours planning a lesson.

And what about the kids? Don’t they deserve something with correct English, I’m sure 1 + 6 = 8 wouldn’t be allowed in a maths lesson! What’s best, something that’s based around their needs and has been improved and improved with input from thousands of other kids and teachers? Or something put together on the back of an envelope the day before?

The only good thing today was that the lecturer who was on at the same time as me in the morning was from one of the institutions that wrote the Eigo Note book. Apparently he wasn’t too glowing in its praises either!



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If you’re wanting the latest Genki English songs in download form (i.e. you want them right now!) I’ve just updated the Download Pack to include all the new CD8 songs (plus a couple of extra goodies). If you’ve been thinking of buying it, now’s the time.

Current Owner Club members have a special CD8 download upgrade discount. I’ll be sending complimentary upgrades to those of you who bought the full download pack in the last couple of days!

P.S. If you don’t have CD7 yet, the special CD7 & CD8 bundle offer finishes on August 31st. From then on CD7 will be full price for everyone!



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Ishikawa, Japan

As I mentioned yesterday I was a bit wary of today. They invited the local ALTs to do crafts and activities with the kids calling it an “international day”. It was all funded because they are one of the English pilot schools for this year. The reason I’m wary is that very often these events turn into “look at the foreigners, aren’t they strange!” festivals

Luckily today they had a very good bunch of ALTs who came up with some very cool stuff, e.g. making a Native American dream catcher, making “s’mores” (first time I’d heard of them!) in a camping lesson, plus other games and songs for the other grades.

All the teachers for my workshop in the afternoon attended and the school was pushing it as part of their English education programme.

However apart from the window dressing there was no English education at all. The ALTs tried explaining things in English, to which the kids responded with “eh?” so correctly switched to Japanese (otherwise the kids would just have ended up hating the lesson), and when the ALTs did give English that the kids understand the teachers would quickly realise it was something that they understand and instead of giving the kids time to think they jumped in with their, often incorrect, translations.

Maybe a better way would be to plan the curriculum for the previous few months to include language that the kids are likely to use here. Then when the ALTs do arrive the kids will be really, really happy and very proud that they can actually use the English they’ve learnt. That’s what I try to do when I do when I visit schools. Then again I might be wrong.

So as far as English goes today, zero points. As far as an exciting and very enjoyable day for the kids to remember forever, full marks.

Model Class

Then it was my “model class” for 5th and 6th grades. 6th grade is tough. I can do stuff for that age group, but it’s very hit and miss and not what a “model lesson” should be. As most 6th graders at the beginning it was like drawing blood from a stone. So I used my normal trick of doing my self introduction. It’s a bit showy off, but if you can tell the kids you’re the CEO of an an internet company and show pictures of you travelling the world then at least you have their attention.

If you can, try and find one thing to impress the kids in your own self introduction, even something small can often work wonders. Teachers are, after all, role models, so if a kid thinks “Wow, I want to play baseball in America too” or “I want to play the guitar too!” then it’s a good day’s work.

Next was to try and get some motivation out of them to learn English. As this school has been doing the Eigo Note and just “playing with English” the kids don’t have much sense of why they are learning it. That’s the next thing to work on.

How to motivate 6th graders

One trick here is to find out what they want to be when they grow up, and then get them to try and find a job where they won’t need English! If it were about today, then in Japan that would be quite easy, but when you get them to think of 20 years’ time, where most of the jobs they will be doing haven’t even been invented yet, there isn’t a single job in Japan where you won’t need a foreign language at least a little bit. (If you don’t believe me, try it yourself!)

That had them sold on the idea. So now it was to find out what they know. The teachers yesterday told me to do my self introduction etc. in English. I said that wouldn’t work unless they could at least understand part of what I was saying. So I asked the kids what English they knew, to which the answer was “none!”. So then comes my usual trick for showing 6th graders that they do at least understand a lot of English, even if they can’t actually speak that much.

Once I had them on that we had 5 minutes to show a “model lesson” so I just did the Genki Disco Warm Up and Rock, Paper, Scissors to show the GE rules, and they were really, really good.

As with anything, if you can see the road you are going in, it’s a lot easier to actually move along it.

Funky Japanese Noodles

Then for lunch we had some excellent nagashi soumen.

Shyest teachers ever?

Then it was the teachers’ workshop.

I thought these were the shyest teachers I’ve ever taught. Until I realised that the reason they weren’t asking questions or sharing their problems was because that they don’t have any! They’ve been taught to not bother whether the kids get good at English or not, and for the curriculum they have the eigo note. Hence they were not very motivated. The only real questions came from the junior high school teachers. One of the teachers asked why I was so genki. The reason was that I had to be to get them to even have an ounce of passion amongst them!

As usual with these types of teachers, it wasn’t the “how to teach” that they wanted, many just wanted to have a free Genki English lesson. And sure enough in What’s your name? and Wie heisst du? they became the outgoing, confidence filled speakers they can be. But if I have to teach every person in Japan myself there aren’t enough days in the year! I need their help to do the actual teaching. Which is actually what they are paid for!

Luckily though in the evening I had dinner with the teachers and it was a lot easier to explain that “getting good at English” doesn’t necessarily mean tests or grammar or whatever, and that even if the kids think they are just “playing with English” then they can learn a great deal as long as the school plans the curriculum and materials well. They were actually really into things by the end of the evening and were really into the idea of getting the kids to be able to speak anything they want to in English.

Why ALTs are the best

However one thing that struck me today was how much better the ALTs are than the classroom teachers at teaching English. I’ve always known this, but as ALT budgets are being cut and as there are no where near enough of them, most of this year I’ve been focussing on how normal classroom teachers can teach on their own. This can be done, and there are some great teachers out there, but in general they need a heck of a lot of confidence training, and a very supportive system behind them.

Whereas with the ALTs all they need is a little guidance on what to aim for, a few warnings about what not to teach (e.g. don’t start with ABCs) and then the vast majority take the passion and excitement they have for being in Japan and use it to really inspire the kids to learn AND they get amazing results.

So come on Japanese teachers, prove that you can be just as good as the best ALTs! Dekiru, dekiru, dekiru to omoeba dekiru!! desyo! : )



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Hokkaido -> Ishikawa, Japan

Another long flight down to Komatsu, plus a bus, plus a train, then arriving straight into a meeting with tomorrow’s teachers.

Although they have a teachers’ workshop in the afternoon, in the morning they have a “let’s play with English” set of sessions with the local ALTs. Then they want me to do a “model lesson”. As you probably know, Genki English is the best method in the world for teaching kids starting from 1st to 4th grade. So which grades do they give me? 5th & 6th! There’s just nothing remotely like a “model lesson” that you can do for that age group, so I was more than a little worried.

So then I asked why and found out it’s because they had one of the Ministry of Education staffers come down to do a presentation where he banned them from doing any English, actual teaching or even just “getting to know English”, in any grades other than 5th and 6th!

With the appalling Eigo Note coming out, we’ve known that are promoting English for the upper grades is happening, but it was always hoped that we could continue on teaching real English in the lower grades, where anyone can see it is much more effective. I have heard of other areas banning it in 3rd and 4th grades, but to actually have a Ministry presenter going round the country saying it is really going to ruin things for the kids of Japan.



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