Renewing ELT in Japan: The Crack in the Rice Bowl
William Gatton
DynEd Japan |
This article considers the ELT profession in the context of the current
pressures upon Japanese public and private institutions. Professions exist
to provide identity, security, self-regulation, and to insulate members
from the vagaries of the outside world. Historically, academics have benefited
from this while the tax and private tuition paying public accepted a definition
of education on the ivory tower model.
Every nation must periodically consider to what degree educational institutions
are mere holding stations on a life development path and to what degree
do they have vital social utility. Does anyone believe that JapanŐs educational
institutions are immune to the need for renewal? With great deference to
our Japanese colleagues, official ELT in Japan is uniquely positioned and
defines learning efficiency rather oddly. The entrance examinations may
be educationally suspect but their social value as a legacy of the mandarin-bureaucratic
social model cannot be ignored.
If ELT in Japan has not developed in isolation from the social processes
that nourished its growth, neither can it hide from the forces that are
reshaping that growth. Pop quiz time. Name three post-war client states
which have failed to undergo fundamental reform and are also economically
deeply mired in their outdated paradigms. The answer: Cuba, North Korea,
and Japan. Rich winners are as prone to denial of reality as impoverished
losers.
In a recent article on the Asian economic mess, Lester Thurow of MIT
wrote, "From the perspective of demonstrated abilities to deal with
the aftermath of a collapse, Japan is the sickest country on the Pacific
Rim" (1998). Indeed, Japan, a purported democracy, has suffered eight
years of stagnation and recession, perpetrated without doubt by the elite's
malfeasance and incompetence. I use the phrase "purported democracy"
with caution since in a true democracy, alternative eliteŐs are available
via periodic public choice. Many Japanese now expect a darker future, according
to a Yomiuri poll. A paradigm shift is deeply needed.
Japan's fate, in my view, is governed by three trends: the demographics
over the next 50 years, the continuing democratization process, and the
full modernization of China. First, not only has Japan's population begun
shrinking, but that decreasing population will have an increasing proportion
of marginally productive oldsters requiring high consumption of expensive
resources. To exaggerate only slightly, in another fifteen years there will
be little objective reason to build anything in Japan other than community
homes for the elderly and replacement infrastructure. Is this not an unprecedented
condition for a modern society? The psychological impact of a national senescence
is well worth considering. Secondly, these trends occur at the moment when
a power shift from the decrepit pre-war mandarin-bureaucratic model to a
more openly democratic model is emerging. Finally, JapanŐs self-image as
Asian leader confronts a substantially invigorated and powerful China now
expecting that role. A challenging situation, indeed. The implications of
these trends must profoundly shake those responsible for projecting policy.
Indeed, the elites have been altogether paralyzed for years, making room
thereby for even more corrupt, inefficient, and wasteful practices.
Having strayed from ELT for two paragraphs, is anyone in any disagreement
that at least the first of these trends is having a profound effect upon
education here? The ELT teacher training profession has been successful.
There is now a large, qualified cadre of native Japanese fully capable of
taking positions teaching English at all levels. To dispute this must serve
as an indictment of the many TESOL training programs that have eagerly recruited
Japanese participation. Where are these qualified Japanese English teachers
to find jobs if not in Japan? Is there any university in the U.S., let us
say in Kansas, where the French Department, for example, is staffed with
large numbers of native French?
Current economic malaise further intensifies the demographic impact.
There already is excess educational capacity in relation to the currently-defined
projected demand for education. A shrinking student population is forcing
administrative reform to achieve efficiency and relevance in the financially
stressed institutions themselves. Will Japan follow U.S. trends, distance
education by Internet, and continuing education programs for those seeking
retraining or enhanced professional training in their careers? Traditional
institutions are being shaped by the market. Academics may recoil at the
so-called commodification of education, but reactive postures only increase
institutional sclerosis.
And there is plenty of that already. How many universities in Japan,
for example, have comprehensive, integrated programs that are not a superficial
collection of course titles? The lack of integration is deliberate and is
intended to protect schools from governmental interference such as occurred
during the military dictatorship. Two generations later the system has ossified.
Is not the great success of TOEIC, Eiken, the private language school industry,
the home study market, and the overseas study market due at least in part
to consumers' desire for objective and demonstrable success in language
education that is denied them in traditional institutional programs? The
ivory tower? Wake up and smell the coffee. ELT teachers at all levels are
but a small part of a service industry called education.
If the "traditional" ELT profession has not mustered an adequate
expression of its values, why not? At one time, the Euro-American academy
existed to train members of the elite in Latin, Greek, selected great works,
and a few of the better sorts of field games. Has ELT here now reached an
analogous crossroads? One local ELT elder recently mused upon the current
low voltage of the ELT "meanings and methods" debate compared
to a mere decade ago. Is the profession so settled intellectually that innovation
is no longer needed? Some have argued that publishers are responsible for
homogenizing materials development and thereby dampening debate. This thought
needs consideration, but publishers are largely responding to and exploiting
professional currents and trends. Creativity, if there is any to be had,
comes from teachers.
The way that the demographic and administrative reform trends are being
undertaken in Japan are less than gentle. Administrators responsible for
making adjustments at their schools do so in conformance with and reflecting
local standards of governance, usually the opaque bureaucratic-mandarin
model. Those with power exercise it as they see fit. Many people in education,
and not only foreigners, have and will find that growing scarcity and increasing
competition creates a failure of administrative grace under pressure. The
worst of human nature may govern many of these cases. Conflicting parties
ignore the objective interests by manipulating emotive/symbolic or legalistic/adversarial
language.
Struggling with power requires a familiarity with the rules of the game
to which few ELT teachers can pretend. JALT maintains an officially objective
stance, but this in effect offers little professional assistance to member
professionals. National reform spasmodically advances, but most often as
repetitive labor-relations conflicts replayed locally. And in every such
case power has as one goal the severe localization of the conflict so that
"outsiders" do not take a view. The context needs to be much better
understood and addressed.
Solutions
If reform is needed, taking a positive, proactive approach may prove
constructive. The shared interest ELT teachers have with administrators
is to produce decent results and to then demonstrate them. Action plans
will vary. For example, if a school does not have a true program but conducts
itself assuming each teacher is an intellectual monad, a program reform
may align itself with administrative trend. The key will be to understand
how the workplace needs to adjust. To develop mutual interests, confirm
that the understanding of interests is indeed mutual. I do not know what
the answer is regarding my hypothetical French department in Kansas. But
if those hypothetical French instructors at the Kansas school could not
read, write, or converse in Kansan, and were therefore unable to participate
even in the minimal level of administrative governance of their own departments,
should they be logically entrusted to carry out such reforms or even entitled
to think their jobs secure? Ultimately, there may not be satisfactory general
solutions that securitize all members of the profession here. Those disadvantaged
by the execution of reforms by stressed, self-protective administrators
may have little recourse. Appeal to law is of little apparent value. Part-time
teachers are completely vulnerable as is anyone with no or poorly drafted
contracts.
If the writing is on the wall, one may find it further discomforting
to bang one's head against it. Of course, one may emulate Camus, who vowed
to tear his sheets even upon his death bed. But Camus perished in a car
wreck, sadly missing the chance to vent existential rage upon the linen.
How many foreign and Japanese ELT professionals have decided to forgo participation
in professional organizations for personal reasons or often no reasons at
all? We all have a vested interest in a healthy ELT profession in Japan.
With JALT membership shrinking, every member has an obligation to review
their commitment to the renewal of the profession.
Reference
Thurow, L. (1998, February 5). The New York review of books
[Online]. <http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/>
Article
copyright © 1998 by the author.
Document URL: http://www.jalt-publications.org/tlt/files/98/aug/gatton.html
Last modified: January 18, 1999
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