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Dean Johnstone

Monday, July 31, 2006

Education, teaching, learning

The last few weeks have really opened my eyes to education in many ways. I have focused a lot on learning metholods and thoughts without giving such deep attention to the role of educators.

Living and working at a language school has really changed that, especially after a course on teaching methodology. It is very interesting to see education developing towards being more self-driven and more of a facilitation and coaching role. The concept of the teacher has changed a lot in the last 100 years (in Europe) but this is set to accerlate in the next few years as the so called "X-generation" give birth to off-spring who want more than individual, personalised choices.

I did not expect to see so many interesting theories within foreign languages - after all foreign languages are about following the rules and grammar of the country right? Well, no! Do you need to learn grammar at all? Are vocabulary lists useful? Should the teacher speak the language or allow students to experiment themselves (and get it wrong, at first) with the language? Is fluency or accuracy most important? The list goes on... as one by one my views of language learning and teaching are positively challenged.

I also discovered how education changes. How the poorest in Brazil recieve the poorest education and how the richest recieve personalised, high quality services. I wonder how any cycle of poverty can be broken if such systems persist, at least in Europe the divide is not so evident, but still exists.

I meet English teachers, who have taught for years, many hundreds of students, and yet have never spoke to a native English person before they met me last week!

Perhaps by accident, perhaps a part of a bigger destiny, spending three weeks here has helped me see education as part of a bigger self-image.

As I sit chatting with the manager (owner and entrepreneur) eating my best Feijoada ever, perhaps for the last time, I realise the power of education and how maybe it might how I develop next.

Sunday, July 30, 2006


Learning and teaching English

Saturday, July 29, 2006

The last few days

So I have now finished work. My long days (a phone call at 7am, from my boss to say good morning is no more! At first I tried to sound professional when he called by trying to sound awake, it worked for the first week but on the last day I dropped the phone on the floor and knocked over a glass of water... by then he knew I was not awake).

Working in the language school was great. I have been treated very well by the students, teachers and staff. We had three courses in 3 weeks, so many different people. They invited me to their house - Dean if ever you want to visit Rio, Sao Paulo, Sao Joa etc. let me know...)

I'll miss the 5-star teatment (better than any hotel, as here you just leave your dirty shirts and they come back ironed and hung up 8 hours later!). And the cost... in 3 weeks I spent R$3.5 (about 85 British Pence.. or under 2CHF). That was because I decided to go off site and buy something. Otherwise food (lots of it) and chocolate cakes etc. where self-service and the beer and wine on the house and still my weight is unchanged... I like Brazil!

Today, in Itajuba visiting friends and seeing the LC on a social visit. Just waiting to go for a Pizza and beers and catch up etc.

Looking forward to home, but not to getting there. I think it will be around 31-32 of door to door activity (car (20mins) bus 6am (4.5hrs), metro (20mins), bus (30mins), wait (3.5hrs) and fly (11hrs), wait (2.5hrs) connection flight, Milian, 10.30am (2.5hrs), London Tube (1hr), train (2hrs) car (1hr), plus other things that usually happen in airports, metros, train stations. Hope to get home to see my first six o'clock news on Thursday!

Friday, July 14, 2006


Our class, just outside the classroom (notice natural GREEN plants, wow!) With Julian, an international teacher, author and all round great person!


I get straight to work... a weeks long training course on the methods and practices of classroom techniques. It was so great to work with Brazilian teachers (some come from state schools, others private schools, others have their own language schools!).

Welcome to the real world...

Man does it smell, look and taste nice!

I leave the MC house and end up in Pirangunho to start work as a language assistant. We go out for a meal in the local pizzaria, before which I am given my own room, en-suite, hot water in the sink (rare in Brazil, this was a luxuary the MC house could not afford), double bed, full length mirror (the fun you can have) and TV with the BBC!

The site is great and the people very friendly (really great people to live and work with). Photos

The bad side: too much food. We have a breakfast at 7.30 (fruit salad - s000 tasty! hot milk, bread, ham, cheese, Pao de Queijo, tea, fuit juice). Then a break at 10.30 (fruit, biscuits, tea, milk, juice, and a salty (savory) today was Pizza!). Then lunch at 12.30 - Salad (I love the salad!) meat, rice, beans, potatoes in cheese, covey (a special green veg) Then pud... Doce de leite, Minas Cheese, Sweet pumpkin, sweet peaches etc. (You remeber the Minas food right?). Then a break a 3.30pm (the sweetest chocolate cake ever.. tea, coffee, milk, busicutes). Then dinner (in 15mins at 7.30pm!).

My days are long. We start at 7.30 (Breakfast) and finish at 10pm. But we have 1.5hrs for lunch and a 2hr break in the afternoon (5-7).

It is long days but good days (If I stay fit). the scenary is great.. hills, cows, small roads, farmers etc. I woke at 6pm to the birds! A world away from Sao Paulo!

Sunday, July 09, 2006


The MC house and office... 4 floors, 8 people and I am the last to leave from the old team!


In Sao Paulo, you climb a steep hill (like this) and imagine to see something. Not the case... more houses and tower blocks! On any spare bit of land they build... and still build. Within 10mins of our houses more big tower blocks are going up! The population will swell more.


Leaving Vila Mariana. A middle class and respectable area of Sao Paulo. I was told this when I arrived and thought that well, if this is middle class, I wonder what the less developed areas are like!


Lucy, Segala, Me, Dea and Jhow at transition party

Saturday, July 08, 2006


Another day of MC2MC transition (taken early June, 2006)

7/7 and around

The 7th June 2005 saw the UKs biggest terrorist attack on its own soil (the biggest terrorist attacks against British people were Sept. 11th 2001 when 67 British Nationals lost their lives, in these attacks the UK was the second biggest national victim, source) .

The bombings of the London Transport systems was led by four suicide bombers, all British nationals who were raised in West Yorkshire.

The day before the attaks London was awarded the 2012 Olympic Games. It was also the days of the G-8 summit, widely seen as a start of a positive new approach to Africa and world poverty. Preceeding these G8 Days were massive and highly publicised "make povery history" events, broadcast on the UKs biggest media agencies and attended by Pop & Rock stars, Politicians (Kofi Annan) and statesmen (Mr. Mandela).

This year we see a report on the outcomes of that G-8 Summit; and the UK takes a key lead in this by publishing monthly data on outcomes.

Some call that the 7/7 attacks were a result of the UKs stance in Afghanistan and especially Iraq. On the 6th July one of the bombers released a video from the grave talking of the justification of the bombing and that more are to come.

Just as terrorists hijack planes and buses they also hijack countries achievements and attempts to improve world poverty and then strive to deny the victims reflection.

Then, I recieve a mail from the British Foreign Office talking of more attacks on trains:

"A small nail and screw bomb exploded on board a train in central Sao Paulo on Friday 7 July. Eleven people were wounded. Three were taken to hospital. The remainder were treated at the scene. No British citizens appear to have been involved.
Police sources suggest that the explosion may have been the work of disgruntled street traders: the police have recently launched a crackdown on illegal street trading.
Until the source of the explosion is identified travellers should be aware of the risk of similar incidents and should be extra vigilant when travelling on trains and buses in Sao Paulo."

This coming at the same time as I write how good and safe the Metro is. I stil believe that, of course. A small minority of people cannot hijack and prevent the decent majority. Be this in London, New York or Sao Paulo.

Friday, July 07, 2006

Transition Party!

We had our transition party in a great Sao Paulo Bar, Coppola. It was a bar with a European feel (no Samba and Brazilian music, which at the start of the year I liked, now I have had enough of and want to get back to music I can sort of dance to!). But the things that I will miss is the live music. Often there are bands (this night was a rock band). It is a shame that there are less live bands in UK clubs (without it costing a fortune!).

And the good thing it was free (we had to say it was Lidia's Birthday to get this bonus... who is Lidia?!?). We had around 80 people on the guest list and many AIESECers I had seen during the year (some in passing, others discussing my future life, others discussing @s direction, others just joking with).

I like Brazil for the aspect that they drink (and a few get drunk) but a respect and tolerance exists, always. There was no violence, rudeness etc. Which, I am sorry to say is not typical of a club in the UK. This is a real shame that got me thinking not about the "jungle" that I am leaving (Brazil), but rather the "group of animals" I am returning to when I land in London.

I do not want to disrespect my nation. I love it deeply, but it also pains to see such disrespectful behaviour in the UK when the majority of other adults in the world can have a night out in a bar / club etc. and it be 100% free of the Police and Ambulances.

I walked home alone (and got a little lost), 5am, (20mins to the Metro, on the Metro, then 10 mins more walking) feeling safe in this, one of the most "scary" cities on Earth.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Living next door...

"Well, I was going to go for a short run, but with all the helicopters in the air, I dont think its so wise". I tell Marcelo.

But I go out anyway, to see three helicopters all staying in the same area, slightly to the north of where I am. They stay still, so there are not looking for a criminal at least (that is what I feared).
The next day, they are back, so I go up to see the street they are focused on over taken with the media. Camera crews, TV presenters on air, others preparing their script, news vans, cameras etc. They are looking onto a building.

I got home to search the web. I find that a lady called Suzane (effectionatley known as "Suzane Murder") has moved in. I tell Elias and with the usual response of lots of Portuguese shouting as everyone else in the MC rushes to see. They all instantly know the nortious muderer.

She and a boyfriend and a brother murdered her parents for money (I am told that she admitted to the killing, but blamed the men). The two men are in prison but she is free, awaiting a court date (I am unsure of the details, but I know that Brazilian Legal system is very long and left largely to chance so anything like this is to be expected... this from Elias, a Graduated Brazilian who read Law).

She is under house arrest and so is legally free to move, so long as she notified the police (which I assume she did) and so really it was a no-news story. A criminal who is doing what she is allowed to do. But to media it was a great scoop! A murderer who is moving house!

She moved from another district of Sao Paulo to get away from the press intrusion and the hate from people. And... she came to Vila Mariana to meet the media (more of it, now she moved) and hate, but at least from new people.

I wonder how much the media play a role in these cases. She is doing nothing wrong (as per the Brazilian legal system). Indeed there could be a case against the media (do they have a right to intrude so closely, helicopters, into a person who is following the legal process by the letter?) and the public (should they show hate towards Suzan or towards the state which lets her move house?).

The media - informing the public of the legal system (that muderers like Suzan can move house freely) or stirring up anger and unrest?

Monday, July 03, 2006


RoDean (left) and Balbman (right) the dynamic duo of Brazils People Development Framework!