It’s good to talk…TEFL
Tuesday, October 27th, 2009Remember the old BT ‘It’s good to talk’ adverts? Yes, even if we think of BT as a dinosaur of the telecoms age, the marketing phrases they used still reverberate with those of us who remember the 80’s & 90’s it’s good to talk ads with old Bob Hoskins - ads that shaped a generation of us TEFL teachers and reminded us why we had to call our mums every so often. So speaking to one another, even in this digital age, is still important. Facebook can provide an artificial conversation (while we juggle mum with our friends and plans for the evening) but it can’t take the place in any of our lives for the direct emotion we hear in each others voices.
OK - don’t get me wrong (as Chrissie Hines once said - sorry - I grew up with this stuff), I do enjoy Facebook, but I am definiltely of the pre-digital age. I yearn back to the sound of Tears for Fears and Duran Duran in the decade that music forgot called the 80s. But that doesn’t mean that I have forgotten how to communicate (and if you can name all of the acts in the 80’s pic below you are can do more than me - hint - some are pictured twice!)

So life has taught me that when an opportunity comes around to speak and communcate I need to take the chance that is offered. Which is why I love The Language Show. Because it is good to talk. And I know that, like last year, I’ll speak to at least 200 people every day at the show. So this is why I find it surprising how many TEFL course providers shy away from exhibiting and putting themselves up in front of their potential customers.
If you Google ‘TEFL Courses’ or ‘TESOL courses’ you’ll find hundreds of providers who have never presented more than a faceless website to the world. You’ll not find them in any way on YouTube, or even a picture of them. They’ll say ‘We offer this course, accredited by ZZZ’ (never heard of them), or ‘We offer that course, with added bells and whistles, accredited by YYY’ (no, who are they either?). Do you ever feel like they are fishing for you? Casting their rods out and hoping you’ll figure that this one must be OK, because…
When actually, what really matters is talking to people. When you speak to someone about something, if you delve deeper, you get more than the company line - the ‘bells and whistles’ - because at these shows you get real advice from people who have been there at the sharp end of teaching - which may well be where you are heading. So If you really want to know how far a distance learning course will get you, or whether the CELTA is really all it is cracked up to be, don’t just trust a static website, or a blog where someone says ‘yes, it’s great’ or ‘no, you need this’. Speak to someone - 2 or 3 organisations at least. Look at different types of courses - think about whether you need a £1000 course if you are off on a gap year, for example. It’s your money - an investment in your career. Spend it wisely.
So taking to people is why I love the Language Show in Olympia. At Global English we want to give you the right advice for your TEFL journey, be it short or long. We are not interested in selling you the ‘latest flavour’ course - rather we’d like to know where you want to go - whether you want TEFL/TESOL as a career abroad or in the UK - or just a passport to you next step around the world. We have been there - done that - and enjoyed the experiences TEFL has given us. So we’d be happy to help you on your way too.
Thinking back to my new romantic days, if I’d had the opportunity of visiting a TEFL fair, I’d probably have received better advice, rather than playing roulette with a range of different distance TEFL providers, and picking the poor course that I ultimately did. So at the Language Show you can come along and compare different TEFL products - and if you stop by our stand we look forward to seeing you and answering your questions!
Remember - it is still good to talk!
William, 80’s throwback, 15 years TEFL experience
Global English


