Plan A
As time passed, friends and acquaintances became more concerned about my finding an activity that filled the premise criteria. I did more internet searches for irregular winter volunteer ideas. There were plenty of groups cuddling orphans for 2 weeks and then leaving after a bond had been formed, or weeding the community vegetable patch, or repairing houses, but I could see unintended consequences with most of these. Was this putting carpenters and masons out of work? Were they teaching better agricultural practices for the future? Some groups sounded like you were working for a government agency with their rules and swearings in. However, a volunteer group out of Auckland kept coming to the top of the search engines. One of their projects was teaching conversational English overseas. Plenty of country choices. Hey, I can do this! I then checked out all the blurbs about them and found them righteous. I had a chat with them and got enthusiastic.
This is not completely altruistic as I also wish to travel and experience a different culture and what better way than to live in this culture? A fair exchange.
Plan A
Be it right or wrong, English has turned into the de facto language of the world. One can maintain their language and culture, but if one does not have conversational English language skills, they will be confined to one geographic area and have limited employment - jobs not involving science nor the travel industry nor tourism. English skills mean the Queen’s English, understood world-wide, with limited regional dialects or slang. Reading and writing skills are included. Hopefully there would then be sufficient momentum to continue to a lifetime of learning of skills and filters. I do not see any unintended consequences.
When I was in grade 2, I had no enthusiasm for learning to read. The reading primers involving Dick and Jane were of no interest to me and I was falling behind. My Mother took me to the Calgary Public Library and into the hands of Miss Rogers in the children’s section. We picked 3 books of interest to me and I finished them that night and returned the next day for more. I succeeded because I knew where to look it up. So this would also be a pay forward for Miss Rogers who showed me the path.
So I signed on with Love Volunteers and picked Moldova. I had seen the country on stamps but didn’t realize it still existed.
There are presently 300 million people in the world learning English and there is a very large industry supporting this. I contacted a more commercial group that were arranging immersion courses in conversational English. If you can get to the area, they will put you up at a resort for 6 days, 12 hours a day, to speak with people paying a fee to improve their English skills. They had 2 courses in the area so I signed on for Romania and Poland.
So, what are my qualifications? I have no police record, my shots are up to date and I am able to care for myself. English is my native tongue and I speak maybe 4 dialects well enough to sound sort-of local. I have a university degree but I have no certification for teaching English. However, I can certainly chatter away. Most of the teachers seem to be 20 years old, so I could be the grumpy old man of the group.
So, I’ll do a quick scouting trip to see what this is all about, return home and evaluate.
Give your son an education and he’ll make sure his family is looked after.
Give your daughter an education and she’ll make sure your future generations are looked after.
I still need a Plan B.
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