STARTBODY

Teach English in Baiqiao Zhen - Jinan Shi

Do you want to be TEFL or TESOL-certified and teach in Baiqiao Zhen? Are you interested in teaching English in Jinan Shi? Check out ITTT’s online and in-class courses, Become certified to Teach English as a Foreign Language and start teaching English ONLINE or abroad! ITTT offers a wide variety of Online TEFL Courses and a great number of opportunities for English Teachers and for Teachers of English as a Second Language.

When the internet was first created, it had the simple task of helping share text information between a handful of colleges. Fast forward a few decades, and the revolutionary idea has springboard into a whole new platform for far more than just communication. While cat videos, restaurant advertising, and social medias consume a large portion of users time online, information transfer still finds a way to be relevant, and able to adapt. Now, things like problems and their solutions, blueprints, and abstract ideas can be sent from one side of the globe to the other; and this creates the demand to be able to understand each other. As the world becomes more globalized, so too, does the necessity to be able to communicate. Now, in a modern era and with the ability to communicate globally, we are able to talk to a much broader base. If every citizen was able to communicate with anyone else, more things like stories and traditions, would be passed down and understood by the masses. By being able to read another culture's history so easily would create more sympathetic views. We are reaching this point with the access to abundant video cameras, to show how other people live, and with a universal language, be able to interact more easily. A universal language would give a voice to those who need it, and help create more globally aware citizens. Debates that otherwise wouldn't exist, from people who have not been able to voice their concerns. People in remote areas would be able to tell anyone about problems they are facing. The UN does their part to give representation to everybody, and a global language would help reinforce the idea. Not only would it help highlight problems, but would allow for different outlook on the same problem. For instance, if the scientific community came across a problem they couldn't solve, it would be all the more easy to phone up their colleagues in another country and talk about their issues while not needing any mediation. Math is a language unto itself, but being able to discuss implications of discoveries requires a common tongue. With such a thing, society could progress to new understandings once thought impossible. Soon, businesses would run more efficiently as any outsourced labor could be easily communicated with. The idea of a singular language is more accepted in the United States, where the country is the size of most of western Europe, yet all speaks the same tongue. In Europe, most people can speak a number of languages to be able to converse with their neighboring countries. Such small countries, like for instance Malta or Liechtenstein would see the benefit of talking with larger more powerful countries, so that they will do business together, with minimal language barrier. What has become clear, is that people have begun to realize the cost of doing business on a global scale as well as the benefits of a global society that acts in tandem to one another.


ENDBODY