Xin chao, y feliz Pascua tarde.
[Note that I meant to post this last week -- I've sure you'll forgive me for the halting of time.]
It has been about three months since I taught at the school
here. And what little twisty nucleic acids can we thank for that?
I’ve managed to do some private tutoring, lots of pacing
around, some musical sleight of hand, and some other remote giggish work for my
old job at Portland Community College. The private lessons started in person
and migrated online as we proceeded to lock our doors, run around in circles,
and stomp on whatever virus spore shimmied its way through the bidets.
It is a simple life. Unfortunately, my little ground level
studio with no windows to the outside isn’t the most pleasant place for a
living time-capsule. I think of the spring coming to the northern forest and
ponder nicer places, as I’ve done too often in my life: phoebes
and Louisiana
waterthrush arriving in northeastern North America, wrens and song thrushes waking up in
northern Eurasia, orange-crowned
and black-throated gray
warblers in the Pacific Northwest coming to a screeching halt with their legs in
midair, like in cartoons, panting for breath after a short migration--I’m the
expert here, and I’ll tell you how birds work.
Like many an expat in Vietnam, I’ve tried to convert my
teaching into online work. There are many services, especially out of China
(Cambley, VIPKid, etc.) that facilitate paid teaching via web browsers or their
own apps. I realized early on that the voluminous digital gig economy with its
random hours, zero benefits, and low pay is whistle-beckoning me.
My-oh-my how I tire of inaccessible apps and websites. In
fact, I’ve been tired of them for decades, which goes to show how much progress
has gone down on this front, and may ironically explain my insomnia. It
certainly demonstrates why heavy-handedness is often called for. When
accessibility is considered a matter of charitability--special needs--a nice
thing to do, but sometimes not practical, then consequences need to apply. We
must make ignoring us impractical for those who will make barriers--the
appointed shapers of the conduits of our existence. The access that disabled
people do have wasn’t born without a fight.
Anyway,
so far, after spending hour upon hour with these platforms for teaching English
to speakers of other languages, like VIPKid, Cambley, and DaDa, I feel as
though I am digging myself a bottomless hole in space. I think to myself,
there’s a good chance any complaints I have will mean as much as a mosquito to
them, and that they deal with zero accountability for application and website
accessibility. This may be especially true if they are based outside North
America or the EU, where at least some hard-fought legal precedence is
established, however tenuous. If I was but an insect in the U.S. job market,
I’m one in outer space now. That’s my sense of the global online circuit.
March rolled around with no prospects of schools opening.
Some new cases began to grind business to a further halt, evaporating a few
silent, cautiously hopeful weeks. Many fellow expats could be seen drinking
their day away, assisted by a $1.30 beer platform. Others told me that they
were plenty busy on the ball, and told me what English teaching service they
were using. “You should totally sign up!”
A really pleasant American fellow expat told me about his
successful swap to VIPKid for English teaching. He expounded on their ample virtues
and pay, and told me they are looking for Americans like us to teach English online.
This was perfect for him, especially as he was to relocate fancy free to Chiangmai.
It is nice to be as free as a bird. To think you can get a job all the time,
live on a shoestring and live the itinerant, interstellar hip existence. I wish
I was like others. I try to remind myself that I am rightfully an adult, with
all the liberties and induction of ego inflammation entailed by age and
androgenesis. As I walk down the street or try to start a conversation, I would
like the people I encounter to use a vocal tone that says, “You are a human
being just like we are.”
No, I don’t need them
to count the three stairs to the mall entrance. No, I’m not afraid of your
silent dog--I didn’t know he was there until you apologized. Unfortunately, as
I dig a bottomless hole in space, I realize I might not be able to fake being
the steel monkey I’m supposed to be. I can’t fill out forms on these Pho-king
websites because buttons are not properly labeled and edit boxes are not
sufficiently marked up to allow one to navigate without a mouse or touchpad via
a text-to-speech screen reader device (like Apple’s proprietary Voiceover, or
JAWS for Windows). No, I need help--just not with stepping off a curb. Help
from a friend is enough to get me through the steps of a simple online job
application, but when the web platform or standalone app to communicate with
students has the same problems, it’s no job for me no matter how many master’s
degrees of separation I hold. Crikey.
I contacted VIPKid about their futile app, website, and
instruction materials, offering to help them improve. “I’m sure they will find
some work for you” my Chiangmai-bound friend said.
“Your teaching career is impressive
and moving to us. Unfortunately, after discussion, investigating the
limitations of our online teaching portal and curriculum, we cannot accept your
application at this time. We are a young company that is growing and has the
mission to prepare every child for the future world, and we hope to in the
future be able to meet the needs of EVERY student. But unfortunately, at this
time we are not able to accommodate teachers and students in these situations.”
Anyone say, ‘special needs?’ We are not yet
considered a part of the future.
Heartbreak is the name of the mouthless moth that emerges from a chrysalis
of wasted time. BS is the wasted time.
An excellent essay Trev. With the endless uploading of apps and programs, I fear this will be an issue for quite some time. People/ companies are in a hurry to bring their products to market. They don't seem to have the time or desire to deal with such issues as accessibility. My hope is that at some point, you will find an inspired developer that cares
ReplyDeleteOr at least they can hire me as a token consultant.
DeleteHi Cuz!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing! The disparity is never ending- sheesh! Please keep us updated on how its going, especially if you end up hammering through the window-less wall. In the mean time we'll all keep bothering folks to make things accessible- keep up the good work!
Thank you kindly. :D
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