Poor language skills to hamper Thais come 2015

Posted By on March 13, 2012

Poor language skills to hamper Thais come 2015:-

When the Asean Community comes into effect in 2015 regulations for seven professions in the labour market will be eased under mutual recognition agreements (MRAs), enabling people employed in these professions to work in other Asean member countries.

However, while the MRAs will make it easier for doctors, dentists, nurses, engineers, architects, surveyors, and accountants to seek work abroad, few Thais are likely to find their qualifications meet the strict criteria necessary to gain Asean recognition due to poor language skills.

One of the biggest obstacles facing Thais hoping to benefit from the Asean Community is Thais' lack of foreign language skills - Associate professor Patcharawalai Wongboonsin, Chulalongkorn University College of Population Studies

One of the biggest obstacles facing Thais hoping to benefit from the Asean Community is Thais' lack of foreign language skills - Associate professor Patcharawalai Wongboonsin, Chulalongkorn University College of Population Studies

According to associate professor Patcharawalai Wongboonsin, a researcher from Chulalongkorn University’s College of Population Studies, one of the biggest obstacles facing Thais hoping to benefit from the Asean Community is Thais’ lack of foreign language skills.

Ms. Patcharawalai told a Thai workers’ qualifications for the Asean labour market seminar recently that compared to people from Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines where English is widely spoken, Thai professionals face significant obstacles in leveraging employment opportunities and better salaries after the Asean Community comes into existence.

Using the engineering industry as an example, Ms. Patcharawalai said that only 3,712 Thai engineers, or just two per cent of Thailand’s 170,830 engineers, have the necessary certificates, portfolios and eight years of continuous work experience necessary to qualify for accreditation.

The situation is similar for Thailand architects, who must have worked in architecture for at least 10 years, half of which they must have held a professional licence, with at least two years in charge of important architectural projects.

According to Ms. Patcharawalai, with these tough criteria and poor language skills Thai engineers and architects, in addition to other professions, can not compete with leading skilled workers in the region.

Agreeing with the gloomy outlook is Boonlert Theeratrakul, director of the labour market research division at the Department of Labour, who said a recent survey found many Thai workers lacked most in English, IT and numerical skills, making “it really hard for them to compete in Asean”.

Ms. Patcharawalai told the seminar that though Thais were easy to train and could learn their jobs quickly, Thailand professionals had more weak points than strong ones and many workers lacked training, preparation, ethics, discipline and punctuality.

Chirapun Gullaprawit, director of social development strategy and the planning office at the National Economic and Social Development Board, said the number of workers in Asean countries is expected to increase to 300 million by 2015, with higher quality Chinese and Indian workers also expected to join the the professional workers pool.

Mr. Chirapun said Thailand’s education system needs to produce workers for the 21st-century with discipline, synthesising, creative, respectful and ethical minds, in addition to knowledge in their fields and professional skills.

English Click offers a range of English language training courses for professionals to prepare them for the 2015 Asean Community. Our English language course for engineers, English language course for medical and healthcare professionals, English language course for lawyers and the legal industry, and English language course for the banking and finance industry, in addition to our English language courses for general business management feature content specifically tailored to provide Thai professionals with the English language skills necessary to conquer in the 2015 Asean Community.

For more information on any of our courses telephone us on (02) 678.1530, or fill out our contact form.

English language vocabulary

mutual (adjective) held in common by two or more parties
criteria (noun) a principle or standard by which something may be judged or decided (adjective) make a choice from a number of alternatives
recognition (noun) acknowledgment of something’s existence, validity, or legality
significant (adjective) sufficiently great or important to be worthy of attention)
leveraging (noun) the power to influence a person or situation to achieve a particular outcome
discipline (verb) train oneself to do something in a controlled and habitual way
punctuality (adjective) happening or doing something at the agreed or proper time; on time

The full source for this Talking Point can be read at  Thais face challenges getting Asean jobs

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English – “the language of knowledge”

Posted By on August 19, 2010

English – “the language of knowledge”

A recent news item that caught my attention reported that former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad strongly supported the continuance of English language teaching in his country, saying this “will not make us less patriotic”. He also added: “People should accept the fact that English is currently the language of knowledge”.

English language skills provide access to the worlds knowledge

English language skills provide access to the worlds knowledge

As an illustration to back up this statement, the internet is now a prime source of information across the whole spectrum of human knowledge and activity. Although the internet is available in various languages, English still remains the main language on websites around the world and the language people need to be fluent in if they want to take their company’s products or services to the international market, or work internationally.

Furthermore, we are living in an ever increasing technological environment and most of the scientific information and research is written in the English language. Commenting on this fact, Mahathir Mohamad stated: “You cannot rely on someone to translate the latest information for you as it changes every minute. If you master the English language, you can acquire the information by yourself and search for the information that will benefit you”.

Thailand is in a similar situation to Malaysia in as much that English language proficiency within the population is one of the key elements to achieving continuing economic, professional, scientific, commercial and social progress. Recognizing the importance of being able to read and write English, speak English and conduct presentations in English, the Thai Ministry of Education has shown is commitment to establishing an increasing number of international and English language programs within the country’s school system.

English Click has been teaching children English, Adults English and English for business managers for more than 50 years and is able to provide companies with English language training and knowledge building courses across a comprehensive range of disciplines.

Our broad range of specifically tailored English language courses include English language training for those working in the medical industry, English language training for those in the legal industry, English language training for engineers, English language training for those in banking and finance, English language training for travel and tourism industry staff and IELTS English language training for those planning on studying overseas, to name just a few.

English language vocabulary:
patriotic (adjective): loving one’s own country
illustration (noun): example (literally a picture)
back up (verb): support
prime (adjective): first or very important
spectrum (noun): range
acquire (verb): obtain
benefit (verb): help
proficiency (noun): skillful use
comprehensive (adjective): full, complete
disciplines (noun): subject areas

For a free, no obligation information pack on our English language training courses for adults, English language training courses for children, English language training courses for business or English language training courses for specific industry sectors – click HERE

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