Free language school in Vietnam teaches generosity


By Marianne Brown, Voice of America



HANOI—For a few hours most afternoons, you can find 24-year-old Pham Minh Dap selling balloons and children’s toys outside Hoa Binh park in central Hanoi.







Free language school in Vietnam teaches generosity




Pham Thi Trang, right, studies Japanese at a free language school set up by a street vendor in Hanoi, Vietnam, Aug. 7, 2014. (Voice of America)


He has worked as a street vendor here for five years, along with roughly 30 of his relatives who come from a poor village of rice farmers in Thanh Hoa province. Each day he makes about $5.


“Every Sunday morning, I go to Dong Xuan market, I buy the balloons,” Pham said. “I bring home and put the air in the balloon and hang it on my bicycle. The customers,  they see and they buy.”


Dap has another job, too. Earlier this year, he and his brother set up Stand By You, a language center with volunteer teachers offering free lessons to poor students in Hanoi, a place where education is often seen as a way out of poverty.


Rent and other expenses add up to around $500, or 10 million dong, each month. Dap contributes around $150 from his earnings as a street vender and private-language tutoring. His brother matches that with money earned from his work as a secretary. The rest comes from friends and a fee of 25-to-50 cents, or 5,000 to 10,000 dong, per class for advanced students.


Free foreign-language training


The aim is to help students who would otherwise have no opportunity to learn a foreign language. Most come from agricultural communities and face challenges in covering city rents, food and other expenses.


It’s “here just for students who don’t have money,” Dap said of the free school. “… Their parents are farmers. Farmers are really poor in Vietnam.”


While the percentage of impoverished Vietnamese people has fallen from 58 percent in 1993 to 14.5 percent as of 2008, according to the World Bank, rapid economic growth has contributed to rising inequality in income and opportunities.


But unemployment among college graduates remains a persistent problem, with one in 10 university graduates unemployed, according to local media.


Last year, Pham Vu Luan, minister of education and training, blamed their unemployment on universities failing to teach the kinds of skills employers need.

Read the full article by Marianne Brown from Voice of America.

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