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LOCATION:

 

Christian Development Centre, Tagaytay

Country Homes 3

Silang Crossing.... Tagaytay City 4120 Philippines

 

Telefax:  00 (63) 46-4131419

Phones: 00 (63) 918-9309690 or 00 (63) 919-3790031 or

 

Email:  asia@abc-international.ru  or cdcpcec@smartwifi.com.ph

www.orgsites.com/ca/abc

June 2006
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ABC Members List:

Registrar:
Millet Buenafe
Director:
David M. Grubbs
Co-Director:
Mitzu Y. Grubbs

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img ABC International Language Programs - Asia
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Our Asian Headquarters is located in a resort city of the Philipines

ABC PRESENTS:

ENGLISH LANGUAGE TRAINING PROGRAMS FOR ASIA - SERVING PROFESSIONALS, STUDENTS AND CHURCH ORGANIZATIONS.

We Offer: 2-Week, 1 or 2 Month Rotating Intensive Programs. We have California USA Native English teachers and staff.

Our packages are the lowest priced in Asia.

2-WEEK ROTATING PROGRAMS:  20 hrs/week.  Inclusive Fees: (dorm accom, 3 meals/day, airport transfer, laundry service) US$299.  Extra days before or after @ $10/day

1-MONTH PROGRAM:  20 hours/week.   Inclusive Fees: (dorm accom, 3 meals/day, airport transfer, laundry service) US$580. Extra days before or after @ $10/day

2-MONTH PROGRAM:  20 hrs/week.   Inclusive Fees (dorm accom, 3 meals/day, airport transfer, laundry service) US$1150. Extra days before or after @ $10/day

NEW PROGRAMS START EVERY WEEK!

 
What Do You Need?
  BASIC & ADVANCED SKILLS
CONVERSATION, READING & WRITING
CAMBRIDGE / OXFORD DESIGNED COURSES
PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS OR MISSION EMPHASIS
LIMITED TO 25 PER PROGRAM - REGISTER QUICKLY!
 
TROPICAL RESORT & NEXT TO THE TAAL VOLCANO AND LAKE


Tagaytay City has a beautiful environment in the cool tropical highlands of the Philippines.

  56km south of  Manila.  It is a very safe tourist destination and is the conference and retreat center of the country. 

  YOU WILL LOVE IT!


It is also home to the world famous Taal Volcano and Lake.

CDC is a 5-storey Conference & Training Centre with clean-safe rooms (dorm or private), cafeteria, with laundry & email services available.

 
Koreans flock to RP to study English
By ROBERT SIY Reuters Ellie Sung and a friend are queuing at a Manila shopping mall to catch the film "Mission Impossible 3" for the second time. It's not that Sung is a Tom Cruise fanatic or finds the plot difficult to understand. "I like to watch movies. It's for my English practice," she said. Sung, 28, is one of thousands of South Korean students at about 800 language schools in the Philippines who are trying to get the edge that translates into a good job, a higher salary or an acceptance letter from an elite university back home. The importance placed on English in South Korea has driven high school students, graduates and unemployed degree holders to private language centers or "hagwon" as they are known there. The Philippines -- a former US colony with a love of Hollywood movies, basketball and other icons of American culture -- is a close and relatively cheap choice. It is five hours by plane from Seoul and there are Korean communities in many cities. While the government puts the number of Koreans living in the Philippines at around 70,000, Dr. Hyun-Mo Park, president of the Filipino-Korean Cultural Foundation, sees it closer to 100,000. Last year, 524,000 Koreans visited for various reasons, including education, business and tourism. The tourism department expects 600,000 Korean visitors this year, growing to 800,000 by 2008 and 1 million by 2010. Question of standards A big draw for South Korean students is cost. In the Philippines, they need P40,000 to P60,000 ($755 to $1,135) per month for tuition, room, board and entertainment. For the same fee or less than for group classes in Korea, they can enroll in one-on-one lessons. But standards vary widely. Bernard Lee, an administrator at the Jungchul Academy in Manila, said unauthorized schools had "mushroomed" in the capital and other big cities since the English language trend among Koreans started in the mid-1990s. Lee estimated that only about one-quarter of the schools were registered with the government. "In certain places, they're a dime a dozen," he said.
  English for Koreans Continued
Philippine law encourages foreign-owned firms catering to the domestic market to take on Filipino partners or be directed in part by Filipinos, so many hagwons choose not to register as a way of remaining fully Korean-owned. "As long as you pick a good teacher, that's the most important thing," said Julie Park, 25, who studies English with a private tutor. For many South Koreans, immersion in the language is what they pay for with a ticket to Manila. "Everyday I can practise English with almost everybody," Sung said. But recent studies show the number of Filipinos who speak and understand English competently has fallen as the debt-laden government struggles to find money for education. According to the European Chamber of Commerce, about 75 percent of the 400,000 college graduates each year have "substandard" English skills. The hospitality factor Shiena Jaco, a senior teacher at the Jabez International Education Center, says the findings are misleading because they do not reflect the lowering of English ability among Filipinos as much as the rising standards all over the world. "In many places in the Philippines, people can actually speak English very well," Jaco said. "Many of our students end up staying longer than they plan to. It's the norm." South Koreans are also less threatened by the insurgencies and crime that can deter tourists from visiting the Philippines, said former Trade Undersecretary Gregory Domingo. "They have hundreds of guns pointed at their country every day so warnings of things like kidnapping and extortion probably don't scare them as much," he said. For Park of the Filipino-Korean Cultural Foundation, the local welcome also counts. "In other countries, racial discrimination is a big problem for Koreans but in the Philippines not so much," Park said. "Filipinos are a very hospitable people." .

 
  ABC INTERNATIONAL LANGUAGE PROGRAMS - ASIA
Tagaytay Country Hms 3, Silang Crossing, Tagaytay City - Philippines  •  , 4120
phone: 63 (919) 379-0031 • fax: 63 (46) 413-1419
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