I am going to call this one “Testing Saudi Style”. Today we were to give a test known as the
English Comprehension Level (ECL). This
a standardized assessment to determine the eligibility of Saudi military
personnel to attend follow-on training in America. Where they will go and the type of training
determines their necessary ECL score. In
broad strokes, training that requires more communication; medical, flight,
liaison, etc. requires a higher score than other types. The score is simply a raw score of number of
correct answers out of 100. The test has
a 66 question listening section and a 34 question reading section. Obviously, higher scores are better.
When we arrived at the testing center we had a list of 35
students to test. The answer sheets are
pre-filled and we are only allowed to bring a few extras to cover for
mistakes. We were greeted with over 60
students. Immediately fingers began to
be pointed, and as one may guess they were pointed at my colleague and me. We told the first few students who asked,
that if they were not on the list we could not test them. This led to us being asked if we had the
correct list or did we make a mistake.
Then someone with slightly higher rank asked the same questions
again. This pattern continued for about
another four or five individuals until we came to the highest ranking student,
a major. He finally got the head of the
institute involved and as “negotiations” began the language used went from
English to Arabic. Anyone who has taught
internationally knows that this is the normal tactic to use when we, the poor
American instructors, are to be talked about and/or blamed. I mean, it is the reality and one learns to
just roll with it and wait until they are done.
We finally got somewhat organized and into our lab
rooms. However, for the next 10 to 15
minutes there was a steady stream of students entering and feigning ignorance
of the fact they were not on the list.
This is why the answer sheets are pre-filled. We finally began our 0900 exam at around
0929. And, we are now going to
accommodate all of the other students with a specially organized testing
session tomorrow.
After the test, I was slowly walking around the room collecting answer sheets, when I noticed a group of three students who had moved away from the desks and were openly reviewing their answers together. I freaked out a bit, but held my composure. When I asked them about it, they responded that it was normal and that they saw nothing wrong in what they were doing.
Welcome to the
Kingdom!
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