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To those EPIK teachers leaving in Feb

 
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Lucas



Joined: 11 Sep 2012

PostPosted: Sun Jan 27, 2013 8:58 pm    Post subject: To those EPIK teachers leaving in Feb Reply with quote

I thought I'd give so some of my amazing wisdom that might save you some hassle down the line..... Smile

1. Paying final bills - You or you should ask co-teacher/K friend to call the gas board/elec board and tell them the final day you will be leaving the apt - ask them to come the day before and give you a final reading and to give you the bill there and then on the spot.

They CAN write them - then go to the bank, pay the bills and give the receipts to your finance lady at school - this will speed up your contract comp bonus - OR your school is super disorganized and will just give you it anyway (even if you haven't paid your final bills)...

2. Ask for a written reference BEFORE you leave the country! - this might not be important immediately when you get home but it can sometimes be a pain to get one once you leave the country - Co-teacher moves on/ 'too busy' writes you a shitty one (always harder for them to do that 'in country' and then look you in the face after they've done it) - loads of people here say ' you write it and have them sign it. I�d say that's a bad idea for many reasons......So why not ask them to write it in Korean, you can get it translated and notarized for 70-80 bucks and it all looks legit and nice! Also tell the specifically what you wanted included in the ref. and ask the principal to stamp it�.

3. Get a Korean police background check - Cheap and they'll print one out for you as you wait - WHY? You never know, you might decide to do teaching/something else where you must prove your clean criminal history throughout your life......Real pain to do that once you leave Korea� - take alien card with you to do this�.

4. Sort out your pension stuff before you leave.....

5. Leave your school in good terms (if you can!)

6. Take original/photocopies of all of your pay slips back with you � you might need them in the future!
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Axiom



Joined: 18 Jan 2008
Location: Brisbane, Australia

PostPosted: Mon Jan 28, 2013 4:42 am    Post subject: Re: To those EPIK teachers leaving in Feb Reply with quote

Lucas wrote:


2. Ask for a written reference BEFORE you leave the country! - this might not be important immediately when you get home but it can sometimes be a pain to get one once you leave the country - Co-teacher moves on/ 'too busy' writes you a shitty one (always harder for them to do that 'in country' and then look you in the face after they've done it) - loads of people here say ' you write it and have them sign it. I�d say that's a bad idea for many reasons......So why not ask them to write it in Korean, you can get it translated and notarized for 70-80 bucks and it all looks legit and nice! Also tell the specifically what you wanted included in the ref. and ask the principal to stamp it�.



Further to this, if there is even the slightest chance that sometime in the future you may want to apply for a position at a Korean uni, then also get a 경력증명서 (Certificate of Career).

It may save you a great deal of time.
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silkhighway



Joined: 24 Oct 2010
Location: Canada

PostPosted: Mon Jan 28, 2013 6:25 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

All of this is great advice, some of which I wish I had taken. A big rule of thumb, it's a thousand times harder to get anything done once you are gone.
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Lucas



Joined: 11 Sep 2012

PostPosted: Fri Feb 01, 2013 3:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

BUMP

One more time for those of you just getting back from your hols.......
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Quack Addict



Joined: 31 Mar 2008
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Mon Feb 04, 2013 2:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
loads of people here say ' you write it and have them sign it. I�d say that's a bad idea for many reasons......So why not ask them to write it in Korean, you can get it translated and notarized for 70-80 bucks and it all looks legit and nice! Also tell the specifically what you wanted included in the ref. and ask the principal to stamp it�.


You want me to pay $80 for a reference letter? Ba ha ha ha hah a!
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silkhighway



Joined: 24 Oct 2010
Location: Canada

PostPosted: Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quack Addict wrote:
Quote:
loads of people here say ' you write it and have them sign it. I�d say that's a bad idea for many reasons......So why not ask them to write it in Korean, you can get it translated and notarized for 70-80 bucks and it all looks legit and nice! Also tell the specifically what you wanted included in the ref. and ask the principal to stamp it�.


You want me to pay $80 for a reference letter? Ba ha ha ha hah a!


I don't think it's a bad idea if you did a good job and trust your co-op teacher will write a decent LOR, especially if don't have work lined up when you're returning home, or you're going into a career where you'll want to keep a running portfolio. The thing is..NOBODY is going to call Korea to get a reference. Plus it doesn't take long before teachers change schools, phone numbers change, etc., and everyone forgets that you were even there. The experience becomes a bit of a black hole, and this could be a way to bridge that.

Or you could just be wasting $80, it's the risk you take.
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kinship



Joined: 24 Jan 2013

PostPosted: Mon Feb 04, 2013 1:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Paying final bills - You or you should ask co-teacher/K friend to call the gas board/elec board and tell them the final day you will be leaving the apt - ask them to come the day before and give you a final reading and to give you the bill there and then on the spot.



To add to this, clean your apartments thoroughly. I do not know how many horror stories I have heard about where previous westerners left their places in a filthy, disgusting mess.
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Lucas



Joined: 11 Sep 2012

PostPosted: Mon Feb 04, 2013 3:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
You want me to pay $80 for a reference letter? Ba ha ha ha hah a!


You'd be surprised how unique most people's writing styles are.

If you want to write a cover letter and then have one or more of your ref's sound almost the same - fine. But that send red flags to more alert bosses.

You; 'well my co teacher wasn't confident in writing English, so I wrote it and they signed it'

Boss: Ok I�ll trust that you wrote an honest and balanced ref about yourself! Rolling Eyes
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silkhighway



Joined: 24 Oct 2010
Location: Canada

PostPosted: Mon Feb 04, 2013 6:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lucas wrote:
Quote:
You want me to pay $80 for a reference letter? Ba ha ha ha hah a!


You'd be surprised how unique most people's writing styles are.

If you want to write a cover letter and then have one or more of your ref's sound almost the same - fine. But that send red flags to more alert bosses.

You; 'well my co teacher wasn't confident in writing English, so I wrote it and they signed it'

Boss: Ok I�ll trust that you wrote an honest and balanced ref about yourself! Rolling Eyes


I think it's an individual situation if it is worth it or not. One good thing about "I write it and you sign it" is that you will write with a Western-style tone. A reference letter should be honest but not necessarily balanced. It's an endorsement of your character, not a performance review. I'd be afraid that a letter written in Korean might come off in a different tone than what a Western manager would expect.
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