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Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher?
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ndelarosa



Joined: 03 Dec 2015
Posts: 5
Location: Bangkok, Thailand

PostPosted: Fri Feb 05, 2016 8:07 am    Post subject: Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher? Reply with quote

Hello all,

I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok that caters towards infant/toddlers to preschool age children. I'm a little worried because the only teaching experience I've had was the fieldwork given in both programs. I am wondering if anyone can give me some advice for the following:

1. What are your opinions teaching in an international school, government school, or private language institute? Would any of these schools be a good stepping stone for someone new to the ESL field?

2. I have read from other forums that in order to get a visa/work permit, I will need to bring: my degree, passport, a police check, and school transcripts. Is there anything else that I would need to bring?

3. Are there personal experiences you can share when you first started teaching abroad?

Thank you all for your time!
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suphanburi



Joined: 20 Mar 2014
Posts: 916

PostPosted: Fri Feb 05, 2016 9:15 am    Post subject: Re: Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher? Reply with quote

ndelarosa wrote:
Hello all,

I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok that caters towards infant/toddlers to preschool age children. I'm a little worried because the only teaching experience I've had was the fieldwork given in both programs. I am wondering if anyone can give me some advice for the following:

1. What are your opinions teaching in an international school, government school, or private language institute? Would any of these schools be a good stepping stone for someone new to the ESL field?

2. I have read from other forums that in order to get a visa/work permit, I will need to bring: my degree, passport, a police check, and school transcripts. Is there anything else that I would need to bring?

3. Are there personal experiences you can share when you first started teaching abroad?

Thank you all for your time!


1)
...a) Without being certified as a teacher (license) or having a B.Ed the chances of getting hired at an international school are not good.
...b) odds of landing a position at a government school as a primary school EFL teacher are 100% but you'll be starting work in May, not March.
...c) language academies are focused on afterschool, evenings and weekends. There isn't much demand for EFL to toddlers at language centers.
...d) there will also be lots of work in PRIVATE K-12 schools for someone who is actually trained to deal with toddlers. Land and simply google "ajarn" or "teaching in Thailand." March to May with jobs starting in May.
...e) There are LOTS of kindergartens that would love you have you. Again, Hiring takes place from March to May with positions starting in May.

2) you are correct. You will need your degree, transcript, and a police clearance. There is now a requirement to have your degree "authenticated" and Americans have problems getting it done at the US Embassy (they won't authenticate anything). You might want to get an apostille from your state's "Secretary of State" even though Thailand is not a signatory to the Hague convention (apostille treaty).

3) Relax. I assume from your basic info that you are a female and under 30 to go with your BA. Right after Songkran you'll have your pick of jobs.

The biggest issue you'll face is making big issues out of nothing.
This isn't the US.
The rules are DIFFERENT.
Learn the rules BEFORE you start making noises and don't talk about the royal family (unless you want to spend 15 years in Jail).
Oh, and the police are NOT your friend. It is safer to deal with organized crime gangs than the police.

"Pattaya police, army bust 32 foreigners for playing bridge "
CHON BURI – Nearly three dozen foreigners, many of them pensioners, were arrested and fined 5,000 baht each for playing bridge in Pattaya.

Local police, soldiers and Bang Lamung district officials raided a Jomtien & Pattaya Bridge Club meeting above Alto's restaurant off Thappraya Road in the resort city on Wednesday, taking into custody 32 people, mostly European nationals, and holding them until 3am.

From the Bangkok Post, Feb 4.
Also available from the BBC and Al Jazera websites.
Video of the bust on Youtube.

.
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nomad soul



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 11454
Location: The real world

PostPosted: Fri Feb 05, 2016 9:37 am    Post subject: Re: Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher? Reply with quote

ndelarosa wrote:
I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok that caters towards infant/toddlers to preschool age children.

Is there a reason why you've chosen to not pursue a teaching license? That would open way more doors for you worldwide, especially if you add a year of US teaching experience.
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ndelarosa



Joined: 03 Dec 2015
Posts: 5
Location: Bangkok, Thailand

PostPosted: Sat Feb 06, 2016 12:48 am    Post subject: Re: Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher? Reply with quote

nomad soul wrote:
ndelarosa wrote:
I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok that caters towards infant/toddlers to preschool age children.

Is there a reason why you've chosen to not pursue a teaching license? That would open way more doors for you worldwide, especially if you add a year of US teaching experience.


My fiance is doing business in Thailand so I am following him there. I was thinking of doing my teacher's license in the future, most likely in a university in Thailand. The whole timing with him doing his business and me getting my credential doesn't work out right now :[
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suphanburi



Joined: 20 Mar 2014
Posts: 916

PostPosted: Sat Feb 06, 2016 3:17 am    Post subject: Re: Traveling to Thailand...advice for a fledgling teacher? Reply with quote

MOD EDIT
Finding jobs in Thailand is ALL about being on the ground.

The only schools that hire from overseas are the top internationals (and you don't meet their minimum requirements (licensure and experience) and schools who can't hire locally because of their poor staff mismanagement (places like Sarasas).

From the states the easiest thing is to just get a "certified true copy" made by a notary and get an apostille affixed at Secretary of State for your state. (usually only takes a short time - days as compared to weeks or months).

Getting it done in Thailand is an exercise in futility, expensive and difficult.

.
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sigmoid



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 1276

PostPosted: Sat Feb 06, 2016 4:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok


Is this your first trip to Thailand?

if so, it would certainly behoove you to become familiar with the current economic and political climate there as well as the short-term outlook for the kingdom. Suphanburi scratches the surface in his comments above.
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ndelarosa



Joined: 03 Dec 2015
Posts: 5
Location: Bangkok, Thailand

PostPosted: Sat Feb 06, 2016 8:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sigmoid wrote:
Quote:
I've recently graduated with a B.A. in Child Development and a TEFL certificate in the USA. I am traveling to Thailand in the end of March and I am hoping to find a job in Bangkok


Is this your first trip to Thailand?

if so, it would certainly behoove you to become familiar with the current economic and political climate there as well as the short-term outlook for the kingdom. Suphanburi scratches the surface in his comments above.


I've been to Thailand for summer vacation in the past 3 years, but I've only stayed for about two weeks and I was o