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steward
Joined: 12 Feb 2007 Posts: 5
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Posted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 5:16 pm Post subject: General start out advice needed |
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Hi,
I have no experience but am very interested in ESL teaching so I am looking for general and broad advice as well as specifics. There are many questions to follow, I know, but advice on any of the following would be very helpful to me. I am living in New York but would like to be able to teach overseas in the next year or two. I have a BA in English writing.
1. Does a TEFL, TESOL or CELTA certificate actually help- which is best and where do they respectively help geographically. Which areas in the world need which degree of certification etc. I would love to go to SE Asia, but might be in Europe for a while too. I know Europe has strict standards
2. Where is the best, most efficient place to get this certificate in new york? Is an online course just as good?- what about physical teaching training- what about oxford seminars or other schools?
3. Should you get training in the country you want to teach in ( I heard this is good for places like Thailand)- or is getting a certificate here enough to go over there and teach/get work, and is getting one a year before you do so worth it, or will it be useless to get trained here and go to a completely foreign system.
4. Basically, what is my best option/ course of action to be able to get work in say, one of five countries of my choice (my wife might work in Asia)- and what would give me the most leeway? what should I invest in and what not. What would be a waste of time.
I would be very thankful to anyone with any guidance to offer. All info will be very useful as I make decisions.
Thanks in advance.
E. Steward |
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wildchild

Joined: 14 Nov 2005 Posts: 519 Location: Puebla 2009 - 2010
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Posted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 8:05 pm Post subject: |
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I would advise you to start browsing through the many forums, threads and posts here on Dave's; the information that you seek, and much, much more, are to be found within. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Wed Feb 14, 2007 10:05 pm Post subject: |
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Basic qualifications: a bachelor's degree and (presumably) American citizenship. Ok, this qualifies you for pretty much nothing more than entry level work, but you probably realize that.
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1. Does a TEFL, TESOL or CELTA certificate actually help- which is best and where do they respectively help geographically. Which areas in the world need which degree of certification etc. I would love to go to SE Asia, but might be in Europe for a while too. I know Europe has strict standards |
Certification does not help you get a job in Japan, not does it usually lead to better pay. It is not even necessary to land an entry level job. It will probably help someone who has no experience to learn how to prepare lesson plans and execute them, and learn something about the theory of teaching. If you plan to make TEFL a long-term effort, go for it.
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2. Where is the best, most efficient place to get this certificate in new york? Is an online course just as good?- what about physical teaching training- what about oxford seminars or other schools? |
Can't help you with places to get certification, but get the type that involves live, not online, training. Pretty obvious why.
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3. Should you get training in the country you want to teach in ( I heard this is good for places like Thailand)- or is getting a certificate here enough to go over there and teach/get work, and is getting one a year before you do so worth it, or will it be useless to get trained here and go to a completely foreign system. |
In Japan, some entry level schools will provide a meager type of "training" and probationary salary. The former may last a day to 2 weeks, and the former may last a month to 3 months (with lower pay). It really does little more than give you practice on how that particular school wants teachers to act in the classroom. Some of it might carry over to another school, but some doesn't.
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4. Basically, what is my best option/ course of action to be able to get work in say, one of five countries of my choice (my wife might work in Asia)- and what would give me the most leeway? what should I invest in and what not. What would be a waste of time. |
Asia is pretty big. So is SE Asia. What 5 countries are you interested in? I would say if you have narrowed it down that far, visit each one's forum here and ask around. As far as Japan goes, I'd say you have 2 options:
A) JET programme www.jetprogramme.org
B) Major conversation schools (eikaiwa) that hire from abroad. Examples are NOVA, AEON, ECC, GEOS. Look at the Japan forum FAQ for more details.
Question 1. Do you plan to job hunt only from within the USA, or are you willing/able to support yourself for a couple of months while job hunting and living in a foreign land? It'll cost one person about US$4000-5000 to do that.
Question 2. What are your wife's qualifications? |
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steward
Joined: 12 Feb 2007 Posts: 5
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Posted: Thu Feb 15, 2007 1:03 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Glenski,
thank you for your detailed respopnse. My wife is in sales (A large US financial solutions firm), and is considering looking for a sales job in Asia, wherever she can find one. Granted, we are a bit clueless, and plan to go on a trip to checkout the scene- but we are interested in Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Korea, Japan - India would be good for her, but i dont know what the teaching options are. Perhaps, if she finds a job, i could do the research and training there.
Thanks again for your advice |
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GambateBingBangBOOM
Joined: 04 Nov 2003 Posts: 2021 Location: Japan
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Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 10:26 am Post subject: |
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Glenski wrote: |
Certification does not help you get a job in Japan, not does it usually lead to better pay. It is not even necessary to land an entry level job. It will probably help someone who has no experience to learn how to prepare lesson plans and execute them, and learn something about the theory of teaching. If you plan to make TEFL a long-term effort, go for it. |
I hear this type of thing all the time, but if you look through want ads and make connections that will help you get jobs outside of the Eikaiwa circuit etc then some sort of certificate is very, very often required in order to just apply. That's what my experience has been, and many of the people that I've known here who have looked for work after finishing their Sister City one-year (non-renewable) contract or finished JET have had big problems finding anything other than eikaiwa or juku or something because they don't have any qualifications in teaching English language, and often end up leaving Japan even though they don't want to. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Sun Feb 18, 2007 10:51 am Post subject: |
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GambatteBingBangBOOM,
All I'm going by is what I see in the ads, too, and for entry level work in Japan. That means eikaiwa and JET. Certification is not needed in most cases. The OP and his wife have no other qualifications, so to try getting other type of teaching work in Japan is pushing it in my opinion.
"Outside of the eikaiwa circuit" means a few things (in Japan):
ALT through the JET programme
ALT through a dispatch agency
direct hire through board of education
private school
university
business classes
JET doesn't require certification.
Dispatch agencies take whatever they get in the way of candidates, but most don't seem to ask for certification, either. Of course, I don't know what all ask for.
Direct hires are rare and usually require teaching experience, so I wouldn't bring this up. Same for private schools.
Universities require far greater qualifications, so the OP is automatically out of the running.
Business classes might want certification; I don't know a lot of them, but the top three ask for the following.
Simul wants: "TESOL or equivalent EFL qualifications plus a minimum of two years of business teaching experience "
Phoenix Associates wants "Native English level university/college graduates with business experience."
Sumikin asks for "Corporate training experience and professional qualification (e.g. MA TESL, Applied Linguistics, RSA Diploma or equivalent) preferred. (preferred doesn't mean required. Glenski)
What place other than an eikaiwa or dispatch outfit is there for the OP and his wife as newcomers? (Personally, I wouldn't wish dispatch work on anyone, but the work is there and growing.) |
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ilaria
Joined: 26 Jan 2007 Posts: 88 Location: Sicily
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Posted: Sun Feb 18, 2007 1:45 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: |
1. Does a TEFL, TESOL or CELTA certificate actually help- which is best and where do they respectively help geographically. Which areas in the world need which degree of certification etc. I would love to go to SE Asia, but might be in Europe for a while too. I know Europe has strict standards |
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we are interested in Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Korea, Japan |
I've worked in Thailand and Indonesia. Having a TESOL certificate definitely helped me get work in both countries.
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2. Where is the best, most efficient place to get this certificate in new york? Is an online course just as good?- what about physical teaching training- what about oxford seminars or other schools? |
Online courses lack teaching practice. As for Oxford Seminars, they give six days of training (including only one teaching practice session)... for $995. Which I find a little overpriced. To be fair, their job placement service is included in the cost. It specialises in Asia - so, it's not exactly a difficult task for their placement advisors to find jobs for you.
Put it this way about dodgy certificates. If Employer A doesn't require TEFL certification, he won't care if you have a bit of paper from an online/Oxford Seminars course or not. If Employer B does want TEFL-certified teachers, she'll look askance at your bit of paper from Bob's Online TEFL Ripoff Providers/Oxford Seminars, because she'll be well aware that your course didn't meet the right standard - 100+ hours total course length with at least 6 hours of observed teaching practice. Either way, you're better off not doing a course online or with a company like OS.
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3. Should you get training in the country you want to teach in ( I heard this is good for places like Thailand) |
It's a good idea. The training provider can often link you up with schools who need teachers - so you can start interviewing/working immediately after you finish the course, if you wish. Also, the course fees and living costs can be quite a bit cheaper abroad than in your own country (though with the US$ so weak at the moment, be careful about this).[/quote] |
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FuzzX
Joined: 14 Oct 2004 Posts: 122
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Posted: Sun Apr 08, 2007 10:08 pm Post subject: |
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1. DO YOU HAVE A DEGREE?
2. CAN YOU BUY ONE?
You dont need one for anything... if your an alright person you�ll get hired. |
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Sheikh Inal Ovar

Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 1208 Location: Melo Drama School
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Posted: Mon Apr 09, 2007 3:37 am Post subject: |
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FuzzX wrote: |
You dont need one for anything... if your an alright person you�ll get hired. |
Only in the world according to Fuzzy ... |
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FuzzX
Joined: 14 Oct 2004 Posts: 122
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Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2007 8:54 pm Post subject: |
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tell me where a degree will make me a better teacher?
I have 5 years of college
a college diploma in electronic engineering
a chef�s certification
an associates degree in police foundations
my dive instructor�s certification
a bartending diploma
a licence to drive forklift
I�ve taken TESOL and CELTA.
I have 4 years teaching experience in 4 different countries.
I�ve written all my own teaching materials AND I enjoy my job. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2007 9:47 pm Post subject: |
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It's obvious from the few recent posts from FuzzX that he/she doesn't believe much in a college education, at least for TEFL work. That's your prerogative. This is a stale old argument that I hope does not revive itself.
Basically, an education in any field will give you the tools for a background or foundation in it. What you do with the tools is up to you and your innate abilities.
Are some educated teachers good? Yes. Bad? Yes.
Are some uneducated teachers good? Yes. Bad? Yes.
Bottom line is that in most cases, you are better prepared to teach if you have an education in the field.
FuzzX is qualified for entry level TEFL work (in Japan anyway). What he/she would do to make the most of it is up to him/her. |
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Sheikh Inal Ovar

Joined: 04 Dec 2005 Posts: 1208 Location: Melo Drama School
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2007 6:04 am Post subject: |
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Let me spell it out for you Fuzzy ... just who exactly are these 'alright' gals or geezers ... people that you deem to be 'alright'? ... people of your own mindset?
They certainly can't include anyone with an eduaction as, in your own words,
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FuzzX
Joined: 14 Oct 2004 Posts: 122
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2007 10:21 pm Post subject: |
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I may be qualified for entry level in Japan but I certainly worked there and was paid the same amount as a degree holder in a normal school, which seemed to piss the �ther grads off a great deal.
Wasn�t a big fan of �sit down tax� though. Not much for having fingers jammed up my ass either.... I don�t even like my own fingers up there.  |
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