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Boring Letters of Application
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CoolThailand



Joined: 08 Jun 2007
Posts: 18

PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 5:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I sometimes wonder whether composing a letter with any real depth or meaningful content is worthwhile in Thailand. The majority of Thais on the receiving end of the letter probably don't understand it anyway ... best to keep it simple stupid (KISS), I find.
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Justin Trullinger



Joined: 28 Jan 2005
Posts: 3110
Location: Seoul, South Korea and Myanmar for a bit

PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 4:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Can't decide if this deserves its own thread, so I'll try it here. Recently, rather than the merely boring application letters, to which I have become acustomed, I've received a rash of letters I find, frankly, a little too concise. Perhaps "blunt" or "to the point" would be a polite way of describing them, but frankly, I find them a bit rude. Have I been in Latin America too long? (Where everyone always enquires about the health and families of others before getting down to it) Or is there something a bit unsettling about these emails? (Examples below)



To whom it may concern:
I am interested in applying to your school. Please send me an application.

Sincerely,

John Doe



Dear School,
I am looking for teaching work. How should I apply?

Regards,

Jane Smith



And on and on it goes- I really appreciate concise. But there comes a point where being overly concise (to me) runs the risk of A) being rude, and B) not giving enough information. (For example, I receive emails several times a week asking for information about our "programs." As a mid sized organisation, we have a lot of very different programs. And I'm not going to clog the net by sending descriptions of them all. If they told me what they were interested in...)
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DNK



Joined: 22 Jan 2007
Posts: 236
Location: the South

PostPosted: Wed Jun 13, 2007 7:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Interesting thread. I have a question, or idea at least:

Would it be alright to include maybe a second, more in-depth personal bio/whatever as an attachment? Say, you'd have a CL with the usual, concise, get to the point but include the relevant information thing, and then a maybe one- or two-page letter that talks about past experiences, style, etc? The recruiter wouldn't have to read it off the bat, but if your CL made it through the first pass, and they read your CV and liked it, this might save some time with the back and forth.

I'm not aware of it being common practice, but I'm wondering if those of you who deal with this sort of thing would appreciate it or not.
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sigmoid



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 1276

PostPosted: Fri Jun 15, 2007 8:45 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

No one seems to have mentioned that schools are often just as guilty when it comes to posting job ads: very little information or a lot of irrelevant information. Like most situations, it is a two-way street.
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merlin



Joined: 10 May 2004
Posts: 582
Location: Somewhere between Camelot and NeverNeverLand

PostPosted: Fri Jun 29, 2007 8:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey - I just sent that letter of application!

Got the job, too. Great job, great school, great salary.

No BS, no jumping through hoops, no self-important "screener". They wanted me and I wanted them. What could be more simple?

I showed what they wanted through a teaching demo.

What I've discovered over 10 years is this: the harder the shool makes it to apply the worse it will be working for the organization. A 10-page application is just a preview of an organization where teaching will be controlled by people who have no idea what great teaching is (not that I claim to be a great teacher of course, but I CAN recognize its lack).

And all the great jobs I've had were just as simple as saying "I'm available" at the right place at the right time - whether I was there by by design or coincidence.

If I ever get into TEFL management the first neck under the axe will be the guy/gal who spends more than 10 hours a month hiring people.

Quote:
Like most situations, it is a two-way street

Ditto
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DNK



Joined: 22 Jan 2007
Posts: 236
Location: the South

PostPosted: Sat Jun 30, 2007 3:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Really? I would've expected the ones with the largest processes would be best since they cared for the best quality, but maybe it just means they're into lots of hoop jumping and have extremely high expectations, etc...
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Glenski



Joined: 15 Jan 2003
Posts: 12844
Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN

PostPosted: Sat Jun 30, 2007 8:31 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Justin and other employers at large,

Do you prefer applicants to send you an attached resume, zipped or otherwise, or a resume embedded in the text of the email (to avoid viruses)?

Seems to me this could go either way.

1) A place with good anti-virus software would be able to avoid the majority of problems in attachments.

2) Text-embedded resumes lose their flavor and polish with the loss of formatting. I just LOVE using the right font, bold, and underlining and would hate to carve it out just because an employer doesn't have the sense to use an anti-virus software package.
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nomadder



Joined: 15 Feb 2003
Posts: 709
Location: Somewherebetweenhereandthere

PostPosted: Mon Jul 02, 2007 10:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Given the way people are these days, who's going to send out a whole lot of info if A) you don't know if there are any jobs available
B) there may or may not be any jobs available but people respond only when it suits them

Why waste so much time and writing/reading on both sides? If on the other hand you know there is a position available, then is the time to make an interesting and informative cover letter. Even then, you can spend hours composing it and your resume only to hear back zilch. I still don't get the irony. It's never been easier to send a quick reply and yet...

Recently I tried for something else-not job related exactly-I was nearly touched that the woman called everyone back one way or the other. CALLED! It hardly mattered whether I got it or not. Just the decent gesture and nice message left. Leaves goodwill for that place and I'll go there in the future as a patron and maybe try again. As for the others... Confused Bad karma!

Well done Merlin! I've had that happen sometimes too-great feeling to be looking in the right place at the right time and find a perfect match. About as rare as love at first sight. Laughing

Can I inquire as to which country and/or what may have helped you land the job besides timing?
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Henry_Cowell



Joined: 27 May 2005
Posts: 3352
Location: Berkeley

PostPosted: Mon Jul 02, 2007 10:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's nothing wrong with creating a nice PDF of your resume. It will preserve all the fancy formatting that you give to your Word document. PDFs are readable by anyone with Adobe Acrobat Reader.
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Ahchoo



Joined: 22 Mar 2007
Posts: 606
Location: Earth

PostPosted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 4:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Why are you contacting me? (presumably because you would like to apply, but at least please say so.)
Who are you?
Name?
Nationality?
Age?
Sex?
Where are you now?
When will you be available?
Qualifications? (in brief)
Experience? (in brief)
The basic terms are clearly (albiet briefly) stated in the ad, don't tell me what you 'require'.
Don't attach documents, I don't open attachments that may come from a virus infected staffroom computer.
Particularly don't send a stack of attachments without even a word of introduction.
Don't ask what the application procedure is, you're involved in it now, this is it.
Don't send an 8 word message like " I would like to teach English in China" and nothing else, I already assumed that when I saw your email in the inbox, more information please.
If you have questions ask them all at once, not one a day, I'm a little busy.
Please make sure your letter is coherent so I won't think it's someone taking the mickey.
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Stephen Jones



Joined: 21 Feb 2003
Posts: 4124

PostPosted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 7:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Don't attach documents, I don't open attachments that may come from a virus infected staffroom computer.
So because you're too idle to download a free anti-virus program you ignore two-thirds of your job applications. Marvellous!
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Ahchoo



Joined: 22 Mar 2007
Posts: 606
Location: Earth

PostPosted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 8:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Stephen Jones wrote:
Quote:
Don't attach documents, I don't open attachments that may come from a virus infected staffroom computer.
So because you're too idle to download a free anti-virus program you ignore two-thirds of your job applications. Marvellous!

No, the computer I'm using has Chinese widows and I don't trust myself to operate the Virus protection systems properly. Being Chinese windows it automatically downloads the Chinese version of any software for some reason)
I don't need to see a scan of your degree, I believe you.
How much trouble can it be to type 'I have a **** degree in *****'?
You don't need to type it all out everytime either, save a word doc and cut and paste.

Another thing, if you're in Nigeria, forget it.
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MELEE



Joined: 22 Jan 2003
Posts: 2583
Location: The Mexican Hinterland

PostPosted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 2:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

merlin wrote:
No BS, no jumping through hoops, no self-important "screener". They wanted me and I wanted them. What could be more simple?

I showed what they wanted through a teaching demo.

What I've discovered over 10 years is this: the harder the shool makes it to apply the worse it will be working for the organization. A 10-page application is just a preview of an organization where teaching will be controlled by people who have no idea what great teaching is (not that I claim to be a great teacher of course, but I CAN recognize its lack).




Merlin, if you ever get a TEFL management position you will begin to see why schools do these things. Of course, a ten page application is over the top. But after you put a lot of time and money into recruiting someone, conduct a long distance phone interview, answer all their questions, decide you want them, make a job offer and that's it, you never hear back from them, not a no thank you, not an excuse about the health of their mother, or mention of a higher paying offer in a country with a drastically different economy. You spend 5 days waiting to see if they are going to accept the position, meanwhile your second, third and fourth choices are tired of hanging on the line and accept other positions. I make an effort to acknowledge all applicants, but applicants don't make the same effort to let us know where they stand in the process. Meanwhile my higher ups are demanding to know why there are 1 hour phone calls to Turkey, Moscow, and a Japanese cell phone on the bill but I still have no teachers to show for it.

We send out an intial questionnaire with 5 questions on it. The main purpose of this questionnaire is to gage an applicants interest. Some never return it. Some answer with curt one sentence answers. Others take the time to respond with thoughtful responses. It doesn't really matter what they say. But that they took the time to do it and then to edit it!!! It shows us that they care about applying for this job.

I work at a largish public institution in a developing country. There are going to be hoops to jump through if you work here. We try to keep them to a minimum. But if us asking you to complete a peliminary questionnaire is too much for you, you're right, you wouldn't want to work here. But if you want to do the best you can for students in need. Then answering 5 questions is well worth the time and effort.

Good luck on your new job, Merlin and all the others that are changing schools this term.
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denise



Joined: 23 Apr 2003
Posts: 3419
Location: finally home-ish

PostPosted: Tue Jul 03, 2007 4:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

sigmoid wrote:
No one seems to have mentioned that schools are often just as guilty when it comes to posting job ads: very little information or a lot of irrelevant information. Like most situations, it is a two-way street.


I agree. I don't like applying for jobs that don't mention the working conditions (# of contact hours, approximate ages/levels/number of students per class, etc.) and SALARY!!!! It seems downright cruel not to mention the salary, given that it's taboo for job-seekers to ask about it! (And honestly, schools must surely know that it is a big factor! Not that we're ONLY in it for the money or that other factors, including the satisfaction of the job itself, aren't important, but come on! We need to survive!)

Merlin--I agree with a lot of your post, too--but Embarassed I confess that after a few years here at Dave's I have yet to attempt a multiple-quote in a post, so I'm not quoting you... I think a short questionnaire like MELEE mentioned is OK. At the very least, it lets them see our writing skills. Still, to ask for a cover letter + CV + multiple-page questionnaire + sample teaching materials + lesson plan +... etc, etc. I'm qualified and experienced enough for many jobs out there (sorry, not to toot my own horn...) but... no thank you! I will gladly send references, letters of recommendation, copies of degrees, etc., AFTER initial contact has been made (and often these things are required after the interview, or at least after an interview has been scheduled), but come on! It's not like I only apply for one job at a time and I have all the time in the world to devote to that particular school. I do enough research on each school that I apply to to be able to tailor my cover letter and show a basic knowledge of the program, but I do have other uses for my time.

d
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ShapeSphere



Joined: 16 Oct 2004
Posts: 386

PostPosted: Wed Jul 04, 2007 5:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

merlin wrote:
What I've discovered over 10 years is this: the harder the school makes it to apply the worse it will be working for the organization.


Totally agree, and it's been my 19 year-experience in computers (previous career) and teaching at present. I think a lot of all this job hunting is luck. You can make yourself a bit luckier by constructing a cover letter that is grammatically correct and by following the instructions laid out in the job ad. But right place, right time is the main factor.

If you get to the interview, you can help yourself by being sober and smartly-dressed, but if the interviewer doesn't like you, no chance. It all comes down to rapport and a bit of luck again. This is based on my experience and colleagues/friends I've spoken with. Don't know about yours.

I've always noticed that if I act deferential it garners a greater response. Should I have the temerity to ask a few questions it's generally frowned upon. Offering a suggestion for a phone interview as an initial contact resulted in the employer not replying. (The job was distant and I thought this would help both parties). This kind of initiative (or audacity/rudeness) could be seen as troublesome to a prospective boss.

Ahchoo wrote:
Don't attach documents, I don't open attachments that may come from a virus infected staffroom computer.


I assume you mention this in your job ad? I'm always very careful to follow the ads regard this. But I am not a mind reader and regretfully cannot know what goes in the recesses of your brain.

Ahchoo wrote:
I don't need to see a scan of your degree, I believe you.
How much trouble can it be to type 'I have a **** degree in *****'?


I admit I find this very odd. It's been well documented in the media that incredible numbers of people are giving out fake information about degrees. Either raising their qualifications or concocting new ones.

DNK wrote:
Really? I would've expected the ones with the largest processes would be best since they cared for the best quality, but maybe it just means they're into lots of hoop jumping and have extremely high expectations, etc...


I find that too much bureaucracy hints at people wanting to retain their jobs for the sake of it, as opposed to caring or efficiency.

But answering five questions or filling out a couple of pages is fine by me. That's not an unreasonable request. But an employer should acknowledge receipt of the documents. It demonstrates professionalism and courtesy.
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