|
Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Students and Teachers from Around the World!"
|
View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
jm21
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 406
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:48 am Post subject: Teaching at a University in China with a JD, no experience? |
|
|
Moved this from the newbie forum, as I guess it fits better here.
My story: I am graduating from law school in the middle of May, and really need a break (perhaps permanent) from law. I was originally debating whether to be a teacher or go to law school, got a great scholarship from a law school, so I went, figuring a JD would help me out in other areas even if I didn't practice law. I've been wanting to travel abroad for years now, but have always been able to come up with excuses not to go (too expensive, working at X job would look better on my resume, etc). If I start practicing law, I won't ever be able to travel much. I'd like to take this chance and go. I'm also thinking of applying for the foreign service, but I'd really like to test out living abroad first, and think some experience working abroad would look good to them.
The pay doesn't really matter to me, but a job working at a Uni or College or something like that would look a hell of a lot better on my resume I think. I'm more concerned with getting single accommodations than a little money. Actually, making a low wage would probably allow me to get an economic deferment, so making under $1300/month or so is a good option for me. The wages in China seem to be about $500-1100 per month for entry level positions, with some sort of housing or housing allowance provided?
So I have a few basic questions. I've searched the forums a bit and am still unclear, and really wanted to have the answers when I go home this weekend for my mom's birthday and try to explain why I'm thinking about not practicing law after going through the three years of hell that is law school.
Is it possible to teach at a University (or maybe a college or something?) without teaching experience? I have a few months, several years ago, when I did some assistant teaching, but I'm pretty sure that doesn't count for much, if anything. I'll have a JD, and BA in English. I'm fine doing an online TEFL course while I finish off law school If I need to.
Like I said, I'd graduate in the middle of May. Is this too late to apply for jobs at Unis (I guess I could get some sort of letter from my school showing I'm going to graduate, now that I think about it)? I was thinking you could apply in June or July and still be OK, but not sure. Would I have enough time to take a 4 week TEFL course (to up my chances of employment hopefully), then look for a job at a University?
Are there any sort of programs that do TEFL training and help with placements in higher ed?
Thanks for any help you can give. I'm extremely grateful there are forums like this out there.
EDIT:
If I'm out of luck for teaching at a University, how common are jobs teaching at the primary or kindergarten level that I could get a job at? That's a job I'd really enjoy I think, even though it might not do anything for my resume.
EDIT2:
Forgot to say, I'm a 25yo white male from the US. I forgot that that might make a difference in China.
Last edited by jm21 on Thu Feb 28, 2008 11:02 am; edited 2 times in total |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
kungfucowboy83
Joined: 25 Jan 2006 Posts: 479
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 10:59 am Post subject: |
|
|
ince you have a ba in elinglish it shouldn't be a problem and the law school degree might just get you a job teaching some legal classes if you look around hard enough |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Beyond1984

Joined: 13 Dec 2007 Posts: 462
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:39 pm Post subject: Business Law/Business Ethics |
|
|
Do a search of joint venture business schools, in which a university in the US teams up with a university in China to offer programs taught in English. The graduates are awarded business degrees from both.
Some kind of Business Law/Business Ethics class is usually part of these curricula. These are often taught by retired judges with no teaching experience.
It may pay better than the low salary you are hoping for, but maybe you can talk them down
You will certainly earn substantially less than the amount the US government allows one to earn abroad tax-free: $85,000.
You will likely have up to 18 weeks of paid vacation, a western apartment walking distance to your classroom, motivated students and a teaching load of 12-15 hours/week.
Good luck!
-HDT
"How does it become a man to behave toward this American government today? I answer that he cannot without disgrace be associated with it."
-Henry David Thoreau, "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience," 1849 |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Jordean

Joined: 12 Dec 2006 Posts: 238
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:49 pm Post subject: |
|
|
I have a History PhD and a JD and seven years' practice under my belt, and no universities have offered anything more than teaching standard English classes. I would not count on a law lectureship, at least not at a 1st or 2nd tier school. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Anda

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 2199 Location: Jiangsu Province
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:49 pm Post subject: Um |
|
|
First University job and the crowd below will arrange a TEFL course for you here after you have arrived in China.
Contact Person: Susan Yao
Office Telephone: +86-25-83335972
Cell Phone:
Fax: +86-25-83335973
Email: [email protected]
Address: 15 W. Beijing Road, Nanjing 210024, P.R.China
Postcode: 210024
School Website: http://www.jsyk.cn
Jiangsu Education Center for International Exchanges (JECIE)The Affiliated High School to Jiangsu Education Institute. Nanjing No.14 Middle School. Nanjing No.1 Middle School. No.2 high School Affiliated to Nanjing ...
www.chinatefl.com/jiangsu/teach/jecie-2.htm - 59k -
...................................................................................................
All you need to know to get started.
Beginner�s Guide To Teaching English In China23 Apr 2007 ... Lizzy, a university student working at the school, was assigned to live with me for ... Are you still in China? I teach English in Chengde. ...
www.bravenewtraveler.com/2007/04/23/teach-english-china/ - 28k
......................................................................................
Teaching English in ChinaTeach English in Shenzhen, China Teach English speaking and listening skills and learn Mandarin Chinese. Each semester earn credits from the University of ...
http://www.transitionsabroad.com/listings/work/esl/china.shtml
............................................................................................... |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
roadwalker

Joined: 24 Aug 2005 Posts: 1750 Location: Ch
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 12:52 pm Post subject: |
|
|
I would push the JD. Don't let them confuse it with an undergraduate law degree. Spell it out, especially the Doctor part. It won't get you much more salary, but a bit more and you still won't be ineligible for your deferment. Save your bar review materials, if you will have them or course outlines for a lecture style class or two in either some facet of US law or international or commercial law. Many universities would be interested. I would love to see you try to teach the socratic method, just to see the look on the students' faces!
I think the TEFL cert will help job prospects and give you a bit of confidence and a kind of outline for teaching. It won't prepare you for a Chinese style classroom as you may surmise from reading other threads.
I don't think this is a real resume boost though, I suppose with enough lipstick, it could look good. But if you end up in the law grind, maybe this will be your last shot at free time (14-20 classroom hours/wk plus some prep time v. 40-plus billables at DC&H). Otherwise you may find you like teaching and make that decision. Good luck!
Oh forgot, at universities a decent apartment is usually standard, but conditions vary and you may get a housing allowance in lieu, especially in Beijing or Shanghai. It isn't counted as your salary for Chinese tax purposes I think. For your deferment, who knows? |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
jm21
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 406
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 1:29 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Thanks for the links Anda.
I'm not sure if teaching at a Uni in China would do much for my resume (for a law career, though maybe for a teaching or diplomatic career it'd look good), but at least it wouldn't hurt it, provided it was dressed up right ("well, I was going to take the bar, but then got an invitation to lecture at a prestigious university in China and..."). Mostly I would just prefer having bright, higher level students, or little kids. I'm not sure I'd like teaching at a middle or high school group all that much, or to a really mixed group. Just based on my experience doing some substitute assistant teaching work...I loved the little kids, but wanted to brain the high and middle schoolers sometimes....
Yes...law seems less and less appealing. I'd really like to get in the foreign service, but they seem very selective. Maybe I'd end up teaching abroad for a while if I really liked it, or come back to the US and get a teaching license....or maybe try to set up my own business...who knows. I'm tired of worrying about careers (edit: but apparently it's a damned hard habit to break) and big houses when I'm 25 and single...I need to slow down and enjoy my life a bit or I think I'm gonna burn out. I figure I'll be better off doing something I really want to than trying to force myself down a career path I don't like.
Beyond1984 - Hah, most law school classes are taught by people with no teaching experience, it seems to me. I've always been under the impression it's the journal articles that get you in the door. I'll check out the joint venture programs though.
Roadwalker - "I would push the JD. Don't let them confuse it with an undergraduate law degree. Spell it out, especially the Doctor part."
Haha, I was thinking along those lines.
"I think the TEFL cert will help job prospects and give you a bit of confidence and a kind of outline for teaching. It won't prepare you for a Chinese style classroom as you may surmise from reading other threads. "
I talked with someone who taught in Japan without any TEFL courses, and he said he felt at a total loss and wish he had taken a little extra time to do one. I'd definitely want to do one if I have the time. I think face-to-face courses are more credible and would prefer that.
Thank you all for the helpful comments! I'm getting more and more excited as I learn more. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Anda

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 2199 Location: Jiangsu Province
|
Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 11:09 pm Post subject: Um |
|
|
Give it a go! The kids are more fun. I teach kids part time and college students full time here.
.....................................................................................................
1 - 10 of about 265,000 for Elementary school china english teacher
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Elementary+school+china+english+teacher&btnG=Google+Search
Inside an Urban Elementary School in the. People's Republic of ChinaPeople's Republic of China The school day, begins with group exercise which is- ... and attentive Chinese elementary school, teachers are usually women and, ...
www.eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/recordDetail?accno=ED406465 - 22k - Cached - Similar pages
Native English Immersion Teacher Needed for Private Elementary ...Native English Immersion Teacher Needed for Private Elementary School in ... Want to get paid to live in Japan, Korea, China, or other parts of the world? ...
www.teachenglishinasia.net/jobs/native-english-immersion-teacher-needed-private-elementary-school-chuncheon - 29k - Cached - Similar pages
The Language Teacher Online: Tsao, June 2001The Language Teacher June 2001. Teaching English from Elementary School in an .... In fact, soon after the restoration of Taiwan to the Republic of China, ...
www.jalt-publications.org/tlt/articles/2001/06/tsao - 19k - Cached - Similar pages |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Jordean

Joined: 12 Dec 2006 Posts: 238
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 12:14 am Post subject: |
|
|
Another thought for what it's worth. If you haven't taken the bar yet, good luck after one or two years NOT doing law. Unless you are exceptionally brilliant, you should get the bar under your belt now. Teaching 'law' in China isn't going to help you keep fresh on all this.
The law sucks, but you should keep all viable options open.
I don't know how much employers are going to value your international experience, either. I would not accept the platitudes of the uninformed who are probably gushing about how knowing another language, etc., is a real plus. Interesting for cocktail party conversation, to be sure, but when push comes to shove, most Stateside employers could not care less about your overseas experience...
You should just do what you enjoy and not care how it's going to work out. If you really enjoy it, something fine will happen. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
jm21
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 406
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 12:58 am Post subject: |
|
|
Anda - That's a pretty good idea. I hadn't thought of doing one full time, one part, but if the hours are pretty low that might be a great setup.
Jordean wrote: |
Another thought for what it's worth. If you haven't taken the bar yet, good luck after one or two years NOT doing law. Unless you are exceptionally brilliant, you should get the bar under your belt now. Teaching 'law' in China isn't going to help you keep fresh on all this.
The law sucks, but you should keep all viable options open.
I don't know how much employers are going to value your international experience, either. I would not accept the platitudes of the uninformed who are probably gushing about how knowing another language, etc., is a real plus. Interesting for *beep* party conversation, to be sure, but when push comes to shove, most Stateside employers could not care less about your overseas experience...
You should just do what you enjoy and not care how it's going to work out. If you really enjoy it, something fine will happen. |
I think most employers won't value the international experience much, except as another job on the list (which is why I thought having X University, rather than X unknown private language school would be good). Some people might think it's good, most probably don't care. The only careers I'd think it might count towards at all would be teaching or diplomatic...teaching because it's, well, teaching...diplomatic because it shows you've lived in another country and probably aren't going to freak out and want to bail on them a month into your posting, after they've invested a lot into your training. Aside from that I'm not sure where it would help you except maybe some international business, which I wouldn't be interested in anyways. That's all speculation though really.
My concern with the bar is that I'm so burnt out on law school, that I'd spend $6k (well, $3.5k or so without living expenses included) on preparing (an amount which would cover my airfare, TEFL course, and then some) then fail because I couldn't focus enough. I'd rather be able to say I decided to postpone the bar or that I decided I didn't want to practice law, than have to say I failed it and ran off. I'm still not entirely sure whether I want to take the bar in OR, WA, or TX either...and if I'm going to take any of them I need to figure that out within a week or so, which is a very difficult decision...and if you fail you lose your eligibility for reciprocity in TX at least, I think WA as well and maybe OR...not sure if you can take the bar then immediately switch to inactive status either.
I think if I review some supplements and/or bar prep materials a bit in my spare time, a year won't be too bad. Maybe I'd have to do some extra prep work. 2 years would probably be pushing it. I was 3rd in my class my first year, but my grades have been steadily dropping since, and if that trend continues into the bar prep then that doesn't bode well for the exam. If I wait a year or two and decide to take it (which would mean I'm dissatisfied with what I'm doing), then I'll be so much more motivated and focused, I think I'd do better than if I took it now.
That was my thinking on it. What do you think? |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Anda

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 2199 Location: Jiangsu Province
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 1:49 am Post subject: |
|
|
I started University when I was about 42. Do what you are happy doing but keep in mind that an education is needed to get a good job. You might consider doing a masters unit in education if you find that you enjoy this kind of work. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
jm21
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 406
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 2:17 am Post subject: |
|
|
Anda wrote: |
I started University when I was about 42. Do what you are happy doing but keep in mind that an education is needed to get a good job. You might consider doing a masters unit in education if you find that you enjoy this kind of work. |
If I went back to school (argh, again?) for teaching, I'd probably do one of the programs like OR has, where you get licensed and with a little extra work get a MAT degree at the same time....not sure how a MAT and M.Ed. compare...and not sure if either would add much since I'll already have a JD. Do employers abroad have some preference for M.Eds? |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Jordean

Joined: 12 Dec 2006 Posts: 238
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 3:45 am Post subject: |
|
|
jm21 wrote: |
My concern with the bar is that I'm so burnt out on law school, that I'd spend $6k (well, $3.5k or so without living expenses included) on preparing (an amount which would cover my airfare, TEFL course, and then some) then fail because I couldn't focus enough. I'd rather be able to say I decided to postpone the bar or that I decided I didn't want to practice law, than have to say I failed it and ran off. I'm still not entirely sure whether I want to take the bar in OR, WA, or TX either...and if I'm going to take any of them I need to figure that out within a week or so, which is a very difficult decision...and if you fail you lose your eligibility for reciprocity in TX at least, I think WA as well and maybe OR...not sure if you can take the bar then immediately switch to inactive status either.
I think if I review some supplements and/or bar prep materials a bit in my spare time, a year won't be too bad. Maybe I'd have to do some extra prep work. 2 years would probably be pushing it. I was 3rd in my class my first year, but my grades have been steadily dropping since, and if that trend continues into the bar prep then that doesn't bode well for the exam. If I wait a year or two and decide to take it (which would mean I'm dissatisfied with what I'm doing), then I'll be so much more motivated and focused, I think I'd do better than if I took it now.
That was my thinking on it. What do you think? |
Everyone is burned out after three years of law school. If you can do the review and take it this summer, then you can just go off to China and not worry about it. After the torture of Bar prep, China will seem like a breath of fresh air. And if you decide to go back to the law, voila, you're good to go.
As they say, strike while the iron is hot... |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Anda

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 2199 Location: Jiangsu Province
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 4:54 am Post subject: Um |
|
|
The systems change from country to country but in Australia you can do a Masters in linguistics which is a Masters in education in eight units of study. You can also do this by distance education while teaching English here. However you would need time off to sit eams twice a year. You can sit exams here for many of courses.
With a masters in education you can get teaching accreditation in your home country which opens up doors with international schools and good money. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
jm21
Joined: 26 Feb 2008 Posts: 406
|
Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 3:21 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Jordean wrote: |
Everyone is burned out after three years of law school. If you can do the review and take it this summer, then you can just go off to China and not worry about it. After the torture of Bar prep, China will seem like a breath of fresh air. And if you decide to go back to the law, voila, you're good to go.
As they say, strike while the iron is hot... |
Hmm, ya, I suppose everyone is burnt out by the time of the bar. It just seemed like I was more-so than other students from what I see at school, but maybe they're all thinking the same thing.
Wonder what the chances are of getting a legal job after spending a long time away?
So a good plan for me, for now, would probably be:
1. Start some online tefl course
2. Finish law school
3. Start studying for the bar and applying to some of the universities in China in Mid-late May
4. Take the bar in July
5. Fly off , assuming I got a job, sometime in August. (or fly over at the end of July, very beginning of August, and do a hands-on/face-to-face tefl course?)
EDIT:
Was looking up some more specific info on some of the towns on that Jiangsu education center website, and the KFC endorsement on Suzhou's official website just cracked me up. http://www.suzhou.gov.cn/English/live/33.shtml |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
This page is maintained by the one and only Dave Sperling. Contact Dave's ESL Cafe
Copyright © 2018 Dave Sperling. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
|