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dog@kew
Joined: 10 Jan 2010 Posts: 13
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Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2010 2:56 am Post subject: Build your ultimate ESL teacher |
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I thought I'd ask this separately from my other post: What would someone do if they started over, say, from about where I am? If I could go back, I'd have done things far differently than I did getting my BA. I know even less about this than I did about that. So I'll describe my self and situation, in the hope that some of you want to advise me:
I'm 31, live in Vancouver BC, where I've mostly held service industry jobs. Lately I got an BA in English, where I did well enough to consider but despair of going to grad school. I've gotten a very little bit of work at a tutoring centre (the subject of my other post), but otherwise have no qualifications.
Money wise, I'm completely broke; I'm not negatively wealthy, but I'm getting there. I have no dependents, no need to stay in the city. I don't need to make a lot of money (but I wouldn't object), or start a family.
I like post-secondary school; I'm interested in education, maybe in a more abstract sense than would make me a good teacher, at least in "the trenches." I figure I'll need to go back to school and the idea of going for a long time doesn't bother me in the least.
As for working conditions: hard work doesn't bother me, but a lot of stress does. I'd like to avoid treating teaching as an industry, if I could get away with it.
I'm not a disciplinarian, and not able to be entertaining at will (not to say I want to be left alone with my 100 cats and newspaper collection; I'm just not a type A sort of person. I gathered on the other thread that I'll never do well with involuntary students.
So, what would you do if you were me? something else entirely? Where would you go? |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2010 3:44 am Post subject: |
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You must have had some sort of plan while you were working and studying. What was it?
You've graduated and are now broke and looking for a teaching job. Congratulations. You are just like younger graduates, except that you are older. Some take the plunge abroad; the thrifty keep their heads above water, while the others blow it all and often come back complaining.
Unless you are able to find some employer abroad who is willing to pay to fly you there, I'd say stick with trying to build up some experience at home first, and look for local work teaching. I have no idea what it is like in Canada. Perhaps use your service industry experience to find foreign students that need business English along those lines...?
If you have a long-term goal to teach, you might want to consider looking into a master's plan, too, but for now, I would think that you'd want the work to put a bit of money away first. A master's will help you go further, but you need to stabilize your finances now, it seems. |
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dog@kew
Joined: 10 Jan 2010 Posts: 13
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Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2010 4:30 am Post subject: |
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It's pretty competitive here in Canada, it seems, so much that school looks like a better way to go than trying to get work experience. I appreciate most any commentary, but I'm wondering more about what a long-term plan looks like, than what I should do right now. I didn't have a plan for the degree; if I were just like the younger graduates who have plans, I wouldn't need to ask. But I guess I should probably search the previous threads some more, since the advice would be similar. Thanks for the info. |
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jdl

Joined: 06 Apr 2005 Posts: 632 Location: cyberspace
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Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2010 12:36 pm Post subject: |
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Teaching children and young adults is a high stress job. If you are not at all entertaining, then adults will 'vote with their feet' and we know the employment implications of that. Did I say teaching children and young adults is high stress!
How did you ever decide on education as a career path? How successful were you in the non education service sector?
I would certainly try out some teaching either as a volunteer or coach before investing money and time into a teaching degree.
As Glenski asks, "What was your plan" |
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naturegirl321

Joined: 04 May 2003 Posts: 9041 Location: home sweet home
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Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2010 4:15 am Post subject: |
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Make a plan, work towards it and change your plan as your goals change. |
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The Ever-changing Cleric

Joined: 19 Feb 2009 Posts: 1523
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Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2010 6:05 am Post subject: Re: Build your ultimate ESL teacher |
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dog@kew wrote: |
Money wise, I'm completely broke; I'm not negatively wealthy, but I'm getting there. |
this is your biggest obstacle. here's my short term plan for you:
1. find a job that will make you positively wealthy.
2. pay off any debt.
3. establish some savings.
4. if you can complete 1-3 within a year or two, then you begin to have some options in life.
dog@kew wrote: |
I appreciate most any commentary, but I'm wondering more about what a long-term plan looks like, than what I should do right now. |
in my opinion, unless you take care of your more pressing short term problems first (lack of cash) there's no point in making any long term plans.
good luck.
Last edited by The Ever-changing Cleric on Sat Jan 16, 2010 7:15 am; edited 1 time in total |
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norwalkesl
Joined: 22 Oct 2009 Posts: 366 Location: Ch-Ch-Ch-Ch-China
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Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2010 6:34 am Post subject: Re: Build your ultimate ESL teacher |
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dog@kew wrote: |
I thought I'd ask this separately from my other post: What would someone do if they started over, say, from about where I am? If I could go back, I'd have done things far differently than I did getting my BA. I know even less about this than I did about that. So I'll describe my self and situation, in the hope that some of you want to advise me:
I'm 31, live in Vancouver BC, where I've mostly held service industry jobs. Lately I got an BA in English, where I did well enough to consider but despair of going to grad school. I've gotten a very little bit of work at a tutoring centre (the subject of my other post), but otherwise have no qualifications.
Money wise, I'm completely broke; I'm not negatively wealthy, but I'm getting there. I have no dependents, no need to stay in the city. I don't need to make a lot of money (but I wouldn't object), or start a family.
I like post-secondary school; I'm interested in education, maybe in a more abstract sense than would make me a good teacher, at least in "the trenches." I figure I'll need to go back to school and the idea of going for a long time doesn't bother me in the least.
As for working conditions: hard work doesn't bother me, but a lot of stress does. I'd like to avoid treating teaching as an industry, if I could get away with it.
I'm not a disciplinarian, and not able to be entertaining at will (not to say I want to be left alone with my 100 cats and newspaper collection; I'm just not a type A sort of person. I gathered on the other thread that I'll never do well with involuntary students.
So, what would you do if you were me? something else entirely? Where would you go? |
All prices are in USD. Don't let "what you are supposed to be/do/have" get you down. Having things is waaaay overrated.
To enact an ESL plan and have money just in case, $2,000 is the minimum USD to have on hand after you get where you will be teaching. $3,000 is best, and of course more is better. Barest minimum if everything works out and you don't need to spend on any exigencies?
$500 USD. But I do NOT recommend it. Credit cards for safety, too.
$3,000 will allow you to get the hell out of country if things go very bad quickly, walk up to an airline counter and buy a ticket out, or buy a train ticket to somewhere else.
As far as in country set up costs, I found that in China and Mexico, $1,000 USD is MUCH more than enough to have money for a few months while you get a job and get the first paycheck and buy things for the house/apt. In fact my first months costs were WELL under $200.
In the USA/EU another matter entirely. To repatriate and have enough cash, $5,000 barest minimum and $10,000 would be better. In the USA and much of Canada an auto is absolutely necessary and they are not cheap unless you buy a beater (very old used car in very bad condition) for $500 USD. First, last and one months rent can easily be $3,000 in a major US city, and much much more in places like LA and Manhattan for an apartmeny. The cheaper route is to share a house with your own private bedroom, $400-$600 a month, no deposits.
Have a network of friends and relatives and former employers that you can rely upon if TSHTF and you need to leave/move on short notice. No one plans to be one of those sad-sacked long faced laowais living in a run down brokedown palaces in Thailand. |
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dog@kew
Joined: 10 Jan 2010 Posts: 13
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Posted: Sun Jan 17, 2010 11:42 pm Post subject: throwing elbows |
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Thank you, Cleric and Norwalk. That actually helps. But, do postings that display any weakness ordinarily recieve a torrent of crowing discouragement, or is it just mine? Sometimes I think there's something about me, that's even apparent in print, which makes a certain psychological type want to kick me in the shins. I recognize a certain tone here; some of my elementary school teachers would get just the same ecstatic sobriety in their voices when they'd dole out an unfair punishment. I remember it. Leave it to you guys, huh? Maybe I should. |
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mozzar
Joined: 16 May 2009 Posts: 339 Location: France
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Posted: Mon Jan 18, 2010 12:35 am Post subject: |
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I think it's a case of warning you of the worst possibilities and being safe. If everyone on the board went around saying how easy and great teaching is they'd not only be lying, but we'd have a lot of angry people posting from some far flung region with no job, no money and no way to get home. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Mon Jan 18, 2010 3:08 am Post subject: |
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Thanks to mozzar for summing up the "discouraging" responses to date.
We aren't saying you shouldn't come. We are saying it would be unwise in your financial situation, and that you should plan better and prepare a bit more to be safe. Most newbies here in Japan have your lack of experience teaching and just a freshly minted degree, but do you really want to move somewhere that you can't afford? or can't afford to leave?
You wanted advice. We gave it. Don't complain just because it wasn't what you wanted or expected. At least we're polite about it. |
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santi84
Joined: 14 Mar 2008 Posts: 1317 Location: under da sea
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Posted: Mon Jan 18, 2010 3:45 am Post subject: Re: throwing elbows |
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dog@kew wrote: |
Thank you, Cleric and Norwalk. That actually helps. But, do postings that display any weakness ordinarily recieve a torrent of crowing discouragement, or is it just mine? Sometimes I think there's something about me, that's even apparent in print, which makes a certain psychological type want to kick me in the shins. I recognize a certain tone here; some of my elementary school teachers would get just the same ecstatic sobriety in their voices when they'd dole out an unfair punishment. I remember it. Leave it to you guys, huh? Maybe I should. |
Given your description of your previous teaching experience:
http://forums.eslcafe.com/job/viewtopic.php?t=78187
You would be wise not to disregard the other posters, especially jdl's emphasis on the stress in the job. If the situation you described occurred at your overseas job, you could be fired. I would say that you would almost certainly be fired in that situation. Without any money to back yourself up, you'd be in a real pickle.
There's no discouragement or shin-kicking, just the reality of the situation. I know you have issues with how some previous educators conducted themselves, but EFL (and ESL, mostly) is a business, before anything else. There is no way avoiding it, unless you volunteer tutor - and that doesn't pay any bills. |
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dog@kew
Joined: 10 Jan 2010 Posts: 13
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Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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Fair enough. I consider myself well advised not to go beyond the safety nets in the shape I'm in now. It's just that lots of people, like me, are pretty good on their own at coming up with reasons not to try anything new. Blindness to what could go wrong, or to how difficult something might be, usually isn't my problem; but, I tend to solicit a lot of advice that assumes I'm not hard enough on myself, or not worried enough. I've lost a lot of good years to a fear of the unknown, so it gets my back up a bit when I feel as though I'm being told that I'm not scared enough.
So, is this strictly a gig for hard-asses and salesmen? Is there no point in even getting educated for it if you aren't going to be a public school teacher down the road? No point in learning if you aren't good already? |
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santi84
Joined: 14 Mar 2008 Posts: 1317 Location: under da sea
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Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 9:49 pm Post subject: |
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dog@kew wrote: |
So, is this strictly a gig for hard-asses and salesmen?
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No, not at all. In EFL (and in ESL, although public schools can be different), it is a business. There are few students who take English for "fun", they either require it for business or academic purposes (this is 99.9999% of EFL in Asia), or because they need English to survive on a daily basis (this is ESL in North America). You do not have to be a salesman, but you do have to keep in mind that students are there to learn English for their own purpose, needs, etc. and have expectations to learn what is required for the goals.
Your experience at the tutoring centre is really similar to any sort of teaching gig that you will be able to get with your qualifications (I suspect this was a tutoring centre for Korean students? Something similar?)
dog@kew wrote: |
Is there no point in even getting educated for it if you aren't going to be a public school teacher down the road?
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You will find a wide variety of opinion on this. It really is what you make of it.
dog@kew wrote: |
No point in learning if you aren't good already? |
Few people are natural teachers (no matter what the average person claims). One session of a teacher's training course will show you that everyone has room to improve - even people with 20 years experience. Some people are not natural teachers (myself included), so teacher training can be essential. Teaching is one of those jobs that looks easy to do, but is actually quite difficult (to do well).
If you have a degree in an unrelated subject (BA in Lit is not really related) and no TESL/TEFL certificate, you are at the bottom ladder for EFL and ESL jobs (actually, in Canada, no TESL certificate is below standard). You'll have to accept that without qualifications, you will be eligible for either volunteer work (which is fun, rewarding, but doesn't pay any bills), or the "industry" work that you don't like.
You can move up from there, but you have to start at the bottom. Most of us do. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 10:03 pm Post subject: |
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santi84 wrote: |
dog@kew wrote: |
So, is this strictly a gig for hard-asses and salesmen?
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No, not at all. In EFL (and in ESL, although public schools can be different), it is a business. There are few students who take English for "fun", they either require it for business or academic purposes (this is 99.9999% of EFL in Asia) |
Considering the plethora of eikaiwa (conversation schools) and ALT work in Japan, I'd have to disagree.
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you do have to keep in mind that students are there to learn English for their own purpose, needs, etc. and have expectations to learn what is required for the goals. |
Mainstream school students are forced to attend classes, and they are fairly pointless. Japanese teachers teach other classes in grammar-translation, paving the way for students' chief goal of passing college entrance exams. The conversation classes they take with ALTs don't help. As for eikaiwa classes, most people are either kiddies whose mamas think it will help them (see previous note why it won't) or housewives who just want to kill time or hit on a foreigner.
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dog@kew wrote: |
Is there no point in even getting educated for it if you aren't going to be a public school teacher down the road?
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You will find a wide variety of opinion on this. It really is what you make of it. |
Absolutely! |
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santi84
Joined: 14 Mar 2008 Posts: 1317 Location: under da sea
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Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 10:11 pm Post subject: |
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True enough Glenski, I'm not well-versed in Japan's EFL industry (only Japanese studentsin Canada, I should be clear about that).
Either way, I get the impression that the OP is being sort of picky as to who or what he will teach. You can't come into this and say you don't like a lot of stress, you don't like industry, you aren't a disciplinarian, and don't want to be entertaining at will, if you've got no qualifications to be choosy about it.
You will have unhappy, unmotivated, unpleasant students - and stress. That's why I feel some form of teaching qualification is important, so you can learn how to deal with those issues and turn situations around. Not always, but sometimes  |
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