View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
Terminator99
Joined: 13 Feb 2003 Posts: 1 Location: Keelung
|
Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2003 3:09 am Post subject: Is a degree really necessary??? |
|
|
I have been here for the last two months upon the assurance of my Taiwanese wife that things in Taiwan are all rosy and that schools are yearning for more English teachers.
Having found that every job application I've got replies from tells me that they can't hire me without a degree means I am slowly losing hope.
Is this absolutlely necessary? Will I have to get a fake degreee? Will I have to help Develop Taiwan's misplaced roading network
Any help would be much appreciated.
Anyway go the All Blacks at the World Cup |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
killian
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Posts: 937 Location: fairmont city, illinois, USA
|
Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2003 7:34 am Post subject: |
|
|
for a legal job, a degree is necessary. there are lots of jobs out there that fly under the radar. looking in the want ads perhaps may not be your best bet. pound the pavement. knock on some doors. many bosses are keen to avoid the hassles that come with a legal teacher (paper work, health cards, taxes...) IIRC, you are doomed to being illegal one way or another as present taiwan law FORBIDS foreign spouses from working. do what you gotta do.
best wishes. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Okami
Joined: 25 Jan 2003 Posts: 121 Location: Sunny Sanxia
|
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Aristotle

Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 1388 Location: Taiwan
|
Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2003 4:59 am Post subject: Open Work Permit Toll Free Number |
|
|
Call 0800-885-885 in Taiwan.
Tell him you want an Open Work Permit and they will send you or fax you an application form. They speak very good English but their website is in Chinese only. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
beenthere96-2005
Joined: 01 Aug 2010 Posts: 79 Location: St Louis
|
Posted: Wed Dec 22, 2010 9:54 pm Post subject: Is a degree really necessary??? |
|
|
An interesting article regarding four year degrees from The Gazzette.
Think of what it suggests about a person;
probably from a decent home; probably has decent communication and math skills; can complete assignments and and successfully put up with bureaucracy for years. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Rooster_2006
Joined: 24 Sep 2007 Posts: 984
|
Posted: Fri Dec 24, 2010 9:06 am Post subject: Re: Is a degree really necessary??? |
|
|
Terminator99 wrote: |
I have been here for the last two months upon the assurance of my Taiwanese wife that things in Taiwan are all rosy and that schools are yearning for more English teachers.
Having found that every job application I've got replies from tells me that they can't hire me without a degree means I am slowly losing hope.
Is this absolutlely necessary? Will I have to get a fake degreee? Will I have to help Develop Taiwan's misplaced roading network
Any help would be much appreciated.
Anyway go the All Blacks at the World Cup |
A bachelor's degree is NOT required.
I've been living in Taiwan for over a year and a half now (wow, I can't believe it has been that long).
I am teaching here on an AA+TEFL cert (CELTA) and have a resident visa, an ARC, and have gotten valid work permits for three different schools and have even made a renewal. So I get sick and tired of the "you need a bachelor's degree to teach in Taiwan" crap. It just simply isn't true.
I just finished up my bachelor's degree a couple of months ago by distance, but Taiwanese immigration has never actually seen the degree (neither have I, it's coming in the mail).
If you are married and have a JFRV with an Open Work Permit, you're probably good to go (at least from an immigration standpoint, but maybe not from a Ministry of Education standpoint -- check on this).
Immigration DOES NOT require a bachelor's degree. This is what immigration requires:
If your wife is Taiwanese: nothing
If you are not married: AA+TEFL -- most employers do not give a rat's @$$ about whether it is a BA or an AA |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
KayuJati
Joined: 21 Feb 2010 Posts: 313
|
Posted: Sat Dec 25, 2010 1:00 am Post subject: Re: Is a degree really necessary??? |
|
|
Rooster_2006 wrote: |
Terminator99 wrote: |
I have been here for the last two months upon the assurance of my Taiwanese wife that things in Taiwan are all rosy and that schools are yearning for more English teachers.
Having found that every job application I've got replies from tells me that they can't hire me without a degree means I am slowly losing hope.
Is this absolutlely necessary? Will I have to get a fake degreee? Will I have to help Develop Taiwan's misplaced roading network
Any help would be much appreciated.
Anyway go the All Blacks at the World Cup |
A bachelor's degree is NOT required.
I've been living in Taiwan for over a year and a half now (wow, I can't believe it has been that long).
I am teaching here on an AA+TEFL cert (CELTA) and have a resident visa, an ARC, and have gotten valid work permits for three different schools and have even made a renewal. So I get sick and tired of the "you need a bachelor's degree to teach in Taiwan" crap. It just simply isn't true.
I just finished up my bachelor's degree a couple of months ago by distance, but Taiwanese immigration has never actually seen the degree (neither have I, it's coming in the mail).
If you are married and have a JFRV with an Open Work Permit, you're probably good to go (at least from an immigration standpoint, but maybe not from a Ministry of Education standpoint -- check on this).
Immigration DOES NOT require a bachelor's degree. This is what immigration requires:
If your wife is Taiwanese: nothing
If you are not married: AA+TEFL -- most employers do not give a rat's @$$ about whether it is a BA or an AA |
You are giving your angry reply to a post from 2003.....
<Thu Feb 13, 2003 3:09 am Post subject: Is a degree really necessary???> |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Rooster_2006
Joined: 24 Sep 2007 Posts: 984
|
Posted: Sat Dec 25, 2010 2:27 pm Post subject: Re: Is a degree really necessary??? |
|
|
KayuJati wrote: |
Rooster_2006 wrote: |
Terminator99 wrote: |
I have been here for the last two months upon the assurance of my Taiwanese wife that things in Taiwan are all rosy and that schools are yearning for more English teachers.
Having found that every job application I've got replies from tells me that they can't hire me without a degree means I am slowly losing hope.
Is this absolutlely necessary? Will I have to get a fake degreee? Will I have to help Develop Taiwan's misplaced roading network
Any help would be much appreciated.
Anyway go the All Blacks at the World Cup |
A bachelor's degree is NOT required.
I've been living in Taiwan for over a year and a half now (wow, I can't believe it has been that long).
I am teaching here on an AA+TEFL cert (CELTA) and have a resident visa, an ARC, and have gotten valid work permits for three different schools and have even made a renewal. So I get sick and tired of the "you need a bachelor's degree to teach in Taiwan" crap. It just simply isn't true.
I just finished up my bachelor's degree a couple of months ago by distance, but Taiwanese immigration has never actually seen the degree (neither have I, it's coming in the mail).
If you are married and have a JFRV with an Open Work Permit, you're probably good to go (at least from an immigration standpoint, but maybe not from a Ministry of Education standpoint -- check on this).
Immigration DOES NOT require a bachelor's degree. This is what immigration requires:
If your wife is Taiwanese: nothing
If you are not married: AA+TEFL -- most employers do not give a rat's @$$ about whether it is a BA or an AA |
You are giving your angry reply to a post from 2003.....
<Thu Feb 13, 2003 3:09 am Post subject: Is a degree really necessary???> |
Good!
The seven years during which Killian's post has misled people have finally come to an end! |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
markholmes

Joined: 21 Jun 2004 Posts: 661 Location: Wengehua
|
Posted: Wed Dec 29, 2010 4:32 am Post subject: |
|
|
Have you considered that the law may have changed in that time? Although I knew one person who was teaching with a diploma in 2003, I believe it was quite rare and not spoken about much on ESL forums. The law may have changed in 2002(ish), as was the law concerning transfer of ARCs from one employer to another. New laws take a while to trickle down to schools and for a period (perhaps still) some employers were reluctant to look at teachers without a degree (fearing they would not be able to process the paperwork).
My info may not be the entire story, nor entirely correct, but you are not taking into account the passing of time, the change of law and the time it takes for employers to recognise and utilize new laws. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
dangerousapple
Joined: 18 Apr 2006 Posts: 292
|
Posted: Wed Dec 29, 2010 8:38 am Post subject: |
|
|
Rooster is technically correct, but there can be a big difference between what the law says and what is common practice. A lot of schools don't want to hire someone with less than a BA because they are scared that the paperwork will be rejected (and angrily telling a school owner that your degree is valid isn't going to help, either). I haven't checked up on the regulations lately, but they change continuously and are usually vaguely written, meaning that they are open to interpretation. This scares the average school owner into only accepting what he knows is "safe".
Distance degrees are even more of a hot potato, with the MOE and labor bureau more than happy to reject them. It's the labor bureau that causes most of the headaches by the way, not the MOE. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Rooster_2006
Joined: 24 Sep 2007 Posts: 984
|
Posted: Wed Dec 29, 2010 6:01 pm Post subject: |
|
|
markholmes wrote: |
Have you considered that the law may have changed in that time? Although I knew one person who was teaching with a diploma in 2003, I believe it was quite rare and not spoken about much on ESL forums. The law may have changed in 2002(ish), as was the law concerning transfer of ARCs from one employer to another. New laws take a while to trickle down to schools and for a period (perhaps still) some employers were reluctant to look at teachers without a degree (fearing they would not be able to process the paperwork).
My info may not be the entire story, nor entirely correct, but you are not taking into account the passing of time, the change of law and the time it takes for employers to recognise and utilize new laws. |
Perhaps it is a recent change.
If it is a recent change, then I apologize to killian.
However, as the law now stands:
AA+TEFL is now okay.
JFRV and no degree is okay, too. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
|