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Does anyone have any experience with Apollo?
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Oh My God



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 273

PostPosted: Tue Apr 05, 2011 11:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

haller_79 wrote:
What sort of school is going to give you the necessary OTJT if you haven't got even the most basic quals?


There are several backpacker schools that will give you classes without even the most basic quals and you could get OJT in that way. But I don't really understand your question when I answered it with the very next sentence.
Quote:
Any ESL course gives you the basics that you'll refine and tailor to your specific needs if you'll truly take an interest in improving.


Are there additional quals that you're eluding to?
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deadlift



Joined: 08 Jun 2010
Posts: 267

PostPosted: Thu Apr 07, 2011 6:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Oh My God wrote:

There are several backpacker schools that will give you classes without even the most basic quals and you could get OJT in that way.


A school that will employ someone with no qualifications is unlikely to provide any on the job training that is worth a damn. They're also unlikely to run their classes in such a way that you gain any useful or relevant teaching skills.

All things being equal, and not taking into account interviews or demo lessons, if given the choice between a recent CELTA grad and someone who has worked for a year at a backpacker school, I'd go with the CELTA.
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Oh My God



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 273

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 4:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

deadlift wrote:

A school that will employ someone with no qualifications is unlikely to provide any on the job training that is worth a damn. They're also unlikely to run their classes in such a way that you gain any useful or relevant teaching skills.


It's unlikely that this is from any personal experience and adds a tinge of superiority to perceived differences. But from my personal experience and those of my colleagues, the above statement is MOD EDIT
Quote:
Just get here and begin the process of learning your trade and then your judgement of which direction to focus on will become clearer when the title newbie fades into the past.
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deadlift



Joined: 08 Jun 2010
Posts: 267

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 6:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am speaking from experience. I have worked at backpacker schools and I have never once seen anything that you could reasonably call "training".

I agree that the idea that the CELTA fully prepares someone to be a great teacher is absurd. But I don't believe CELTA has ever made that claim. In fact, the specific endorsement provided by the CELTA is something like "has competently completed the teaching practice but will require ongoing support and training to develop their skills" (I forget the precise wording). Only the CELTA pass A endorsement implies that the graduate is immediately able to work independently.

I also believe that the idea that a backpacker school will provide any kind of substantive training is equally absurd. You get given a book and a CD, and pointed to the classroom. But that's just my moronic opinion and non-existent experience.
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GemGem



Joined: 16 Oct 2010
Posts: 13

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 6:44 am    Post subject: Apollo job offer Reply with quote

I've just been offered a full-time position with Apollo - either with paid leave or unpaid leave.
With the paid leave they are offering 10 days a year with a further 10 public holidays. This seems really low to me! Is this standard?

I think working for them would be ok as a newbie to ESL for my first year but whilst I'm there I do want some time to explore the country I'm going to be living in!
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haller_79



Joined: 09 Mar 2007
Posts: 145

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 8:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

MOD EDIT

If becoming a teacher was simply a matter of walking into a school, any school, with little or no qualifications and it all magically comes to you - well why on earth would teachers colleges, universities etc offer education courses?

BTW I'm not interested in you're reply to this because no doubt it will include plenty of bold type, exclamation marks and underlining.

Deadlift is right imho.
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Oh My God



Joined: 31 Jan 2010
Posts: 273

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 5:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

deadlift wrote:
I also believe that the idea that a backpacker school will provide any kind of substantive training is equally absurd. You get given a book and a CD, and pointed to the classroom.


This makes sense in the same way that a participant in "American Idol" would blame the audience for his/her lack of advancement!

Yes, any ESL course sets you on a path of potential greatness if you continue the education for the advancement of your chosen ESL Teacher career. But the responsibility of achieving those lofty goals is 100% because of you, the teacher!

In VN, Edutainment is King. Edutainment = education + entertainment

The really nice thing about teaching at those backpacker schools is that you get the opportunity to try many new ideas and let your creativity reign as you'll never view a backpacker school as a career choice, just a fill-in for some hours monetarily. So this allows you the freedom to discover your own personal niche without any loss of investment, they're just temporary anyway.

The other schools my negative poster friends are referring to, involve a greater sense of support from both the staff and fellow teachers. BUT it's still up to you to make it work out within your own classes.

So for you newbies, don't expect to waltz in the door of some upper-crust school and achieve greatness, high salary, and the envy of all those around by some short-cut. You're going to have to work your way up to that and that is going to involve some trail and error.

A reputation is what you'll have to establish and when you finally do - the schools will be calling you not you calling them!

During the Tet Holiday month (my slowest month) I raked in around $3000 USD and had no less than 3 schools call me asking me to come to work for them, adding some pretty interesting incentives.

Have I arrived at that most superior of positions? NO because the higher I climb, the higher I want to go...

Make this the way that you are "driven" and all will be made open to all of you as well!

Wink
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shanewarne



Joined: 21 Feb 2008
Posts: 146

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 11:11 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I want to be you! Shocked
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LettersAthruZ



Joined: 25 Apr 2010
Posts: 466
Location: North Viet Nam

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 4:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

deadlift wrote:
Oh My God wrote:

There are several backpacker schools that will give you classes without even the most basic quals and you could get OJT in that way.


A school that will employ someone with no qualifications is unlikely to provide any on the job training that is worth a damn. They're also unlikely to run their classes in such a way that you gain any useful or relevant teaching skills.

All things being equal, and not taking into account interviews or demo lessons, if given the choice between a recent CELTA grad and someone who has worked for a year at a backpacker school, I'd go with the CELTA.


Gotta really agree with OMG here. IT PURELY DEPENDS ON THEE INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTOR!!!!

I know teachers who dove head first into the fire with zero experience five, six years ago and today they have to literally fight off offers to teach! They swore they'd have done it no other way - CLAIMED it gave them free chances to create their own formula and enhance their creativity in a way a "stifling" training course couldn't.

On the other hand, I myself have seen and peer-reviewed teachers who have whatever initials after their names (please select one or more from the following: CELTA/DELTA/TEFL/TESOL/ASAP/OMFG) who were soooooo robotic, it seemed like somebody physically inserted a training manual into their skulls!!

On the third hand, I DO know one instructor who had performed nothing but On-The-Job training and she is still pretty much a failure as an English teacher!

There just is ZERO REASON to state -

"OH! You never got a (please select one or more from the following: CELTA/DELTA/TEFL/TESOL/ASAP/OMFG)??? Well, YOU must be a backpacker....."

OR

"OH! You paid $1200 to get your (please select one or more from the following: CELTA/DELTA/TEFL/TESOL/ASAP/OMFG)! Well, lotta good it did for you....a fool and his money are soon parted!!"

Simple point being - it depends on what the individual teacher can do with the certificate or on-the-job training that they are given! Generalisations don't really help at this point.....
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Jbhughes



Joined: 01 Jul 2010
Posts: 254

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 5:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

OP / other Apollo applicants -

I did my CELTA this time last year in Ha Noi with Apollo, this took a month and during that time I spoke to a few teachers there and noticed a few trends with what they said and what others have posted here -

for what it's worth:

-They complained that their schedules had fairly recently been changed (due to staff changes) and that this, coupled with managerial changes, meant that they felt the place was quite disorganised. This was further exemplified whenever we arrived for 'scheduled' teaching observations of Apollo teachers to shocked faces and less-than-happy welcomes (who can blame them - lesson observations are one thing, discovering one a couple of minutes before the start of your lesson is quite another).

-Most were there because for one of 3 main reasons (or a combination thereof): They did their CELTA there and took up job offers on completion
Apollo was one of the schools in town where one could obtain a work permit and therefore cure any of the usual visa headaches.
They provided training, presumably of the previously-used acronym nature.

-The pay was considered relatively average, with the part-timers making good money when the hours were good.



Although I haven't been to Hai Phong, everyone I know who has says that it's a pretty horrid, boring place - although Ha Long bay is nearby of course and quite lovely.
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Jbhughes



Joined: 01 Jul 2010
Posts: 254

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 5:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

As for where the thread is going at the moment regarding qualifications -

Until I did the CELTA, I never really understood how a course could provide that much extra than the teacher books that come with coursebooks and what one learns through pure experience. I always assumed that the main reason those with qualifications spoke with such high regard about them was because they had paid a reasonable amount of money for them.

Until I did the CELTA, I thought that I was doing a reasonable job, reinventing the wheel all on my own and utilising my experience in the classroom to further my teaching. I worked hard too, preparing lessons, looking up worksheets, pictures and other materials on the internet - even designing some of my own materials in the process.

Before I did the CELTA, I always felt reasonably respected and popular amongst the sts and the school was satisfied with how I was doing.


Then I did the CELTA. I discovered amazing new techniques that I would never had thought of. I learnt how to correctly structure lessons and why. I won't bother listing all of the learning outcomes of CELTA - the point is that I learnt all manner of things that diligently working away on my own I would never have learnt.

I also found that during my teaching experience prior to the CELTA that I HAD actually learnt things about teaching - but not the things I had thought I had. Without a course, I hadn't had a way of distinguishing what was positive and worthwhile about my teaching methods and what was irrelevant and dross (dross reached at the end of a line of reasoning and extensive thought is still as much dross as that which one thinks up over a Sai Gon Xanh).

This brings me to my final point (anyone still reading up to here, may you be bolstered on your quest by this salient news) -

I don't believe that it's fair to say that teachers without any form of qualification / training are bad teachers. But why is it you feel that other people's years of research, experimentation and study and the creation and ruin of whole schools of thought can't help your own? I doubt that there are many of the rather touched 'you can speak it so you can teach it'-people around on this forum and I would never lump all teachers without qualifications in with these special people.


I'm not saying that the CELTA is the be-all and end-all of ESOL and as rightly said, it's just an entry level course. It isn't the only one either - CertTESOL and basically other accredited 120 hour / 6 hour observed teaching are also entry level courses recommended on this site. I'm hoping to have similar epiphanies if I manage to get on to a DELTA at the end of this year - I even expect to throw out some of what I learnt during CELTA. I also won't claim that everything in my above post can't be achieved using OTJT (is there a prize for using this acronym, even if so late in my thread?) - you guys working in HaNoi / HCMC will know if there actually are any schools or not who take people on and offer professional training to teachers without qualifications.
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London Bridge



Joined: 06 May 2008
Posts: 34

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 5:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

[quote="Oh My God"]
deadlift wrote:
During the Tet Holiday month (my slowest month) I raked in around $3000 USD and had no less than 3 schools call me asking me to come to work for them, adding some pretty interesting incentives.


I disagree with your statement above.

$3,000 USD during the Tet month of February, when schools were shut down for at least 16 days?

And many school actually shut down for longer than that.

I don't know what you're agenda is, but you have one.

As for Apollo, the school has been declining for some time, and everyone knows it.

Best of luck to Apollo, but the writing is on the wall. Lower than normal pay, recruiting people out of country for contracts, DOSs that constantly hover, but really don't have solution to the created "problems."

Apollo is quite busy with the kid's market, as you see the traffic jam on Sat/Sun on LVH street.

But that's about it.
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haller_79



Joined: 09 Mar 2007
Posts: 145

PostPosted: Sat Apr 09, 2011 11:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Spot on JBHughes. Also I think Vietnam is the kind of place where you could get away with being a clueless teacher, especially in the lower quality schools where you're expected first and foremost to be 'funny'.
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deadlift



Joined: 08 Jun 2010
Posts: 267

PostPosted: Sun Apr 10, 2011 2:52 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

LettersAthruZ wrote:


There just is ZERO REASON to state -

"OH! You never got a (please select one or more from the following: CELTA/DELTA/TEFL/TESOL/ASAP/OMFG)??? Well, YOU must be a backpacker....."

OR

"OH! You paid $1200 to get your (please select one or more from the following: CELTA/DELTA/TEFL/TESOL/ASAP/OMFG)! Well, lotta good it did for you....a fool and his money are soon parted!!"



No one HAS stated either of these positions.

jbhughes wrote:
I don't believe that it's fair to say that teachers without any form of qualification / training are bad teachers


Nor has anyone put forward this opinion.

There's a lot of strawmen in this thread.

I agree that there's some great, unqualified teachers out there.
I agree that some gifted autodidacts, such as the inestimable OMG, may be able to learn something from teaching at crappy backpacker schools.
I agree that there's some awful CELTA (or whatever) trained teachers out there.

But I maintain that a CELTA-esque qualification is a better introduction to teaching than working in a backpacker school. For one thing, it will help you get better jobs more quickly, our resident ELT superstar OMG's dubious testimony notwithstanding.


Last edited by deadlift on Sun Apr 10, 2011 2:54 am; edited 1 time in total
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deessell2



Joined: 11 Jun 2005
Posts: 132
Location: Under the sun

PostPosted: Sun Apr 10, 2011 2:53 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Funny + good looking + well dressed = Best Teacher ever!
This is the recipe for success nearly everywhere in East Asia.
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