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headdesk
Joined: 13 Jul 2010 Posts: 6
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 6:10 pm Post subject: Newbie with more questions |
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Hi everyone,
I'm looking for ways to up my teaching qualifications and critically evaluate what requirements I might already meet for the ESL market.
At the moment I'm aiming to teach in Asia (preferably Korea or Japan), hopefully to adults, but am more interested in traveling and gaining teaching experience in general, so location is only a concern to a certain extent. Basically while I would prefer Korea or Japan, I am willing to look elsewhere, including Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. The point is to travel and see the world.
A rundown of my background and experience:
US citizen, native English speaker. Female, 28 years old. I know some places prefer not to hire ethnic minorities, so if it makes a difference, I'm visibly non-white. No TEFL/TESOL certification. Graduated this winter with a BA in Humanities.
1 year official ESL teaching experience in the US, through a nonprofit school. Mainly adults, beginner to advanced. 1 semester (6 weeks) TA experience in my mother's adult ESL classroom in Turkey. Informal experience tutoring peers. I received teaching training through the non-profit organization in the US, as well as some coursework on the side to improve my teaching practices. I can, if necessary, provide proof of the coursework and my official teaching history to prospective employers.
Planning on a master's in education and an independent TEFL certification.
I've worked with children, but in a limited way, primarily with the disabled.
Language experience/living abroad: Work as a Turkish/English interpreter on the side. I was raised in Turkey, where my mother taught English as well as ran her own business. I'm somewhat familiar with the way ESL businesses operate there, but not necessarily other places.
What would my prospects be in different ESL markets at this point? What would I need to gain to increase my chances of employment? |
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smithrn1983
Joined: 23 Jul 2010 Posts: 320 Location: Moscow
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 6:50 pm Post subject: |
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From what I understand, you have a degree from a U.S. university and one year of verifiable teaching experience. What did the training consist of, exactly and did you get any kind of certificate?
If it was onsite, 120hrs with 6+ hours of observed teaching practice to real students, then you've got everything you need to teach anywhere in Europe where you can legally obtain employment (mostly Central and Eastern Europe and Russia). Without that certification, you'd want to get one to make yourself more attractive to employers in the region. Also, if you have any business experience, I'd put that on your resume, as business English is a huge market here. As for being visibly non-white, employers are more concerned with teaching quality than the color of your skin. Sending a photo with a resume is standard practice, but the vast majority of employers are only concerned with whether you look professional. You should keep in mind, though, that most jobs in this region are found on the ground rather than from abroad. Nevertheless, you can land a good job here while still in America.
I can't really comment on Asia, as I've never taught there, but someone will be along shortly who can fill you in on the details. One of the countries you mentioned has its own forum and can't be discussed here. It's near China, and has a neighbor to the north with a similar name. |
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headdesk
Joined: 13 Jul 2010 Posts: 6
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 8:32 pm Post subject: |
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Hi there,
Thanks for the response. Yes, my degree is from an accredited US college. No, neither of the courses lead to any certification, they were just seminars to prepare teachers and train them on targeted topics, such as oral proficiency and writing. The initial training was just to introduce new teachers to the basics of adult ed and teaching English.
Which is why I was considering investing in a 120 hour program that would meet the qualifications for a certificate.
I shall cross post to the aforementioned forums for more region specific info as well. Right now I'm just looking for a general sense of what I might need to work on
Thanks again! |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 9:58 pm Post subject: |
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Come to the Japan forum for advice. What I will tell you there is this:
Japan is extremely flooded with teachers now. Entry level jobs are at a premium, and you should expect a lot of competition from fellow newcomers and from people already established here.
Skin color won't really make that much of a difference, so don't try to make an issue of it. It's overall ability, experience, and personality that might seem to match the students or staff.
If you want only adults, that pretty much says you are aiming at eikaiwas that cater only to adults (not as common as you might think because the market is growing for kids' eikaiwa lessons) or at business English agencies (or direct hires in companies that want their employees to learn English). Often (Usually?) businesses want people with work experience in the same field as their employees so the teachers understand the jargon and settings.
I don't include university students in the category of adults. Don't know about you. Uni kids here are about 5 years younger mentally than their physical age, and university situation is not a mature one that you could equate with true adults. Moreover, uni students are unmotivated for the most part, interested only in the credit to graduate, and pretty much coasting through the 4 years in all classes. |
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tttompatz

Joined: 06 Mar 2010 Posts: 1951 Location: Talibon, Bohol, Philippines
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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 11:08 pm Post subject: Re: Newbie with more questions |
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headdesk wrote: |
Hi everyone,
I'm looking for ways to up my teaching qualifications and critically evaluate what requirements I might already meet for the ESL market.
At the moment I'm aiming to teach in Asia (preferably Korea or Japan), hopefully to adults, but am more interested in traveling and gaining teaching experience in general, so location is only a concern to a certain extent. Basically while I would prefer Korea or Japan, I am willing to look elsewhere, including Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East. The point is to travel and see the world.
A rundown of my background and experience:
US citizen, native English speaker. Female, 28 years old. I know some places prefer not to hire ethnic minorities, so if it makes a difference, I'm visibly non-white. No TEFL/TESOL certification. Graduated this winter with a BA in Humanities.
1 year official ESL teaching experience in the US, through a nonprofit school. Mainly adults, beginner to advanced. 1 semester (6 weeks) TA experience in my mother's adult ESL classroom in Turkey. Informal experience tutoring peers. I received teaching training through the non-profit organization in the US, as well as some coursework on the side to improve my teaching practices. I can, if necessary, provide proof of the coursework and my official teaching history to prospective employers.
Planning on a master's in education and an independent TEFL certification.
I've worked with children, but in a limited way, primarily with the disabled.
Language experience/living abroad: Work as a Turkish/English interpreter on the side. I was raised in Turkey, where my mother taught English as well as ran her own business. I'm somewhat familiar with the way ESL businesses operate there, but not necessarily other places.
What would my prospects be in different ESL markets at this point? What would I need to gain to increase my chances of employment? |
Japan and Europe have already been covered for you.
As to the rest of Asia, you have everything you need to find legal work all ALL of the rest of Asia.
For Korea, there are lots of jobs. Have a look on the Korean forums http://forums.eslcafe.com/korea/index.php (separate registration required to log in or post) and the Korean job boards http://www.eslcafe.com/jobs/korea/ for jobs. The paperwork is a pain but there are lots of decent paying, entry level jobs.
AS to the rest of Asia (that you didn't mention) there are also lots of jobs. With your BA you can get a job in a public school in China, and Thailand but the salaries are low if you have student loans to pay off.
There are always lots of language centers looking to hire all across the Asian region and they hire year round.
Getting a reputable TEFL cert is always in your best interests but is not required for employment in Asia nor would most employers in Asia know or care about the differences in the different TEFL cert programs.
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headdesk
Joined: 13 Jul 2010 Posts: 6
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Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 1:11 am Post subject: |
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Thanks everyone for the responses. I'm going over the FAQs and info already posted in regional sections to see what info I can get from there as well. Overall it seems like going for a TEFL might be a good idea as an extra for most places along with the teaching experience.
Also, what would count as "business experience" for resume purposes? I've worked as an interpreter in hospitals and state agencies, done clerical volunteer work, and have worked in the family business with my mother and stepfather, but the vast majority of my experience has been as a retail slave.
@Glenski--I don't mind teaching school age children, at least in theory, it's more an issue of experience.
The schools I've worked with teach adults, and I have little in the way of other background in child psychology or childcare.Most informal work I've done has been with kids who are severely emotionally/mentally disabled, and only in one case did that involve hands on caregiving for extended periods of time.
So my concern would be my learning curve when working in a school setting with typical kids.
Thanks again all
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smithrn1983
Joined: 23 Jul 2010 Posts: 320 Location: Moscow
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Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 6:52 am Post subject: |
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headdesk wrote: |
Also, what would count as "business experience" for resume purposes? I've worked as an interpreter in hospitals and state agencies, done clerical volunteer work, and have worked in the family business with my mother and stepfather, but the vast majority of my experience has been as a retail slave.
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Lots of things can count as business experience, but what is probably most useful is anything in accounting, marketing, management or engineering. If you helped to run your family's business, or helped out with the finances, I'd put that on your resume. Interpreting work in hospitals might also be useful if you have a fairly extensive working knowledge of medical English. Clerical work could also be useful if you were in charge of a lot of correspondence with other organisations. I'd leave off the bit about being a retail slave unless you need it to fill a gap in your resume. |
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naturegirl321

Joined: 04 May 2003 Posts: 9041 Location: home sweet home
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Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 8:23 am Post subject: |
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I saw that you're interested in Latin America and that you have teaching experience. Is there any way that you can turn your one year teaching experience into time towards a teaching license?
If you had a teaching license and two years experience, you could work at intl schools.
Otherwise get a TEFL cert. In addition to the experience you have, that would be a valuable step into getting your foot inthe door. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 1:06 pm Post subject: |
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headdesk wrote: |
@Glenski--I don't mind teaching school age children, at least in theory, it's more an issue of experience.
The schools I've worked with teach adults, and I have little in the way of other background in child psychology or childcare.Most informal work I've done has been with kids who are severely emotionally/mentally disabled, and only in one case did that involve hands on caregiving for extended periods of time.
So my concern would be my learning curve when working in a school setting with typical kids. |
What are "typical kids"?
You're going to work with children if you become an ALT, and probably the same if you work in eikaiwa.
1) ALTs don't usually do most of the work in class. The Japanese teacher of English (JTE) does. It's case by case, of course, but I'd say look at an ALT job as more of the A (assistant) then the T (teacher). Some have it ok, others are mid-ground, and others are human tape recorders. Some JTEs don't even want the ALT, but their school says otherwise. JTEs don't always have the best English speaking ability either. However, they will be the ones to handle classroom discipline and any child psychology (no counselors in most schools here).
2) Eikaiwa might put you with tots, elem ed kids, or teens. Play with the younger kiddies, and encourage the others to like English instead of hate it by the time they become HS age. You might have a chance to do pronunciation work (sorely needed), but the main thing is simple clear understandable conversation (which includes a weak ability at present to listen to the speaker, so work on that). Key thing to remember in eikaiwa (adult or kiddie class) is to let the students do as much talking as possible. |
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