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luckyloser700
Joined: 24 Mar 2006 Posts: 308 Location: Japan
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 4:00 am Post subject: |
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| Tottori-Dood wrote: |
| I wonder who the bigger moron is? The person who makes the obvious typo or the person who points it out to try to look smart? |
Or the person who points out what you've just pointed out? Wow you saved a lot of face with this one. |
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canuck

Joined: 11 May 2003 Posts: 1921 Location: Japan
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 4:02 am Post subject: |
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| luckyloser700 wrote: |
| Tottori-Dood wrote: |
| I wonder who the bigger moron is? The person who makes the obvious typo or the person who points it out to try to look smart? |
Or the person who points out what you've just pointed out? Wow you saved a lot of face with this one. |
LOL |
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furiousmilksheikali

Joined: 31 Jul 2006 Posts: 1660 Location: In a coffee shop, splitting a 30,000 yen tab with Sekiguchi.
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 4:10 am Post subject: |
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| Tottori-Dood wrote: |
I could honestly care less about my spellling. It's not a necessary componant of teaching conversational English. Hate to break the news but most business professionals could care less about their spelling - that's what microsoft word and office assitants are for.
Working at a language school is fun for a year or two, but if you've ever met any of the "teachers" who have stayed at a language school for over 3 years without being promoted into head office then you will understand how big of losers some people are that come to Japan to be "teachers" |
That seems pretty clear to all of us. By the way I would prefer the use of "I could not care less" and could you rewrite the second paragraph, I have no idea what it means. |
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BrytSyde
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 20 Location: Orange County, CA
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 9:47 pm Post subject: |
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| People, People... cant we just chill and have some good dialogue... i had asked a question in which most have been kind enough to respond back with some great answers.. i do thank you all for the help... if you have any advice for me to better prepare myself for japan in the months before i apply i would really help me...thanks yall...and be easy |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 9:52 pm Post subject: |
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BrytSyde,
You asked only a few questions, and pretty general ones. If you want to stimulate more responses, I suggest you ask more questions, preferably specific ones. Many of here are glad to help, but we need a starting point. |
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guest of Japan

Joined: 28 Feb 2003 Posts: 1601 Location: Japan
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Posted: Mon Oct 02, 2006 11:18 pm Post subject: |
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Managers make a lot more than some of you think. Back when I did eikaiwa my manager made more than 5,000,000 a year and was not yet at the top of the pay scale for his position.
Assistant managers usually do make less than the foreign teachers, but career advancement tends to come quickly.
The Japanese English teachers at my school really did get shafted in comparison to foreign teachers, and that includes the head teacher. One could get up in arms over this, but many of the Japanese English teachers I worked with have made career changes and are doing quite well now. |
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ironopolis
Joined: 01 Apr 2004 Posts: 379
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Posted: Tue Oct 03, 2006 12:04 am Post subject: |
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BrytSyde,
To be honest with you, my advice would be to take what you read on the internet with a pinch of salt. This is perhaps one of the better forums, but, as you can see, you get lots of childishness and patronising reponses on here too.
As was mentioned earlier, there are indeed whole internet sites about some of the chain schools you were asking about, but they are nearly always produced by people with a bitter axe to grind and devoid of much objectivity. I recall one such site a couple of years ago, which used juvenile four letter nicknames when referring to any of the managers they were having a go at and in one senior teacher's case, came up with quite a bit of offensive, personal stuff about the guy's wife, who had nothing to do with the company involved!
The MacDonalds comparison has been rightly ridiculed, although I suspect the poster who made it was thinking as much of how some patronising types view the chain schools and people who work at them as of the salaries they pay. You'll encounter that a lot, but don't let it worry you.
It IS actually a fair point that the chain schools pay even less generous salaries now than they used to, but that's pretty much the same across the board of entry level jobs in Japan. You're probably not going to save a fortune here that you couldn't save elsewhere, but perhaps that won't matter too much if your main motivation is to experience a bit of Japan rather than save a packet.
Anyway, good luck. |
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BrytSyde
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 20 Location: Orange County, CA
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Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 12:20 am Post subject: |
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Wad up Everybody
GlenSki, i will do by best in future to have more detailed questions, everything so new to me, its all a learning experience
ironopolis, Thank you for your feeback i am started to see the diffrence prespectives of living and working in japan..
for me and im not sure if anybody else feels this way, goign to japan is not about money what so ever, i could hang back in the states and start a job making 3 times as much, but as was mentioned, i want to experience japan, but even more than that i want to get lost, and whn i say that i mean get lost in a place thats so diffrent than what i know as normal, that i will have to find myself, find my strengths, to basiclly survive, and at the same time experience a culture as bueatifull as the japanese cultutre..
could you guys tell some good sites to more reserch and reading.. i have been to like gaijinpot.com.. any other suggestions would help..thanks guys |
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seastarr
Joined: 22 Sep 2006 Posts: 76
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Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 12:54 am Post subject: |
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| geez, this kind of turned into a touchy topic. I agree with you Brytsyde, if you are going short term, dont go for the money. I came home with enough to get an apartment and hold me over for a month while i found a job at home. I also came home with some amazing memories and the knowledge that I had seen most of the places that I came to Japan to see. The people who went for a year to make money really didn't seem to have much fun on a chain school salary. Those who went for the experience may have left broke, but there are more important things sometimes. If you have any specific questions, let me know. |
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luckyloser700
Joined: 24 Mar 2006 Posts: 308 Location: Japan
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Posted: Wed Oct 04, 2006 1:39 am Post subject: |
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| BrytSyde wrote: |
for me and im not sure if anybody else feels this way, goign to japan is not about money what so ever, i could hang back in the states and start a job making 3 times as much, but as was mentioned, i want to experience japan, but even more than that i want to get lost, and whn i say that i mean get lost in a place thats so diffrent than what i know as normal, that i will have to find myself, find my strengths, to basiclly survive, and at the same time experience a culture as bueatifull as the japanese cultutre..
could you guys tell some good sites to more reserch and reading.. i have been to like gaijinpot.com.. any other suggestions would help..thanks guys |
BrytSyde,
Just keep plugging away at your favorite search engine. Try to arrive here in the early spring, if you can. After a few weeks of settling in, you'll finally breathe a little easier and realize that the cherry blossom trees are in full-bloom. It may be the first truly beautiful image of Japan that enters your head. One of the best images, I promise. But, before you come, search out all of the places you'd like to go and things you'd like to do. Make a realistic schedule for the year listing all of these things and stick to your plan. Don't slack off on it or start telling yourself that just hanging out and drinking with your friends or fellow employees is good enough. You can do that anywhere. Make sure that when you leave, you've got lots of excellent memories and that it was worth all the time and effort you invested.
Good luck. I hope to hear things are falling into place for you. |
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BrytSyde
Joined: 06 Mar 2006 Posts: 20 Location: Orange County, CA
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Posted: Thu Oct 05, 2006 11:20 pm Post subject: |
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Hey everybody..
does anybody have any suggestions on learning Japaneses, my class doesnt start till january, so i wanted to like buy one of those CD's in your car lesson kinda of things...any body have any luck with those?  |
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pk_yang22
Joined: 15 Sep 2006 Posts: 11
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Posted: Fri Oct 06, 2006 2:03 pm Post subject: |
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| BrytSyde wrote: |
Hey everybody..
does anybody have any suggestions on learning Japaneses, my class doesnt start till january, so i wanted to like buy one of those CD's in your car lesson kinda of things...any body have any luck with those?  |
wow....thanks everyone for their point of view. I'm pretty much in the same position as Brytsyde. i found the argument quite useful. i get a taste of both the good and bad of japan.
anyway, i tried the CD's and did not find it useful. all you do is listen and repeat everything over and over again. i thought it was a waste of money. i think it would be more helpful to pick up a book on japanese for beginners and review through. i found that in doing that i get the chance to see how to make simple sentences in japanese and good phases that i can use. to me getting the basic structure helped me, i just need to get more of the vocabulary down. but i guess this depends on how you want to learn the language. |
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luckyloser700
Joined: 24 Mar 2006 Posts: 308 Location: Japan
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Posted: Fri Oct 06, 2006 4:11 pm Post subject: J lessons |
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| pk_yang22 wrote: |
| BrytSyde wrote: |
Hey everybody..
does anybody have any suggestions on learning Japaneses, my class doesnt start till january, so i wanted to like buy one of those CD's in your car lesson kinda of things...any body have any luck with those?  |
wow....thanks everyone for their point of view. I'm pretty much in the same position as Brytsyde. i found the argument quite useful. i get a taste of both the good and bad of japan.
anyway, i tried the CD's and did not find it useful. all you do is listen and repeat everything over and over again. i thought it was a waste of money. i think it would be more helpful to pick up a book on japanese for beginners and review through. i found that in doing that i get the chance to see how to make simple sentences in japanese and good phases that i can use. to me getting the basic structure helped me, i just need to get more of the vocabulary down. but i guess this depends on how you want to learn the language. |
Japanese For Busy People I is a good way to start. It presents easy-to-understand grammar examples in chapters that each revolve around a single context. Get the kana version and don't bother with romaji.
Keep learning grammar and vocab. Rent J movies and get manga with furigana included. Don't bother with listening to CD's too much. They're alright for absolute beginners who want to get a feel for Japanese pronunciation and for what it sounds like in general. But, your listening won't really start improving until you get here unless you have J-friends in your hometown who are willing to let you practice with them or you attend some kind of immersion class. People graduate with degrees in Japanese from universities in their home countries, arrive in Japan, and quickly find out they can understand only fifty percent or less of what they hear because they didn't have many opportunities back home to have real-world conversations in Japanese. Of course, once they make J-friends, they quickly become amazing at Japanese conversation.
Learn grammar and vocab now and worry about developing listening and understanding skills once you get here. Of course, practice reading and writing as much as you can before you get here. |
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bornslippy1981
Joined: 02 Aug 2004 Posts: 271
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Posted: Fri Oct 06, 2006 5:11 pm Post subject: |
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| BrytSyde wrote: |
for me and im not sure if anybody else feels this way, goign to japan is not about money what so ever, i could hang back in the states and start a job making 3 times as much, but as was mentioned, i want to experience japan, but even more than that i want to get lost, and whn i say that i mean get lost in a place thats so diffrent than what i know as normal, that i will have to find myself, find my strengths, to basiclly survive, and at the same time experience a culture as bueatifull as the japanese cultutre..
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Good on ya mate.
I was in the same boat as you a few years ago. I was 22 and just graduated from uni. I had the opportunity to be 50/50 partners in a new restaurant with people I had worked for since I was 15. I turned it down because I had always wanted to live abroad, but didn't have the chance when I was a student.
Now I'm 25. I've been in Japan 18 months. I still keep in touch with the people back home who would've been my partners. I'd be making about 7 times what I make here, but I don't for a second regret the decision.
Japan is a good place to live, and I'll be here another 18 months until my contract expires.
I'm not sure about Aeon, Geos, or ECC, as I never worked for them. I worked for Nova for 17 months, and had minimal problems. I was always paid on time, paid the correct amount, received my travel reimbursement for satellite branches on the day I turned in my claim form, and had all shift swaps and holidays approved. I received my final wages within 7 days, as required by law if it's requested.
You can search and read many complaints on www.letsjapan.org or www.gaijinpot.com. Personally, I think a lot of the complaints are without merit, and are sometimes written by people who are on an extended spring break.
Some complaints I had about the job are: too much about sales. I felt bad for the staff because their bosses would come down hard on them if they didn't make quota. The staff where I worked was always friendly with me, but there were a couple I didn't like. One in particular was a very sales driven woman, and she would lie through her teeth. I understand she had quota to meet, but she was a former student, so I wondered if she had the same thing happen to her, and it was her way of getting even. She'd also use me as a puppet. When somebody would leave from a trial lesson that hadn't signed up, she'd run and get me to come out and talk with the person or wave good-bye. I hated when I'd teach kids lessons and a 20-minute demo lesson would become 40-minutes. It's unfair to the trial student, and unfair to the kids in the class. Sometimes the staff I didn't like would have to sit in on the lesson because the kid was crying too much. She could say a few words in English, so I'd do a lot of fast songs with the kids that they knew, and watch as she stumbled about, embarrassed that she didn't know what was going on.
I liked the kids lessons because it was a nice break from the housewife who was passing the time, but I didn't like them at the same time. There are no resources to teach with. I have some background in theatre, so improvising something wasn't a problem. It can be difficult though when the lesson is taught in a room with four bare walls, and you have nothing but 8 cards and if you're lucky a ball.
Anyway, I'll stop there. If you want more info on Nova, send me a PM. |
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ghoul
Joined: 25 Jun 2005 Posts: 2
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Posted: Fri Oct 06, 2006 7:35 pm Post subject: |
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The real losers are people who call other people losers because their job is lower than what other people want financially. So you are an ambitious wanna be billionaire? You can still be an ahole.
Its your life, if you enjoy hanging in Japan at a conversation school so be it. |
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