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Klemintyne
Joined: 10 Jul 2005 Posts: 5 Location: In the land of the Hurricaines
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Posted: Sun Apr 23, 2006 5:37 am Post subject: What is my best chance in Japan? |
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Hi all I'm an A/A Male 23 year old recent college grad with a major in International Studies and a minor in French .
Other than Summer jobs and summer volunteer work, my only real work experience has been for my school. I have done some informal tutoring. However,I'm not sure I'm the ideal candidate for many of these language schools. What would be my best bet for finding work in Japan ? From everything I have read and seen , it sounds as though Nova would be the least difficult of which to garner acceptance . However, I have one freind who is in Japan right now working for the JET program who was rejected from Nova.
What is the best avenue to pursue? |
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PAULH
Joined: 28 Jan 2003 Posts: 4672 Location: Western Japan
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Posted: Sun Apr 23, 2006 7:12 am Post subject: Re: What is my best chance in Japan? |
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Klemintyne wrote: |
Hi all I'm an A/A Male 23 year old recent college grad with a major in International Studies and a minor in French .
Other than Summer jobs and summer volunteer work, my only real work experience has been for my school. I have done some informal tutoring. However,I'm not sure I'm the ideal candidate for many of these language schools. What would be my best bet for finding work in Japan ? From everything I have read and seen , it sounds as though Nova would be the least difficult of which to garner acceptance . However, I have one freind who is in Japan right now working for the JET program who was rejected from Nova.
What is the best avenue to pursue? |
what is A/A? Asian American? As long as you have a degree (Bachelors) you have as good a chance as any. No experience or qualifications are required to get hired at one of the big chain schools.
Do a search on NOVA, AEON and GEOS to get an idea about the interview and selection process. getting hired is a lottery and you just simply have to keep applying till you get accepted.
If you are in the US the best idea is to have an interview with the big schools such as NOVA, ECC, GEOS or AEON and get hired with one of the large schools. They will need to sponsor your work visa and getting hired or sponsored without an interview is virtually impossible. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Sun Apr 23, 2006 7:24 am Post subject: |
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In my opinion, either places like the Big Four (including NOVA, in case you don't know) or the JET Program should suffice.
Depends on a few things.
How soon do you want to be here? (JET only hires once a year, with a rather lengthy application process.)
What do you want to teach? (JET has you posted in public schools, usually JHS or SHS, in fairly rural areas as an assistant to the Japanese teacher of English. Conversation schools simply require you to teach conversational English, and you are the only person in the room.)
What do you feel comfortable teaching? (Do you want the comfort of a Japanese co-teacher, or can you swing it alone? In public schools, you'll have to deal with 30-40 kids per class, and you may not even see some more than once a month depending on your schedule. With conversation schools, you'll have 5-10 students per class, and you'll see them once a week. With JET, you might have to help with homework and exams and maybe just be a human tape recorder, but as a conversation school teacher, you rarely give out homework and exams. With JET, you'll teach regular 9am to 4pm hours, but with conversation schools, you'll probably teach noon to 9pm and maybe not get 2 consecutive days off.)
What's your financial situation? You'll have to pay your own airfare for 99% of conversation school jobs, but with JET, they pay your way. JET sometimes even pays for part or all of your housing, but not conversation schools.
To answer your fairly general question more directly with only the information at hand, I'd say you stand an equal chance of landing either position. |
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