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Precise
Joined: 23 Mar 2007 Posts: 140
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Posted: Sat Mar 31, 2007 2:18 pm Post subject: A typical day in Japan. |
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Can you seasoned gentlemen and gentleladies describe your typical day in Japan? What's your routine in regards to getting through the day. How do you squeeze in some fun time around your work schedules, varied as they might be? |
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markle
Joined: 17 Jan 2003 Posts: 1316 Location: Out of Japan
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Posted: Sat Mar 31, 2007 4:29 pm Post subject: |
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well I get up around 8, the wife and I try and get in some exercise, maybe do some market shopping, run some errands, or a spot of house cleaning. After lunch I head into work, have a break around 3, then dinner @6, home around 9-10.
I work Tue-Sat so Sunday Mondays are either bumming around the house, hiking, shopping in the city, catching up with friends, couple of other things. |
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Precise
Joined: 23 Mar 2007 Posts: 140
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Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 1:07 pm Post subject: |
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markle wrote: |
well I get up around 8, the wife and I try and get in some exercise, maybe do some market shopping, run some errands, or a spot of house cleaning. After lunch I head into work, have a break around 3, then dinner @6, home around 9-10.
I work Tue-Sat so Sunday Mondays are either bumming around the house, hiking, shopping in the city, catching up with friends, couple of other things. |
What hours do you work, 1-10? Do you work at an eikaiwa or a public school? |
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osakajojo

Joined: 15 Sep 2004 Posts: 229
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Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 3:09 pm Post subject: |
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wake up at 8:30
have breakfast
go to work
come home at 1:30
have lunch
play with my daughter
go back to work at 4:45
come home at 9:30
have dinner
play with my daughter
watch tv or mess around on this computer
go to bed listening to Howard Stern live on Sirius |
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jademonkey
Joined: 30 Mar 2007 Posts: 180
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:15 am Post subject: |
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Let's see...
I would wake up between 8 and 11am, study or loaf around, then jump on my bike and ride to work for a 1pm start. Work all day until 9pm, maybe a quick beer after work, then either go out for dinner with the wife or perhaps down to the local yakitori shop (one of the best in Tokyo) for a beer and a yarn. On the weekends, shopping or maybe a daytrip out to Hakone (which my wife is thoroughly sick of) or somewhere similar. Every time I'm allowed to escape for more than a few days, either go down the coast to Kyushu or (cash permitting) have a look around other Asian countries. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:26 am Post subject: |
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Eikaiwa days.
Get up around 7am. Take care of home affairs (laundry, returning/renting videos, shopping, post office, etc.) before noon. Go to work after lunch. Work until 9pm. Return home by 10pm. Watch videos, read, do computer stuff till midnight. Weekends free.
High school and private lesson days.
Work 8:30 to 4pm, Mon to Fri. Have 1 or 2 private lessons until 8 or 9pm (with dinner at home often rushed in between; wife was pregnant then, so I did most of the shopping and cooking). Saturday have 1 or 2 private lessons from 10am to 2pm. Rest of weekend spent with wife.
High school days.
Wake up at 6am. Get to work at 8am. Work and meetings until 6 or 7pm (later on weeks with exams). Get home half an hour later. Dinner and relaxation with family. Bed at midnight. Every other Saturday work 8am to 2pm, plus work sporadic longer hours on festival days, open house, etc.
University days.
Wake up at 6am. Get to work by 8:30. One or 2 classes a day. Do online research. Leave around 6pm. Dinner and relaxation with family. Weekends off. |
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AndyH
Joined: 30 Sep 2004 Posts: 417
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 11:26 am Post subject: |
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Get up between 8:00 and 9:00.
Help wife with the baby, eat breakfast, check e-mail and play around on internet.
Leave for work around 11:00 am (some days earlier)
Get home around 9:15
Check e-mail and play around on internet.
Go to bed around midnight.
Sunday: Help wife with baby, shopping for groceries, sometimes rent a movie.
About once a month I'll take a trip into Tokyo.
I love being a dad, but life is a lot different now, then when I was a single guy in Japan! |
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Precise
Joined: 23 Mar 2007 Posts: 140
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 3:06 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for the posts. It sounds like you guys have very long working days. This is surprising considering many other ESL hotspots such as Korea don't require you to work more than 30 hours a week. |
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Glenski

Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:43 pm Post subject: |
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Long days, yes. Long WORKING days? Well, sometimes. It depends on how your job is structured. Nobody ever said the Japanese work system was efficient. Hint, hint.
And, as for conversation schools, you may be in the office 40 hours a week (depends), but the usual number of classroom hours is 25-30 per week. |
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User N. Ame
Joined: 11 Dec 2006 Posts: 222 Location: Kanto
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Posted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 11:12 pm Post subject: |
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Glenski wrote: |
Long days, yes. Long WORKING days? Well, sometimes. It depends on how your job is structured. |
Yes, long days in Japan. The Japanese work ethic has this thing about staying at work, long hours, even if you're not actually working. It's considered noble and virtuous to outlast your co-workers, even if that means pretending to grade the same stack of papers that you finished doing the day before. As a JET ALT, by my third year, I was spending more time (especially in summer) in the secret staff tatami room (napping, daydreaming, reading) than I was working in the staffroom or classroom. This may sound like a breeze, but I hated it because when you aren't doing anything, the day drags on forever.
I've always felt the best jobs in Japan would be some kind of self-employment or freelancing, where you weren't subjected to the ridiculous he who stays at work longest wins workplace edict. |
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womblingfree
Joined: 04 Mar 2006 Posts: 826
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Posted: Tue Apr 03, 2007 1:30 am Post subject: |
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Here are my routines for working at an eikaiwa and as an ALT.
Eikaiwa:
Get up at 12 noon, have a shower, get the train into work, eat something from Doutor, office meeting (only on Wednesdays), teach a 50 minute class at 1pm maybe, go for lunch until 5:50pm, get back and pull a lesson out of a box, teach three classes until 9pm, go to an izakaiya with students and co-workers, then maybe onto karaoke until the last train, fool around till 4am, repeat.
ALT:
Wake up at 6:10am, rush out the door listening to my iPod, make the 90 minute trek to Chiba from Ikebukuro, teach four or five classes in quick succession to groups of 50 kids whilst sleeping for 120 seconds between classes, repeat until 3 or 4pm.
The ALT job may sound like a nightmare in comparison but when there were no classes my head teacher let me stay at home (unknown to my dispatch company ) This meant absurdly long holidays during school breaks! Also they let me out as soon as my classes finished even though I was meant to stay till 4:30 every day. Sometimes my last class would be at 12
Also getting out of work at 3pm was nice but getting up at 6:10am was not.
The social life was far better at the eikaiwa, but luckily quite a few of my friends from there were still around when I got the ALT job. No one from the high school really socialised outside as they were too exhausted!! Still in touch with my great head teacher though.  |
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TK4Lakers

Joined: 06 Jan 2006 Posts: 159
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 5:24 am Post subject: ALT |
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6:15am : wake up, shower, quick breakfast
7:00am : out the door for a 10 min walk to the bus stop
7:30am : arrive at school, sit around, yawn, wipe the desks
8:30~12:20pm : classes/open periods, lunchtime
1:15pm~3pm: go to elem. school and teach
on mondays I'll usually go home to tutor for an hour.
other days, play club sports with the students until 6-7pm. |
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TokyoLiz
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 1548 Location: Tokyo, Japan
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Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2007 6:01 am Post subject: Wash and rinse |
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Up at 5:50 am, make bento lunch for me and my partner
On the train at 6:40
At work by 8:25
Prep and teach 3-4 classes, mark papers, grade input, chase absent students to do tests adn get their homework, plus English afternoon activities
Leave 4:30 pm
Catch train at 4:40pm, knit, read or crash part of the way
arrive at home station 6:15
at dojo or gym or lake for a bike ride by 6:45
Give up at 8:30pm
Home by 9:00pm Make dinner, do laundry, listen to podcasts, chill, meditate
Bed by 11:30 at the latest
Oh, but there's Hell Day when I have night school
Do the usual commute to work, put in a full day, then on the train by 4:40pm
Arrive at closest station to school by 5:20pm
get a quick dinner
at school by 6:00pm
class finishes 9:00pm
home by 10:30pm if I'm lucky. If I'm really lucky, I got a seat half the ride home.
Like down and die at 11:00pm |
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rebecca432
Joined: 26 Nov 2006 Posts: 20 Location: Osaka, Japan
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Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2007 5:45 pm Post subject: |
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10 am Alarm rings. I promptly push the snooze button
11 am Get tired of alarm ringing and get in the shower
12 pm Go back to bed
1 pm Get out of bed and eat breakfast and get ready for work
2:30 pm Leave the apartment for the ten minute walk to work
3:10 pm First lesson of the day
Lunch depends on shift so anywhere between 5:30 to 7:30
10:40 pm Shift ends
11-2, 3, 4, sometimes 5 or 6
Go home, eat dinner, go to karaoke or the bar, surf the net, waste time
On my days off, I go to the store, do laundry, and try to take day trips to places
My schedule seems very laid back compared to those of you who have real teaching jobs (no matter what anyone says Nova is not a real teaching job) and those of you who have spouses and kids. Now if I could just get out of bed and do something in the morning I'd have it made. |
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Gypsy Rose Kim
Joined: 08 Dec 2006 Posts: 151
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Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2007 1:16 am Post subject: |
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Precise wrote: |
Thanks for the posts. It sounds like you guys have very long working days. This is surprising considering many other ESL hotspots such as Korea don't require you to work more than 30 hours a week. |
Eek. Have you worked in Korea? You do know that those contract hours are actual teaching hours, and most Korean hagwons are far less organized than those in Japan.
Everyone I know here does faaaaar more prep than you average eikawa teacher (who often does zero).
In Korea, it's normal to have to write formal grade reports, the students often study writing so there are tons of papers to correct, and schedules tend to change monthly so one is constantly preparing new course outlines and writing greetings to the new students/their parents, and on and on. The owners change textbook series whenever they like, so you have to deal with that, too. Also, in Korea, the hagwons often open at 6 or 6:30 in the morning, something I never heard of in Japan. Those who teach high school students in academies may have lessons until midnight and work on a split shift.
We make way more money here in Korea, but we put in A LOT more hours (based on those who have similar job titles in Japan). |
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