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Canuk girl
Joined: 27 Mar 2003 Posts: 60
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Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2003 6:30 am Post subject: Linguaphone Academy? |
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Has anyone heard of the Linguaphone Academy? What can you tell me about them (in Tokyo Area).
Thanks. |
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Wolf

Joined: 10 May 2003 Posts: 1245 Location: Middle Earth
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Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2003 10:21 am Post subject: Re: Linguaphone Academy? |
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Canuk girl wrote: |
Has anyone heard of the Linguaphone Academy? What can you tell me about them (in Tokyo Area).
Thanks. |
Back when they were called something else, they turned me down in a job interview. They hired my roomate instead.
They have a few branches all over Japan. The Nagoya branch got in hot water with the General Union. Union side claimed union - busting tactics (ie non-renewal of union members' contracts for no other reason.)
However, my (former now) roomate enjoyed working there, although he wasn't perfectly thrilled with the setup. |
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chixdiggit
Joined: 21 May 2003 Posts: 60 Location: ROK
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Posted: Thu Nov 27, 2003 12:52 pm Post subject: Linguaphone Academy |
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Hey Canuk Girl, I worked with Linguaphone for about 9 months. As far as Eikawas go it was decent. I worked at the Yokohama branch which, apparently, is an entirely different experience from working at Shinjuku. This is largely a result of proximity to head office which is located at the Shinjuku branch. We had a lot more freedom in Yokohama as Head Office rarely visited or even called to check up on us. The students were great, probably the best I've had in my 3 years here. However, as with any eikawa, there were numerous issues. They recently dropped part-time wage by 500 yen an hour from 3000 to 2500. As a full-timer you have to work national holidays and paid holidays are also few and far between(don't remember the exact details). However, at Yokohama branch the manager Alex will help you as much as he can with holidays(albeit unpaid). The head office foreign boss is a guy named Albert with whom most teachers have their own personal gripes. Personally I left because of company policies, not the school, students, or co-workers. As a first job in Japan, however, it beats the hell out of most eikaiwas. If you have any specific questions email me or reply to this post. Bonne chance. |
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Canuk girl
Joined: 27 Mar 2003 Posts: 60
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Posted: Sat Nov 29, 2003 12:36 pm Post subject: thanks! |
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Thanks guys, quite helpful. I had an interview there and it ranks as one of the weirdest interviews I've ever had, but not terrible.
Last edited by Canuk girl on Sun Dec 07, 2003 12:18 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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chixdiggit
Joined: 21 May 2003 Posts: 60 Location: ROK
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Posted: Sun Nov 30, 2003 3:49 am Post subject: |
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Hey again, I felt obliged to post again as I had a similar experience in the interview. He's a bit creepy yeah? There was also a rather large lady who kept touching my leg during the interview. Anyway that's for another forum. My point is that after the interview you will rarely have to deal with that crap again. You have almost 100% freedom in lesson plans( no crap texts like NOVA). You'll get to socialize in the conversation lounge for half your day sometimes and meet lots of cool people. Don't write it off because of the strange interview. It is MOST DEFINITELY a better place to work than any of the Big 4 and I am speaking from experience. I'm not a nova basher or anything, I simply call 'em as I see 'em. Give it a chance. I'd still be there if my current high-school position hadn't fallen in my lap. Good luck with whatever you decide. |
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