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My prospects for the JET program
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indianajake



Joined: 30 Apr 2004
Posts: 7
Location: USA

PostPosted: Mon May 03, 2004 7:50 pm    Post subject: My prospects for the JET program Reply with quote

I'm interested in applying to the JET Program for 2005, but I'd like to see what my prospects are for getting accepted into it. My situation at the time I apply will be as follows:

Age: 24

Sex: Male

Education: Bachelor's of Science and Master's of Science from Purdue University, very high GPA's on both.

Japanese Skills: I have no experience in speaking or reading Japanese, but I have taught myself to count in Japanese numbers.

Certifications: I will have a license to teach Social Studies at the secondary level (Grades 6-12) within the state of Indiana, the license is also considered good in most of the other U.S. states. In pursuing this license I have taken a large number of courses about teaching methodology.

Experience: As a graduate student, I have two and a half years of instructing mostly conversational college classes called recitations, I have favorable references from their course directors. By the time that I would be ready to begin the JET program I will also have 10 weeks of student teaching experience which is essentially an internship where I am responsible for teaching a social studies class under the supervision of another teacher.

Thanks for taking a look at my post, if anyone could give me a realistic suggestion of what my chances are or any advice on how I could improve my prospects I would greatly appreciate it.
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Glenski



Joined: 15 Jan 2003
Posts: 12844
Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN

PostPosted: Mon May 03, 2004 9:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Your age and education are no problem. You don't need a degree in Japanese Studies to get in.

Your lack of Japanese skills is also not a problem. Even people WITH some such skills don't get in. You won't be expected to use Japanese at work anyway. (But don't stop studying because it will be invaluable for daily life.)

Your teaching license could be good or bad. JET wants people to be ambassadors of internationalization, NOT teachers, although they say that some teaching experience is good. Since ALTs work with Japanese teachers of English (who do the majority of lesson planning and execution), you won't need teaching experience, but it might help to make you more aware of how to do things. Then again, some places might balk at someone who has several years of teaching experience because they might figure you will try to change their system. (Not a real problem in your particular case.)

I rate your chances as good as anyone else's. Show a serious interest in Japan (that is, not to women or manga or anime), a sense of adaptability to living in a foreign environment, and a lot of energy.
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PAULH



Joined: 28 Jan 2003
Posts: 4672
Location: Western Japan

PostPosted: Mon May 03, 2004 10:02 pm    Post subject: Re: My prospects for the JET program Reply with quote

indianajake wrote:


Age: 24

Sex: Male

Education: Bachelor's of Science and Master's of Science from Purdue University, very high GPA's on both.
.



The JEt people take anyone who is a university graduate up until the age of 40. You must have at least a Bachelors degree and having a Masters won't make tha much difference (for the visa). GPAs irrelevant as many candidates are not from the USA where GPA is not used. the degree is for your visa, not as a mark of teaching ability. (JET is not baout teaching anyway, its about exposing students to English and foreign culture- its an exchange program)


indianajake wrote:

Japanese Skills: I have no experience in speaking or reading Japanese, but I have taught myself to count in Japanese numbers.
.


Japanese ability is not required on JET as you are being paid to speak English and introduce your own culture. You are a teaching assistant for a trained and qualified Japanese teacher.

indianajake wrote:

Certifications: I will have a license to teach Social Studies at the secondary level (Grades 6-12) within the state of Indiana, the license is also considered good in most of the other U.S. states. In pursuing this license I have taken a large number of courses about teaching methodology.
.


Formal teaching qualifications are not requested as you will not be teaching per se, but providing language practice and a native speaking role model. I would think the methodology for teaching Social Studies will not be the same as a communicative langauge class, where you are getting non native speakers to speak English. Previous experience and training is usually not required on JET.

They are looking for people who are interested in Japan, are flexible, interested in teaching and can cope with living in a foreign culture.

indianajake wrote:

Experience: As a graduate student, I have two and a half years of instructing mostly conversational college classes called recitations, I have favorable references from their course directors. By the time that I would be ready to begin the JET program I will also have 10 weeks of student teaching experience which is essentially an internship where I am responsible for teaching a social studies class under the supervision of another teacher.
.


Like I said, most of the people applying for JET have never taught before and have no teaching qualifications. Many do not speak Japanese either. You stand just a good chance as any person when applying, but no one here can give you an honest appraisal, as they are not doing the hiring or making the final decision.
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PAULH



Joined: 28 Jan 2003
Posts: 4672
Location: Western Japan

PostPosted: Mon May 03, 2004 11:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

From the MOFA website on JET

All applicants must:


* hold a Bachelor's degree in any subject by July of the year of departure;
* be a citizen of the country where the recruitment and selection procedures take place;
* have excellent skills in the designated language (both written and spoken). (For English-speaking countries this is English, and for non-English speaking countries it is English or the principal language);
* have a keen interest in the country and culture of Japan;
* in principle, be under 40 years of age;
* not have lived in Japan for 3 or more of the last 8 years, nor be a former participant in the programme for the last 10 years.
For ALT applicants in English-speaking countries:

* TEFL qualification is helpful, but not required.
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guest of Japan



Joined: 28 Feb 2003
Posts: 1601
Location: Japan

PostPosted: Tue May 04, 2004 1:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I won't speak of the JET program per se, but there will be certain aspects from your teacher training which should be very valuable in teacher large class EFL.

Lesson planning - Your experience in doing this should help you to make clear enjoyable lessons.

Time management - You will become more effective in the use of your planning time as well as pacing in the classroom.

Teaching techniques - A good history teacher will usually do lots of cooperative learning in class. This same technique can proove quite valuable in teaching communicative English, although there will be huge differences in goals, technique and students.

Classroom management - Obvious similarities.

Educational psychology - You will have a greater understanding than the Japanese teachers, unfortunately you won't be able to do much with it.

Important Note: Don't make negative comparisons about Japanese education to the Japanese teachers. They are sensitive about this.
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Glenski



Joined: 15 Jan 2003
Posts: 12844
Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN

PostPosted: Tue May 04, 2004 6:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sorry, but I just have to take issue with what guest of Japan wrote.

Quote:
Lesson planning - Your experience in doing this should help you to make clear enjoyable lessons.

Most JET ALTs don't even plan lessons. They just follow the JTE's lead. Many serve merely as human tape recorders. No planning needed for that.

Quote:
Lesson planning - Your experience in doing this should help you to make clear enjoyable lessons.

See above remarks.

Quote:
Teaching techniques - A good history teacher will usually do lots of cooperative learning in class. This same technique can proove quite valuable in teaching communicative English, although there will be huge differences in goals, technique and students.

Again, see above remarks.

Quote:
Classroom management - Obvious similarities.

Not really. You won't take attendance; the JTE will. That also means reprimanding anyone who comes in late without an excuse, or taking care of the paperwork they give you when they do have an excuse.
Discipline will (and should) be entirely up to the JTE because of language and cultural barriers with the ALT. These are big barriers and could cover situations as simple as sleeping students to those who cause the infamous "classroom chaos" situations.

Quote:
Educational psychology - You will have a greater understanding than the Japanese teachers, unfortunately you won't be able to do much with it.

MAYBE you will have a greater understanding of it, but without understanding the cultural background behind Japanese classroom psychology, you are like a fish out of water. Besides, the OP has not even been a teacher in his own country, so any courses in educational psychology are merely theory, not applied knowledge, and are geared towards his home country's culture, not Japan's.
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PAULH



Joined: 28 Jan 2003
Posts: 4672
Location: Western Japan

PostPosted: Tue May 04, 2004 6:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Guest of Japan is forgetting an obvious fact:

not only does the OP not speak Japanese, he is also not certified to practice as a teacher in a high school classroom without japanese certification nor with a Japanese teacher present. JET are not by any stretch of the imagination considered proper teachers when they arrive here. The teacher he will work with has a four year degree, a teaching licence, completed a practicum years of experience in the classroom and also speaks the students language.

To think that a newly graduated university student with no teacher training and no language skills in the students language can walk into a classroom in a foreign country and start imposing foreign educational models and teaching technicques from another discipline on his students is being rather optimistic at best.
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