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explorer25
Joined: 18 Jul 2004 Location: Korea
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Posted: Sat Nov 22, 2008 7:40 am Post subject: Is TEFL offered in Seoul??? |
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I checked the website but Seoul is not listed as one of the locations...
any ideas?? i wanna start in January.... |
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bassexpander
Joined: 13 Sep 2007 Location: Someplace you'd rather be.
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Posted: Sat Nov 22, 2008 8:24 am Post subject: |
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What TEFL?
There is the Sookmyung University program, but it's maybe 3.5 million won. Not sure when it starts.
What are your reasons for doing the TEFL? |
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explorer25
Joined: 18 Jul 2004 Location: Korea
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Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 2:20 am Post subject: |
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I 'd like to get the certificate...TESOL TEFL...is it not the same thing??  |
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bassexpander
Joined: 13 Sep 2007 Location: Someplace you'd rather be.
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Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 2:30 am Post subject: |
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Yeah, basically the same as far as things go. There are differences, but not important here.
You don't need it to teach in Korea. You can get an online one for $300 and that's good enough to please the public schools. |
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maingman
Joined: 26 Jan 2008 Location: left Korea
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agoodmouse

Joined: 20 Dec 2007 Location: Anyang
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Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 2:36 pm Post subject: Re: Is TEFL offered in Seoul??? |
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explorer25 wrote: |
I checked the website but Seoul is not listed as one of the locations...
any ideas?? i wanna start in January.... |
You could have taken the CELTA at TTI in Gangdong-gu, but it's full for January 2009. You can get on the wait list, though, but I'd look elsewhere. The thirty day full time intensive course, which is full, from 9am-6pm runs with no more than 10 people each time. It costs 2,150,000 KRW. Of course you can do an online certificate course, but it's nowhere as enriching because on-site TEFL/TESOL programs give you hands-on daily teaching practicums with real English learners, which is what you do instead of looking at a computer screen doing an online TEFL.
I've done a TESOL with Asian-Journal, the CELTA, and an online TEFL.
http://tti.igse.ac.kr/tti/CeltaAction.do?cmd=intro wrote: |
We run the CELTA course four times a year, two full-time 4-week intensive courses in January and July, and two part-time courses in spring and autumn.
We are currently running the part-time autumn course and are full.
The next course will be a full-time, Monday - Friday, four-week intensive in January.
Dates: 5 - 30 January 2009 This course is now full
We are enrolling now for spring and summer 2009
In spring, we will be running another part-time CELTA course, on three mornings a week, starting in mid-March 2009 and finishing in mid-June. (Exact dates to be fixed).
In summer, we will be running a full-time (Monday - Friday) 4-week intensive course, 6 - 31 July.
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maingman
Joined: 26 Jan 2008 Location: left Korea
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Posted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 1:32 am Post subject: , |
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part of reply to me, earliier this year from ical
A Certificate is the standard qualification required to teach English as a Second or Foreign Language in the private sector. Accepted all over the world, the 100hrs ICAL TESL/TEFL Certificate is regarded as a benchmark by which other online courses are judged and we are proud leaders in this field.
We have many ICAL graduates who have found suite employment tin the countries you mentioned thanks to their ICAL certificate and related papers. In fact, the ICAL 100hrs TESL/TEFL Certificate is even accepted by the Education and Manpower Bureau in Hong Kong.
I assume you already have a degree so adding a TESL certificate to your r�sum� will increase your marketability in those countries.
.....
IATQUO moderates only those course providers listed on their website. To be listed on the IATQUO website you need to pay them not only a registration fee but also a commission for each student you have on your books. So as you can see their validation is hardly independent and unbiased. In fact IATQUO was originally set up for a school (TEFL International) that couldn�t get accreditation through the usual channels.
Of course to be 100% certain you should contact the school or relevant government department and check with them first. This will, of course, prevent any problems later.
May I also suggest that you do this even if you take a course from an organization other than ICAL. There is currently NO independent accrediting organization for TESL/TEFL Courses and so it is up to the individual school or government to determine which courses they accept. And in many situations it is left to the individual school; there have been cases where one school in a town will accept a particular certificate but another school in the same town will not. |
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