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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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Conrad B Hart
Joined: 27 Jul 2009
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Posted: Sun Aug 09, 2009 12:02 pm Post subject: |
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| Totti wrote: |
www.pusanweb.com
post your resume on there and you should get a few offers from schools directly. |
http://koreabridge.net/
So there's NOTHING happening in Jeju then?  |
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Czarjorge

Joined: 01 May 2007 Location: I now have the same moustache, and it is glorious.
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Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 4:28 am Post subject: |
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| have you been on pusanweb lately? it's pretty damn dead. |
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lotusbrick76
Joined: 10 Aug 2009
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dedalus2
Joined: 18 Jun 2009 Location: That's what you get for waking up in Vegas.
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Posted: Tue Aug 11, 2009 11:26 am Post subject: |
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Preface: I'm a gyopo with limited Korean language skills and an F4 visa, so maybe since I don't look "American" this will explain some of my difficulties.
While Not in Korea:
-Most of the big name recruiters who post constantly on the job postings never respond to me at all. I got encouragement to apply for public school jobs, but my masochistic streak would prefer a hagwon. Personal preference.
-Some recruiters will send a reply or two, but if I ask further questions, I never hear from them again.
While in Korea:
-OK Recruiting got back to me, but I wasn't too keen on the position. They told me they'd let me know if anything else came up; no response yet within the past month.
-EduOrange met me for an interview and had an interview with a school. The recruiter was going to send me the contract later that evening, but gave the position away to someone else within two hours after my interview finished, promising me a "better position." This was one of those rare cases where I "rejected" the recruiter instead of vice-versa: received constant calls and e-mails about a "really good position" non-stop in the following weeks, that kept coming in until I returned my rental cellphone.
I've been referred a few other recruiters in the past few days but nothing seems too promising... |
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jhines86
Joined: 26 Dec 2007 Location: West Plains, Missouri
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Posted: Mon Sep 07, 2009 6:24 pm Post subject: Recruiters - Jake Kim |
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Ok folks, I'm new to the forum, but not new to knowledge about Jake Kim. Here's the info from a 1st time ESL teacher overseas. I was looking about going over for 4 years. I came across a recruiter in Busan who put me in touch with Jake Kim at the MBT Hakwan in Ulsan.
My wife and I spoke with Jake over the phone and he sent a photo of himself and his wife. I was a skeptic, because I learned that recruiters (read on) really are for the sale.
Jake is WAY DIFFERENT!
We (myself, wife and 3 kids) signed on, and went over. Jake met us at the bus station, took us to our apart and then out to eat. Seeing that we had 3 kids, the school didn't make us start teaching the very next day. We had a couple of days and then a weekend to get things ready. Jake was at our house EVERY day making sure we were getting acclimated.
Over the course of the year, Jake Kim was the BEST friend (short of my wife) I could have asked for!!! We had many hours of talking about the culture, life and everything.
After 6 months, the owner decided to sell the school at which point Jake was fired as the curriculum director. He went on to find another job, but he was still hanging with us.
There are exceptions to every rule and Jake is one of those wonderful exceptions to recruiters. We went everywhere together, had picnics on rooftops with him, Jini and their family. We were accepted into their family even though we didn't speak a lot of Korean. He interpreted for us when my wife when to the emergency room and he was away on a holiday.
Jake is a great person and I count him as part of my family. While there, Jake and Jini had a baby boy (Kyung Min aka Gideon Jacob) and we were given the honor of naming Min with his English name.
I speak to him often over Skype and I miss him greatly. He was as a starter a recruiter, but he grew to be a brother. So while many of you debate the idea of a good/bad recruiter or a good/bad school, please use some common sense.
Korea isn't a paradise of wonderful, honest jobs. Some school owners are cut throat, and won't care one bit about you. You fill a job and there are many others waiting to take your place.
There are those who will bend over backwards to help and are compassionate about you and what role you play as a teacher.
The same goes for recruiters. BUT when you find a person that will hang with you through the good and the bad, it's a gold mine and a person who I will ALWAYS back. (I know I really don't have a lot of sway, but it's a personal testimony to his honesty and integrity as a human.)
I am sure that if you contact Jake, he will do his best to find you a position at a REPUTABLE school, but don't hold him to the fire when the owner does something contrary, it does happen.
I'll get off my soap box. If you want to know anymore, please feel free to contact me, and I will contact him and go that way.
He and I are trying to get teachers more interested in teaching overseas, and as a teacher here in Missouri, I'm very tempted some days to go back, become an expat and stay there. Even on a bad day there, it is better than public school here. Better pay and more respect...
Have a good day!
Shawn Hines
[email protected] |
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randall020105

Joined: 08 Apr 2008 Location: the land of morning confusion...
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Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 1:18 pm Post subject: Re: Good Recruiters???? |
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| [email protected] wrote: |
thanks to all you helpful, kind people out there~it is kind of mind blowing to see you guys so willing to help without any kind of incentive besides general "goodness"  |
+1 |
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smee18
Joined: 24 Mar 2009 Location: Korea
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Posted: Wed Aug 24, 2011 3:58 pm Post subject: |
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In response to the OP's concerns regarding Footprints recruiting, I went through footprints twice, working public school in Korea. Both times they did what I consider to be an adequate job, as well as could be expected I guess. Am thinking of trying another country next year, and will look to them again.
Cheers |
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melee
Joined: 20 Jun 2011
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Posted: Thu Aug 25, 2011 12:34 am Post subject: |
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| Starla wrote: |
| aerialsimulacrum wrote: |
Starla, my recruiter said she didn't know. The only thing she could/would say was the principal had simply called it off. This was an especially cruel blow as I had talked with my co-teacher on the phone before sending my stuff to them. According to my recruiter, the co-teacher liked me a lot, and everything was all systems go until the principal refused.
One guess: my lack of teaching experience with younger learners was the deciding factor.
Another: dislike of my photo, resume, or something else in my application. I'm not a certified teacher and lack an English or education degree.
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I'm pretty much like you...no degree in English or Education and no prior teaching experience or certification. I'd rather be told upfront that based on this criteria, a certain school probably won't hire me. One of my recruiters told me that recently and I was fine with it. I would never apply for a job in the U.S. if I knew I wasn't qualified enough yet these recruiters waste people's time trying to make something fit that doesn't fit. They always ask for my photo and resume right away so I thought they show them to the school I'm supposed to interview with right away as well so a disqualification based on those two factors would come before the interview and not after. I may be wrong though.
I also got a few scenarios where the school pulled out at the last minute. The explanations were almost always lame. In the U.S., if they don't want you they don't offer you a position in the first place but I see in Korea, people changing their minds last minute seems common and this includes teachers as well as school directors and principals. Otherwise, I would have been in Korea already. Though I'm kind of glad I've been made to wait since I was interviewing mostly with kiddie hagwons and have since changed my orientation. I refuse to take the risk and only am dealing with more reputable schools now. I recommend going through the recruiters I mentioned. They seem more genuine than previous ones I dealt with, at least for the time being. |
Same thing has happend with me...got a job offer with the whole process going then suddenly I get turned down with a lame excuse. After this the recruiter who got me the job usually wont contact me again since I would probably seem like a burden. Recruiters are just a numbers game, keep applying. etc. Gmail is handy since I can see which recruiters i've emailed already. |
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Jotun_Symph
Joined: 21 Aug 2011
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Posted: Thu Aug 25, 2011 5:00 pm Post subject: |
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I KNOW A GREAT RECRUITER!!!
a dead one |
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CPJ
Joined: 30 Dec 2008
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Posted: Thu Sep 08, 2011 9:54 am Post subject: |
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A GOOD RECRUITER? -Try them all!
If you're a 'good applicant', you will be flooded with calls from recruiters and schools. In Korea, 'good applicant' usually means that you are a young, attractive, North American female. They will all want you to work with them. They will all treat you really well.
If you're not a 'good applicant', then you will probably be ignored or get the jobs that the 'good applicants' don't want. In Korea, this usually means that you are older, not that attractive, and a non-North American male.
If you're wanting a job, apply to as many recruiters as you can. They will send you job offers. I doubt anyone takes a job because they like the recruiter they are talking to. If this is why you take a job, you have no one to blame but yourself when you hate your job or if you if get cheated.
Talk to the teachers at the school. Ask the hard questions. If you like what you hear, take the job. If you don't like what you hear, pass on the job. How simple is that?
If 100 people applied to the same recruiter, I can guarantee that they will have very different opinions about that recruiter.
Many will say they are great! Others will say they suck! I can guarantee you that every recruiter that has placed over 100 teachers will have teachers at both ends of the spectrum.
So be smart about it! Apply to many, all of them if possible! Then rely on what the teachers at the schools tell you, not what the recruiter tells you. |
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coetivy89
Joined: 07 May 2011
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ElephantJumper
Joined: 26 Apr 2011
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Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 6:43 am Post subject: |
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| Star teachers are excellent at finding positions. However when I got given a terrible contract by a school through them, they wouldn't speak to the school about negotiating it, then refused to help me after I turned it down. Probably not uncommon for recruiters to do that though I guess. |
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isitts
Joined: 25 Dec 2008 Location: Korea
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Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 7:18 am Post subject: |
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| Karea wrote: |
After reading through this thread, alarm bells are ringing.
One of the recruiters I'm currently dealing with seems to be semi-obsessed with the current situation/position of my needed visa documentation.
When I suggested that in the mean-time it was better to apply for the jobs first and see if I am definitely offered a position, I wasn't met with a direct answer/response.
Should I run a mile. Or is this the usual behaviour? |
It's usual these days. |
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northway
Joined: 05 Jul 2010
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Posted: Sun Sep 11, 2011 7:42 am Post subject: |
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| isitts wrote: |
| Karea wrote: |
After reading through this thread, alarm bells are ringing.
One of the recruiters I'm currently dealing with seems to be semi-obsessed with the current situation/position of my needed visa documentation.
When I suggested that in the mean-time it was better to apply for the jobs first and see if I am definitely offered a position, I wasn't met with a direct answer/response.
Should I run a mile. Or is this the usual behaviour? |
It's usual these days. |
As it should be, considering pretty much anyone with a warm body will eventually be offered a position, so long as they have their documents in hand. |
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jeremysums
Joined: 08 Apr 2011
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Posted: Wed Sep 28, 2011 9:01 am Post subject: Re: RBI Korea? |
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Where do Korvia place you? Do they have any spot in Seoul?
| bizrandom wrote: |
| sarahbeara_413 wrote: |
| Does anyone know anything about RBI Korea? I found a job posting of theirs and contacted them, they sent me multiple job openings that all look pretty good. I ran a search for them but couldn't come up with anything....does anyone have any experience with them that can provide any feedback? |
I initially had good responses from RBI, but had one issue with my diploma being in hand, and was essentially dropped. If you are looking for young kids in Busan there is also
Danny J. Kim
HR Manager
YBM Education ECC Division
Calls from Korea (02)-2267-0532 or (02)-2003-1697
Overseas calls (Dial your international access # first)
+(822)-2267-0532 or +(822)-2003-1697
I ended up talking to a bunch of recruiters, several who I found to be very business like, and seemed very caring and good at their jobs. Many were Junk. I ended up not going through a recruiter, but found a company and contacted them directly. I got the EXACT job I wanted. Take your time! SIFT. Here are a couple of others I had good experiences with.
Youngran
TEACHKOREA
ECI Korean Dept./EPIK Division
6563 Hidden Creek Dr.
San Jose, CA. 95120
[email protected]
www.new.eci-ca.org
- SHe called the CHicago consulate, and answered everyone of my questions VERY promptly. I only did not go with EPIK because I took the other osition, but would recommend Youngran (She is located in the US)
142-3 LG Eclat B-832
Samseong-2dong, Gangnam-gu
Seoul, Korea
Zip 135-876
TEL 82-2-553-6210 or 6216~7
FAX 82-2-6442-6210
CEL 82 10 3288 9479
Internet Phone 090-276-2601
[email protected]
http://www.korvia.com
Joyce was the most professional recruiter I worked with. I just didn't want to work around Seoul! Otherwise I would have loved to have worked with her!
Those 3 were awesome. Also if you want to work in Daegu, I know my new company maybe hiring!
Briz |
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