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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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Trevor
Joined: 16 Nov 2005
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Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2013 4:27 am Post subject: |
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My best advice is to get a list of Korean universities that have departments in which your area of expertise would be of value. Contact each department separately. Try to customize each letter. (Like everybody else in the world, Korean academics like to feel as if you are contacting them specifically). Follow up with a phone call to the one's you are particularly interested in. You will most likely get a surprising number of responses if you approach them professionally.
You can also try to use email to network with Korean academics in your field and ask them where to apply. (Like everyone else, they like it when people ask them their advice).
Your biggest obstacle using the above strategies will be that university EnvSci departments will not always have a webpage in English.
| Mozsmith wrote: |
| Malislamusrex wrote: |
Times higher education and highereducation list jobs. You said you can teach other classes, if you have an MA in the specific subject, a PhD in English and are able to teach a subject there is a demand for you're in luck. If you can teach tax accounting, petroleum engineering or advanced Math you're in luck.
| Trevor wrote: |
| I haven't seen too many posts for specific subjects. Are they listed somewhere other than Dave's job board? I can teach several other subjects. |
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Hi there, I hold a PhD in env sci and have done tefl work in the past. Do any env sci teaching jobs ever come up at Korean universities? Cheers. |
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No_hite_pls
Joined: 05 Mar 2007 Location: Don't hate me because I'm right
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Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2013 3:50 pm Post subject: |
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| Mozsmith wrote: |
| Malislamusrex wrote: |
Times higher education and highereducation list jobs. You said you can teach other classes, if you have an MA in the specific subject, a PhD in English and are able to teach a subject there is a demand for you're in luck. If you can teach tax accounting, petroleum engineering or advanced Math you're in luck.
| Trevor wrote: |
| I haven't seen too many posts for specific subjects. Are they listed somewhere other than Dave's job board? I can teach several other subjects. |
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Hi there, I hold a PhD in env sci and have done tefl work in the past. Do any env sci teaching jobs ever come up at Korean universities? Cheers. |
There are a ton of jobs in env sci in Washington, D.C. area, doing environmental compliance if you don't want to teach. They pay great wages with a PHD. Just a FYI. |
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Malislamusrex
Joined: 01 Feb 2010
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Posted: Fri Mar 29, 2013 5:55 pm Post subject: |
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They do. But they may or may not hire. The problem in Korea is that you have to be lucky to get in (right place right time). Once you are teaching in a science department and you are doing a good job every professor in that city will know who you are. If you get friendly with the right academics everyone in the country will know who you are. Then the jobs come easy.
But it's that initial luck that you'll need. Having a PhD and TESOL expedience is what most professors want because they want to publish in major English speaking journals..
| Mozsmith wrote: |
| Malislamusrex wrote: |
Times higher education and highereducation list jobs. You said you can teach other classes, if you have an MA in the specific subject, a PhD in English and are able to teach a subject there is a demand for you're in luck. If you can teach tax accounting, petroleum engineering or advanced Math you're in luck.
| Trevor wrote: |
| I haven't seen too many posts for specific subjects. Are they listed somewhere other than Dave's job board? I can teach several other subjects. |
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Hi there, I hold a PhD in env sci and have done tefl work in the past. Do any env sci teaching jobs ever come up at Korean universities? Cheers. |
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PRagic

Joined: 24 Feb 2006
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Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2013 4:10 pm Post subject: |
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Might be comparing apples to oranges. Yes, IF you want to work in TESOL, then, sure, that Ph.D. in a related dicipline (e.g. applied linguistics or second language eduction) with TESOL experience helps. Others on this board are more concerned with teaching content (in English) at K universities.
Totally different ballgame. In that case, the only experience that counts is your experience gained post terminal degree, in this case the doctorate. Sometimes they will count experience gained lecturing over the course of your studies at your degree granting institution, but post-doc experience trumps. These jobs tend to pay nearly double university ESL teaching jobs, and generally have a 2/2 or 2/3 schedule. Research, then comes into play, as does professional service. |
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