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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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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 12:42 am Post subject: |
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| It too bad immigration or the Ministry of Labor will not enforce regulations for compensation for relevant experience. Foreign instructors do not usually have teaching experience recognized or rewarded like their Korean colleagues. |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 1:33 am Post subject: |
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| Real Reality wrote: |
| It too bad immigration or the Ministry of Labor will not enforce regulations for compensation for relevant experience. Foreign instructors do not usually have teaching experience recognized or rewarded like their Korean colleagues. |
BS. Teaching experience IS recongnized and rewarded. Maybe yours isnt. I know for a fact I got my job over many people with masters and other papers based on my teaching experience alone. Do an outstanding job every day and you will get excellent references. My references were enough to get me my current job as well as an offer to work for an international school, teaching math and science. |
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chronicpride

Joined: 16 Jan 2003
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 1:58 am Post subject: |
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| Daechidong Waygook wrote: |
| Real Reality wrote: |
| It too bad immigration or the Ministry of Labor will not enforce regulations for compensation for relevant experience. Foreign instructors do not usually have teaching experience recognized or rewarded like their Korean colleagues. |
BS. Teaching experience IS recongnized and rewarded. Maybe yours isnt. I know for a fact I got my job over many people with masters and other papers based on my teaching experience alone. Do an outstanding job every day and you will get excellent references. My references were enough to get me my current job as well as an offer to work for an international school, teaching math and science. |
RR used the words 'not usually', which I agree with, if applied to the larger scope of things. |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 2:05 am Post subject: |
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| chronicpride wrote: |
| Daechidong Waygook wrote: |
| Real Reality wrote: |
| It too bad immigration or the Ministry of Labor will not enforce regulations for compensation for relevant experience. Foreign instructors do not usually have teaching experience recognized or rewarded like their Korean colleagues. |
BS. Teaching experience IS recongnized and rewarded. Maybe yours isnt. I know for a fact I got my job over many people with masters and other papers based on my teaching experience alone. Do an outstanding job every day and you will get excellent references. My references were enough to get me my current job as well as an offer to work for an international school, teaching math and science. |
RR used the words 'not usually', which I agree with, if applied to the larger scope of things. |
But why? Is it all bad Koreans' fault? I dont know. I think that a lot of the time people have the experience, i.e. the years worked, but often quantity and quality dont go hand in hand. Word of mouth is very important in Korea. What your boss has to say about you, does count for a lot. A lot of people do a half assed job, and then wonder why they cant leave the hagwon system and make more than 2.0 despite having the experience. In the 3 years Ive been here, I took a vacation once. At two hagwons I worked for the whole year straight. I refused to take a vacation, even when my bosses asked me why I was not taking a vacation. I said I preferred to work. I also still keep in touch with two of my previous bosses. We are on good terms even now. I have dinner at one of my bosses house, wuth his parents on an occassional basis. People burn bridges for stupid things. I like to think that I put in more than was required of me in the past 3 years. And in the end it paid off big. |
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chronicpride

Joined: 16 Jan 2003
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 2:50 am Post subject: |
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| Daechidong Waygook wrote: |
| chronicpride wrote: |
| Daechidong Waygook wrote: |
| Real Reality wrote: |
| It too bad immigration or the Ministry of Labor will not enforce regulations for compensation for relevant experience. Foreign instructors do not usually have teaching experience recognized or rewarded like their Korean colleagues. |
BS. Teaching experience IS recongnized and rewarded. Maybe yours isnt. I know for a fact I got my job over many people with masters and other papers based on my teaching experience alone. Do an outstanding job every day and you will get excellent references. My references were enough to get me my current job as well as an offer to work for an international school, teaching math and science. |
RR used the words 'not usually', which I agree with, if applied to the larger scope of things. |
But why? Is it all bad Koreans' fault? I dont know. I think that a lot of the time people have the experience, i.e. the years worked, but often quantity and quality dont go hand in hand. Word of mouth is very important in Korea. What your boss has to say about you, does count for a lot. A lot of people do a half assed job, and then wonder why they cant leave the hagwon system and make more than 2.0 despite having the experience. In the 3 years Ive been here, I took a vacation once. At two hagwons I worked for the whole year straight. I refused to take a vacation, even when my bosses asked me why I was not taking a vacation. I said I preferred to work. I also still keep in touch with two of my previous bosses. We are on good terms even now. I have dinner at one of my bosses house, wuth his parents on an occassional basis. People burn bridges for stupid things. I like to think that I put in more than was required of me in the past 3 years. And in the end it paid off big. |
On paper, everything looks to be as it should over here. That's Korea. But will they say to your or my face, that they hired you or I for the reasons that sound right or are right? More often than not, from my vantage point, things get spun the way they want it to look.
Case in point, I recruited for a handful of universities in Gyeonggi-do and Gyeongsangbuk-do last year, and I would have a pile of guys with MA TESOL or Education degrees, plus XYZ years of experience. Guys that I interviewed and reference checked and they all totally checked out. But I can't just send one. So I send a couple other resume/photos. The resume/photos of the prime candidates would hit the trash bin, for 'his face is a little bit scary smile', or 'he's 40yrs old, do you have maybe 24yr old girl?', even shit like 'his face looks fat. Can you call him and ask if his body is fat, too?'
The one that cosmetically and ethnically looked the part, almost always got it.
I remember a time that an upstanding school in Daegu even gave me a list of hiring conditions of the qualifications that they were looking for, and said don't even bother sending a resume that didn't have all of this. I sent one that matched the list, plus a cute 24 yr old, Canadian blonde, with no experience. They took the blonde.
The post-hiring spin in almost all cases, was them telling the teacher that they were impressed by their resume and blah-blah, while I restrained myself from puking all over their desk.
I'm not a Korea basher, nor do I dispute that you got your job on your own experience/education/references, etc..., but, on the larger scope of things, this is no ideal market for being rewarded for hardwork/experience/references. |
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TECO

Joined: 20 Jan 2003
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 3:22 am Post subject: |
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| chronicpride wrote: |
On paper, everything looks to be as it should over here.
That's Korea.
But will they say to your or my face, that they hired you or I for the reasons that sound right or are right? More often than not, from my vantage point, things get spun the way they want it to look.
Case in point, I recruited for a handful of universities in Gyeonggi-do and Gyeongsangbuk-do last year, and I would have a pile of guys with MA TESOL or Education degrees, plus XYZ years of experience. Guys that I interviewed and reference checked and they all totally checked out.
But I can't just send one.
So I send a couple other resume/photos. The resume/photos of the prime candidates would hit the trash bin, for 'his face is a little bit scary smile', or 'he's 40yrs old, do you have maybe 24yr old girl?', even *beep* like 'his face looks fat. Can you call him and ask if his body is fat, too?'
The one that cosmetically and ethnically looked the part, almost always got it.
I remember a time that an upstanding school in Daegu even gave me a list of hiring conditions of the qualifications that they were looking for, and said don't even bother sending a resume that didn't have all of this. I sent one that matched the list, plus a cute 24 yr old, Canadian blonde, with no experience. They took the blonde.
I'm not a Korea basher, nor do I dispute that you got your job on your own experience/education/references, etc..., but, on the larger scope of things, this is no ideal market for being rewarded for hardwork/experience/references. |
I have had similar experiences in my EFL career.
Black or Chinese friends from Canada or the U.S. would get a disproportionate amount of disrequests from students. Really nice people and reliable teachers.
When students were asked by admin staff why the student didn't want these teachers, they wouldn't give a concrete reason.
I've seen the dumbest Australian blonde with big *beep* get the most requests in the school.
I've called about job interviews and the Chinese will ask me point blank over the phone - "What colour are you?"
I have covered all of my bases in terms of teacher training and academic study - but I also try to keep things in perspective.
In Asia, you WILL NOT always be rewarded for your dedication and diligent hard work. |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 3:25 am Post subject: |
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| I agree that that is why many people get hired. Hagwons and Unis are businesses that make money from student enrollment. I was hired by the district office in my gu, and placed into an elementary school. The school had nothing to do with hiring me and Im sure that Gagnam District Office isnt sweating how much money they make off me. They dont make ANY money off me, its a public school. And even if they did, they have more money than they know what to do with. Now, I am sure that image did play some part in my being hired. I was sure to project the image of professionalism through and through. That included how I looked, dressed and how prepared I was for the interview and how engaging I was during the interview. |
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ThePoet
Joined: 15 May 2004 Location: No longer in Korea - just lurking here
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:06 am Post subject: |
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I really have to say this because it is not all one-sided in my recent experience. I understand you can show a few pesonal anecdotes about a few people who are into the perfect looks. I won't dispute them, but I will also say that when I first put up my resume a year and a half ago to come to Korea, I got 40 responses within 6 hours and all totalled, I had almost 100 by the time I had made my choice to come here.
This year, I applied to 15 university positions. I had 4 interviews on the cold resumes I sent out (I had no "in's" to these places), and I have 3 more interviews upcoming which I've consequently had to send my regrets to.
That's 7 interviews off 15 resumes. thats close to 50%. I can tell you that when I worked in Alberta as a teacher, I averaged around 20% for resumes sent out.
I can also tell you that every one of these interviews were given to me because of experience, references, and qualifications. I know for a fact that they were not based on my looks. I am 6'3" and 290 lbs...quite big. and I have a face, well, quite frankly, you could put my face into a bowl of dough and make gorilla cookies with it. I know it, my friends know it, and so does the gorilla cookie industry. So, while having good looks may get your foot in the door here, as it does everywhere to some extent, it doesn't always happen here, and those who are hiring that have intelligence, always look for the best qualified, not the best looking.
Poet |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:12 am Post subject: |
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| Good looks play a part everywhere, not only Korea. Jerry Seinfeld said that there are no handsome homeless people. And it probably does play a part in bottom of the barrel schools. But I dont think that good looks are a priority in better schools. The higher the quality of the job, the less looks matter. Image will always play a role in first impressions, and it goes in tandem with your qualifications, references, etc. That is why building strong relationships with employesr matters for those who wish to stay here for a longer time and make it out of the hagwon industry. |
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TECO

Joined: 20 Jan 2003
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 4:13 am Post subject: |
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| ThePoet wrote: |
| I am 6'3" and 290 lbs...quite big. and I have a face, well, quite frankly, you could put my face into a bowl of dough and make gorilla cookies with it. |
That's funny!
We needed that post.
But it goes both ways though. |
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Jeju Rocks
Joined: 23 Aug 2004
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Posted: Mon Dec 06, 2004 8:15 pm Post subject: |
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| Daechidong waygook reminds me a lot of Alex Buffa |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Tue Dec 07, 2004 1:04 am Post subject: |
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| Jeju Rocks wrote: |
| Daechidong waygook reminds me a lot of Alex Buffa |
Why is that? Is anything I said off the mark? I dont think so. |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Tue Dec 07, 2004 2:01 am Post subject: |
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chronicpride wrote,
"...on the larger scope of things, this is no ideal market for being rewarded for hardwork/experience/references."
Exactly. |
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Daechidong Waygookin

Joined: 22 Nov 2004 Location: No Longer on Dave's. Ive quit.
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Posted: Tue Dec 07, 2004 2:21 am Post subject: |
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| Real Reality wrote: |
chronicpride wrote,
"...on the larger scope of things, this is no ideal market for being rewarded for hardwork/experience/references."
Exactly. |
Explain to me your vision of utopia RR. There IS such a market. As I said before, if you put in a great effort and take good care to leave exgremely positive impessions and memories behind you, you will get rewarded. A lot of people land very good jobs. The better the job is, the more emphasis they place on references. Maybe if you want to work for Ding a Ling Super English hagwon or some other haggie, then you wont be rewarded because hagwons dont generally reward people. If every job was like a uni or public school job, there would be no great jobs, there would only be regular jobs. Getting that great job is possible and it is done on a regular basis by people who have experiences and great references.So there IS a reward. |
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Real Reality
Joined: 10 Jan 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Tue Dec 07, 2004 2:52 am Post subject: |
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Daechidong Waygook,
I teach at a "good" university. The experience of the foreign professors has never been included in the determination of the salary and benefits. |
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