thegadfly

Joined: 01 Feb 2003
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Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2010 1:46 am Post subject: |
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I had my degrees before coming to Korea, but I have taught about the same amount of time in the US as I have Korea (8 years in the US, working on my 9th year in Korea). Depends on the problems that bother you more, and the problems that don't bother you much.
I make more money here than I would in the US, I have more control over what happens in my classroom (in my school, I get to pretty much write my own curriculum). The buck also stops with me -- problems with my classes fall squarely upon my shoulders -- if little Jimmy isn't learning in my class, someone comes right to me, pretty quickly. There's no skating or sliding in my gig -- for some people that is a lot of stress, but I like that kind of situation. I come under a LOT more scrutiny here than I did in the US, and that can be stressful for some folks, but again, I enjoy the situation.
The experience in a Korean classroom can help you anywhere, because classroom management skills translate well -- the subject matter may change, but kids are kids wherever you go. The similarities far outweigh the differences.
Each person is different, and the things that I like about my time in Korea have been the exact things I have heard other people DISlike about their time in Korea... there are problems everywhere, so you need to figure out what bothers you more, and try to find a place with less of whatever that is.... |
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