Teaching English In Asia A poll asking if you would consider teaching Engligh in Asia
#1
Posted 16 May 2006 - 12:37 PM
English teaching... enjoys a crappy reputation in places like Thailand but enjoys far greater respect in places like Hong Kong and indeed, pays much better. I don't know much about the English teaching market around Asia and I've never really considered it as an option but would certainly consider trying it for a few years in the future, just for the experience.
What are your experiences and in what countries. Is there anywhere high on your list of 'must teach English there' countries? Where's the last place you'd consider wasting your skills. Do you even have any skills and are one of those duffers who managed to blag a job at some unsuspecting private school without any qualifications?
Would you consider teaching as a career? Do you wish you'd never bothered? Would you rather drag yourself back home with your last penny and dreadlocked hair than consider teaching to survive? Does a shirt and tie 9 to 5 gig in Hong Kong or Japan sound nice?
#2
Posted 16 May 2006 - 02:26 PM
I have to say Thailand burned me out. I got virtually no support, and the pay is abysmal. When asked to recommend teaching here one way or the other, I usually say it's okay as a means to survive, but if the person has other work options here and is determined to stay here, then he/she should look into those other options and take up teaching only as a last resort.
Hongkong, Macau, Singapore, and Japan are the best places for teaching in Asia by far, though one needs to examine living costs in the context of the salary offered. Often, the salaries are quite acceptable, but sometimes you can find yourself struggling to survive if you haven't done your homework. I thought I had done my homework before I came to Thailand, as I talked with people at the U.S. and Thai consulates in Hongkong. At both those I was assured I could live better on the less than US$12,000 a Thai university offered me than I could on the US$45.000 (tax-free)/subsidized housing/excellent retirement program/excellent medical and life insurance I had at the University of Macau. Wrong. My lifestyle couldn't be anywhere near as good on the salary here as it was in Macau.
I love the actual teaching, helping young people come to realize areas they previously didn't know. But I sure don't like the bureaucratic bullsh*t that all too often accompanies it. ESPECIALLY here.
#3
Posted 16 May 2006 - 03:47 PM
I turned to English teaching, and I've enjoyed the hell out of it!
Perhaps the fact that I'm teaching at the university level has something to do with it - fewer hours, decent pay, a lot of respect (relative to what I'd get as either just a student or a teacher at a cram school), and overall a rewarding experience.
So, if you want to take a break from your normal career path, and doing so won't derail your entire life plan, English teaching may prove to be a welcome, albeit temporary, change.
DAN
#4
Posted 16 May 2006 - 08:34 PM
It was on a World Bank project, so the money was not bad and it was a good training for me in the sense that you learn how to convey a 'message', which is useful in any job.
But what I liked most was the free time, not too many hours and plenty of holidays...
#6
Posted 17 May 2006 - 09:21 AM
...which is excellent if you're any kind of a linguaphile, of course, but for a young person out of college looking to pay off loans and live the soft-core oriental adventure, urban Japan is the place to do it.
#8
Posted 17 May 2006 - 05:52 PM
I understand what Kurt says about 'teaching in Thailand burnout'. There isn't much administrative support and to top it all off, other Farangs look at you as a loser or a third teir expat which is nonsense because many of them are second or third rate 'businessmen' who peddle bogus condos, work in boiler rooms, time share or even pyramid schemes and they often earn less than good teachers. I taught for many years and will now do it part time, but I do want to move on to something differnet, related to translation or language interpreting. As long as your students appreciate what you do for them, it doesn't matter what others think about it.
This post has been edited by mbkudu: 17 May 2006 - 05:54 PM
#10
Posted 18 May 2006 - 01:21 AM
Good language teachers are wanted in Japan.
I myself was never interested in that job, however - I am a technician...
Most people I know here coming from Europe, are NOT teaching English, but another language - this is MUCH better paid, and there is not much competition.
It is useful, if you have some additional knowledge, which you might merge into your language teaching.
I know Europeans, who are teaching
Italian (he is good also in music, like opera)
German (same person, who is from Sweden, also training for business)
Russian (some people need this - related to fishery and shipping - I was surprised)
French (for restaurants, food importers)
Swedish (no idea for what, but there are some students)
Serbian/Bulgarian (for some regular training in a political research institute, teaching also Russian - remarkable stable job)
Latin (for Catholic religion and history)
----------
One point I noticed here in Japan:
If you need a visa and you are teaching English, immigration is very mistrusting - too many fakes...
Show up with a different language, a small employment contract - you get your labour permit.
#11
Posted 18 May 2006 - 01:25 AM
However, the parents are often very grateful and I found them to be a rewarding part of the job as they are the ones that often accept you into their lives and community, thus permitting a truer cultural experience. Thai students are for the most part efficient, hardworking and intelligent students who desperately need to be challenged and steered off the rote learning track that the Thai educational system guides them towards.
This post has been edited by igotworms: 18 May 2006 - 01:26 AM
#12
Posted 18 May 2006 - 04:13 PM
But in Thailand you find too many so called 'native' speakers teaching English who in fact come from all around Europe and might not even have a TEFL- or other certificates.
Personally, I know the one or other who fall on some hardship and switched to teaching.
Well, not all are bad but in the interest of the students I would prefer a fully licensed teacher with proper educational background.
#13
Posted 27 July 2007 - 10:06 AM
'... It might finally be the case that fledgling Teflers are veering off the beaten track to Spain for a taste of English teaching further afield. Further east, to be precise...
... Private English teaching establishments in China, Vietnam and Thailand are expanding rapidly...'
http://education.gua...viewf...2134424,00.html
#14
Posted 27 July 2007 - 10:28 AM
Teaching isn't for everyone and not everyone teaching should be.
#16
Posted 27 July 2007 - 06:08 PM
jackslittlefancies, on 2007-07-27 09:28:12, said:
Teaching isn't for everyone and not everyone teaching should be.
I'd be interested in knowing more about your school, if it's not too forward to say so. I'm a teacher at heart, and haven't taught a lick since June, 200, and have been thinking about returning to the field. Though I did encounter frustrations in China -- where does one not? -- I loved it, overall. Though I'm a Caucasian Texan, I always feel in some strange way I can't explain even to myself as being "at home," in some sense, when I alight on Chinese soil.
Ba and Ma in Ennglish-Literature. Have taught lit., all four language skills, and Business Communications, all at university level.
Mekhong Kurt
#19
Posted 27 July 2007 - 10:20 PM

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