Anyone ever done this? Thinking about applying. I have an online business I do part-time, so don't want to take any work home. Is it an easy gig? How much can you save pm?
Anyone ever done this? Thinking about applying. I have an online business I do part-time, so don't want to take any work home. Is it an easy gig? How much can you save pm?
Coom
>I have an online business I do part-time, so don't want to take any work home.
make sure to check what your office hours are because i was in china for some years and some people had strict 8 to 5 office hours even though they only taught twenty 40 minute classes a week. so there was lots of sitting around. schools are wise to the complaints of teachers and may just bullshit you, so try to get an email of another teacher or former teacher if you are serious about accepting an offer and check on what it is really like. if they refuse to give you an email, pass on it. go for a university instead of a public school. much more interesting and you'll have much more leeway in everything.
It is easy. The pay is good by Taiwan standards, not many fulltime positions though so you kind of have to scrap together a bunch of part time work usually.
I'm also interested. If you go through the Teach Taiwan program, do you not get one full time position?
Can you do it without a degree?
>Can you do it without a degree?
no. You need at least an associates degree and a teaching license, provisional or otherwise
So frustrating, there's probably very little that translates the job in the end, but they just want to make sure the person has done homework before.
>there's probably very little that translates the job in the end, but they just want to make sure the person has done homework before.
I don't understand this sentence so probably for the best they're gatekeeping you
fuck off back to india pajeet
>no degree
>no qualifications
>wants access to children
yep, that's a pajeet
Asian cultures are arguably as ridiculous or more ridiculous than our insane liberal culture.