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Teaching Languages
I'm thinking about becoming an English teacher overseas for a couple of years, probably in Japan, after getting my Bachelor's. Then I may come back to SFU to do my graduate, perhapes becoming a Japanese professor...
The thing is, I have no idea how to do this. Who is the advisor I should see about this?
Has anyone ever done an overseas English teaching program like JET? What is it like?
Also, do you guys think the TESL is worth getting? I know that all you need is a Bachelor's to teach English overseas, but will having a TESL give me an advantage?
Is being a Japanese professor like being other professors? I know for professors of science and such, you need to publish research papers every couple of odd years... but since Japanese is already an established language what kind of papers could a Japanese professor write, really
For the record I'm planning to major in Humanities and doing an extended minor in Asia-Canada studies. I may be pursuing a Liberal Arts Certificate and a Religious Studies Certificate as well....
The thing is, I have no idea how to do this. Who is the advisor I should see about this?
Has anyone ever done an overseas English teaching program like JET? What is it like?
Also, do you guys think the TESL is worth getting? I know that all you need is a Bachelor's to teach English overseas, but will having a TESL give me an advantage?
Is being a Japanese professor like being other professors? I know for professors of science and such, you need to publish research papers every couple of odd years... but since Japanese is already an established language what kind of papers could a Japanese professor write, really
For the record I'm planning to major in Humanities and doing an extended minor in Asia-Canada studies. I may be pursuing a Liberal Arts Certificate and a Religious Studies Certificate as well....
Comments
I dont know the requirements myself but I know of several people who have gone, a few of which do not have post secondary.
Do you know what those programs are called? Are those people doing it for a couple of years or as a career?
My sister did the JET programme and really only did it to live in Japan and enjoy the culture of Japan. Teaching really isn't her thing and she found herself bored with the actual job. She said the JET programme was really good though! I can give you her email if you want.
My sister's ex-boyfriend and my old coworker also teach English in Korea. So if you're interested in that too, I can give you their emails as well.
I'd love to go to Korea but they don't teach Korea at SFU and I don't plan on going to UBC or Langara to take the Korean classes there... I know I don't need to know the language to teach overseas but I'd like to =T
Did she do any other preparation beforehand? Did she get the TESL or do the JET Career Development Program?
Watch some RAW anime and Japanese dramas.
The Japanese kids will be amazed by your superb English and hopefully you can get by with your subpar Japanese.
BTW, getting a degree in English is useless. If you want to teach Japanese kids grade 1 English, there's no point in your super awesome essay writing and oral skills. And I don't even know what you're supposed to do with a PhD in English.
I know of people who speak little to none of the foreign languages they taught english to.
First of all, SFU doesn't offer Korean lessons for academic credit. But a friend of mine takes Korean in SFU's Continuing Studies program. Check it out here:
http://www.sfu.ca/korean/
And as for TESL/TESOL, the same friend is working toward getting her TESL/TESOL degree at SFU, but from what she tells me, SFU's TESL/TESOL certificate is not accredited by the TESL/TESOL organization or something. I don't have the details, but she says it's best to get it from Vancouver Community College (VCC) because they have the best program.
Hope that helps.
Yeah, I don't think i'm going to get the TESL at all, hahaha. Thanks for the information!