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#71
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
David Horne, _the_ chancellor of the duchy of besses o' th' barn and
prestwich tesco 24h offy writes: You do realise that you address an audience here of people that live in Europe, live in the US, and have lived in both- and that think you're sounding like a bit of a ****? I'm completely serious. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#72
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Earl Evleth writes:
It is a very structured system. It sounds way too much like Hollywood and professional sports. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#73
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
DDT Filled Mormons writes:
In your parts, how much per hour would you expect to get? Here it's 12 - 18 Euro/hr. If you can land 20 hours a week, that's not a miserable income. That depends on the cost of living. In Paris, €18/hr is €9/hr after taxes and social security, and at 20 hours a week, that's only €780 a month net. That's enough to make a rent payment, but it leaves nothing for anything else. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#74
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Padraig Breathnach writes:
Twenty hours teaching a week is essentially a full-time job, as you have to allow time for preparation of classes and materials, for correcting students' work, and for bits an pieces of extra involvement with students. Yes. Unfortunately, you are typically paid only for the time actually spent in front of students, so you work 40-50 hours a week, and you are paid for 20 hours. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#75
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Mxsmanic wrote:
David Horne, _the_ chancellor of the duchy of besses o' th' barn and prestwich tesco 24h offy writes: You do realise that you address an audience here of people that live in Europe, live in the US, and have lived in both- and that think you're sounding like a bit of a ****? I'm completely serious. I believe you. You seriously sound like a bit of a ****. -- David Horne- http://www.davidhorne.net usenet (at) davidhorne (dot) co (dot) uk http://homepage.mac.com/davidhornecomposer http://soundjunction.org |
#76
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Mxsmanic wrote:
Translation usually pays very poorly, too, although that depends a lot on the language and the translator's subject specialties. Often in the region of €150 per 1000 words. For quality work, that's a poor rate. I asked a purchaser of translation services if the word-count was on the source or the object document. It's often the latter -- yet another reason why translated documents are longer than the originals. -- PB The return address has been MUNGED |
#77
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Mxsmanic wrote:
Padraig Breathnach writes: Twenty hours teaching a week is essentially a full-time job, as you have to allow time for preparation of classes and materials, for correcting students' work, and for bits an pieces of extra involvement with students. Yes. Unfortunately, you are typically paid only for the time actually spent in front of students, so you work 40-50 hours a week, and you are paid for 20 hours. I'd think 40-50 hours a week to be a high estimate. My guess would be about 35. -- PB The return address has been MUNGED |
#78
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Martin wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 20:40:14 +0100, Mxsmanic wrote: DDT Filled Mormons writes: In your parts, how much per hour would you expect to get? Here it's 12 - 18 Euro/hr. If you can land 20 hours a week, that's not a miserable income. That depends on the cost of living. In Paris, €18/hr is €9/hr after taxes and social security, and at 20 hours a week, that's only €780 a month net. Other categories also pay taxes and social security. I make it only EUR 720 We had this problem before. There are more than four weeks in most months. That's enough to make a rent payment, but it leaves nothing for anything else. You need something to occupy you that earns money for the other 20 hours most people work a week. There is more work in teaching than the time spent in the classroom. -- PB The return address has been MUNGED |
#79
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 21:28:24 +0100, Martin wrote:
I'm willing to believe it except it's only a few months since Mixi said that he spent 8 hours a day between lessons twiddling his thumbs. Thought he did Pantyhose Inspections in his downtime Keith, Bristol, UK DE-MUNG for email replies |
#80
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Martin writes:
Perhaps because they got paid a lot more by Airbus Industries and Alcatel etc. in Toulouse. Same thing. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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