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#21
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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: It depends how much you get paid. Perhaps, but there is no such thing as a well-paid teaching job. Of course there is, but how can you give an absolute ('no such thing') for something subjective- i.e. 'well-paid.' How much, per hour, do you consider 'well-paid.' -- David Horne- http://www.davidhorne.net usenet (at) davidhorne (dot) co (dot) uk http://homepage.mac.com/davidhornecomposer http://soundjunction.org |
#22
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFLcertificate?
On 11/01/06 13:48, in article
1h903kq.df0pr0arcob6N%this_address_is_for_spam@yah oo.com, "David Horne, _the_ chancellor of the duchy of besses o' th' barn and prestwich tesco 24h offy" wrote: Mxsmanic wrote: Runge writes: Teaching is a vocation, not a good pay job. Teaching is charity work. It depends how much you get paid. Top American Universities often ask their star profs to teach one course a semester, about 3 lecture hours per week. A full Prof gets over $100,000 a year! At the other end of scale, lower level US colleges hire a lot of "adjunct professors" at poverty wages. |
#23
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Following up to Mxsmanic :
Tim C. writes: How do they find the time? The source of income is usually a working partner. Not the ones I knew. -- Tim C. |
#24
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
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#25
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Tim C. wrote:
Following up to (David Horne, _the_ chancellor of the duchy of besses o' th' barn and prestwich tesco 24h offy) : How much, per hour, do you consider 'well-paid.' We know that. About 1000. (in whatever units Mixi feels like using) It would have to be an important currency, no doubt! -- David Horne- http://www.davidhorne.net usenet (at) davidhorne (dot) co (dot) uk http://homepage.mac.com/davidhornecomposer http://soundjunction.org |
#26
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Martin wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:41:44 +0100, Tim C. wrote: Following up to Mxsmanic : It may not be enough to pay for food and shelter. Many ESL teachers have other sources of income because teaching alone doesn't pay well enough to live on. How do they find the time? and space for a mattress? And a maîtresse? -- David Horne- http://www.davidhorne.net usenet (at) davidhorne (dot) co (dot) uk http://homepage.mac.com/davidhornecomposer http://soundjunction.org |
#27
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Following up to Mxsmanic :
Many ESL teachers have other sources of income because teaching alone doesn't pay well enough to live on. You have to teach in groups to make ends meet? -- Tim C. |
#29
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
Following up to Martin :
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 14:26:34 +0100, Tim C. wrote: Following up to Mxsmanic : Many ESL teachers have other sources of income because teaching alone doesn't pay well enough to live on. You have to teach in groups to make ends meet? Teach in or have sex in? ah, *that* sort of "ends meet" ? blush. I don't think Mixi does either. -- Tim C. |
#30
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Teaching english in Europe with no degree but TEFL certificate?
DDT Filled Mormons wrote:
On 10 Jan 2006 23:19:35 -0800, "flyingdutchman" wrote: Thank you very much for the replies so far. I will take a look at the eslcafe and see whats out there.. It doesnt have to pay that well as long as i could afford food and shelter and some spending money that is good for me. I know a few people teaching here in Italy, and they do just fine. You also need to be mother-tongue English too if you want to have a chance. Actually, none of the guys I know even have their TEFL certificate I don't think! The most important thing seems to be being presentable, and having the right bits of paper to work. I thought TEFL by definition meant not mother tongue English? But I may be wrong, so please educate me. -- Julie ********** Read my blog on the adventure of learning a second language as an adult at http://www.livejournal.com/users/zweisprachen Web Page: http://www.dragonsholm.org/travel.htm |
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