"I am currently working as an attorney in the US. I have a Juris Doctor degree and a BA in English. In both college and law school, I
did some tutoring and mentoring. My fiancee is also an attorney, and has a similar
background with respect to sporadic teaching. I know
from your book that having a master's degree is helpful, but am
wondering if having a doctorate-level degree might help make up for the
fact that we are not in Korea presently/at the time of application and
don't have experience teaching in Korea. We are very committed to
teaching in Korea and of course would be willing to come to Korea for
in-person interviews, but as we are both working as attorneys currently,
we don't have the complete flexibility to move to Korea before landing a
position."
My Answer:
While I appreciate the fact that you want to have a change of pace and a bit of adventure, I'm not sure teaching ESL in Korea is the best route for people with such good job prospects back home, such as you and your fiance.
Teaching ESL, and especially in Korea is basically a dead-end with no real chance for advancement into decent "career" kinds of jobs that give you more than a one or two year contract unless you make it happen for yourself such as getting into publishing or through Internet ventures. I myself am leaving mostly for this very reason. I've made it to the top of the Korean ESL world and there's nowhere to go but sideways or down, which is a pretty grim and demoralizing prospect for someone who is only 35 years old.
Korean Uni Interviews via Skype
If you must come to Korea, it really is very difficult to get a university job from abroad. I estimate less than 3% of Korean universities are willing to do Skype interviews. Sure, having a PhD might help you get a foot in the door, but it also might be a bit of a red-flag because hiring committees will wonder why you would ever want to teach in Korea and you will probably have to spend a good bit of the interview process explaining this. They are used to people with Masters degree in things such as English, TESOL, humanities or arts.
Frugal Living and Early Retirement
Frugal Living and Early Retirement
Not to be too presumptuous and offer advice that wasn't asked for, but have you thought about just working hard for a few years in America, living extremely frugally, getting yourself set up with investments and then "retiring" and traveling and doing whatever adventures you want to do? One of my biggest regrets in life is that I didn't study something more useful in university and set myself up for a situation like that.
Check out these websites for some inspiration:
Freedom Through Passive Income (it's mine!)
No comments:
Post a Comment