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SvanteH 02-26-2009 06:55 PM

I've just found this;

Quote:

What are your qualifications?

Japan ’s immigration laws require you to have a bachelor’s degree (in any subject) to be eligible for a work visa. If you have a degree and your native language is English everything is pretty much straightforward once you have found a company to sponsor you. If you are recruited in your home country, your new company will provide the paperwork so you can get a Certificate Of Eligibility (CEO). This can take up to 8 weeks to process. Once you have a CEO you can get your work visa, which usually takes a week.
Taken from the page Teaching English in Japan: How to Get Started

Does this mean I have to get a bachelor's degree or is it just a false statement from them?

MMM 02-26-2009 08:29 PM

A lot of programs and schools only hire native speakers, regardless of what certifications you have. Just to warn you...

SvanteH 02-26-2009 08:38 PM

Might be so but no one ever said teaching in another country would be easy. I'm not giving up just yet :)

MMM 02-26-2009 08:52 PM

I didn't say you should give up, but I just thought you should be aware.

SvanteH 02-26-2009 09:11 PM

No no of course, any feedback is good feedback!

Tsuwabuki 02-27-2009 09:39 AM

That was pretty much my point.

We have a native french speaker here, but he's from quebec. His English isn't native, as he attended school in French, and even has an identifiable accent to native speakers- BUT, and this is a huge but, Canada is an English speaking country. He got in through the system because no one bothered to ask him if English was his native language, per se. They just assumed.


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