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How lucky you are !
Bon, je me permets de passer en FR si ça ne te dérange pas. J'ai 31 ans, je suis vendeur automobile dans un petit garage familial en Suisse et j'ai envie d'acquérir de nouvelles expériences avant d'entamer une carrière ou de fonder un foyer. Après 4 voyages au Japon (entre 2003 et 2010) et un réel intérêt pour ce pays et sa culture, j'aimerais vraiment y passer quelques temps, hors des sentiers battus. Comment t'y es-tu pris ? Débarqué à la fraîche ou t'avais bien tout prévu à l'avance ? J'espère que je t'embête pas trop avec toutes mes questions : / Merci ! |
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Coming here to teach English is certainly one of the easiest ways to end up in Japan. I came here with nothing prepared, but I knew that anywhere in Asia there is enough demand for English teachers that it wouldn't be long before I had a job. Your other options, depending on how safe you want to play it, are to apply for jobs from abroad, and then once you get a bite to get them to sponsor a work visa. Or to come here on a tourist visa, spend most of your time applying for work in the city where you'd most like to live, and home you get a bite before your tourist visa or money runs out. you're infinitely more likely to find any kind of job by applying from within Japan, walking in the front door, than applying from abroad, but then there's the risk of "wasting" 3 months. If you don't have a 4-year college/uni degree then none of this is feasible. That's the sad reality of it. Teaching French is worth a shot, if you have any other marketable skills, or enough money to start a business (5mil yen at the absolute minimum) then you should look into that. |
Oh sorry for the french writing !
Unfortunately I don't have a 4-year college/uni degree so I guess the dream stops here.. Thanks anyway ! M. |
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Take some cooking classes, practice in your spare time, then come to Japan and look for a job as a chef. I've been to enough restaurants in Japan to know that actual cooking skill is not a requirement for the job. A chef visa does not require a degree, and can pay more than language teaching. |
Okay,
So I guess I can still think about living there :) You see I have nothing holding me back in my country, I can quit my job anytime, I have no wife or children (or pet). I'm completely free to go. But as I read forums about Japan, it always seems that it's difficult to go, mostly because of getting Visa, college degree to get a job or so.. I was also thinking of going into a school in Japan to learn japanese. I could help me staying for a bit and looking forward for a future job. Anyway, thanks to everyone for your advises ! M. |
I understand most of what you said in french :P. So french in school does actually learn me french ^^. I don't know much about teaching in Japan. But if Japanese people have such a hard time with speaking english. Isn't french going to sound even weirder?
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I agree with Aad, the French Language doesn't suite the Japanese.
And it's not that Japan is surrounded by many Countries like in Europe, that it is important to speak several languages. The most imoprtant one is still English. Other languages I say are learned by people with interest in them |
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I’m hoping to move to Japan also. I’m getting quite a bit better in speaking Japanese (still having a little bit of issues recognizing some ひらがな characters!) Currently I do frontend and backend web programming in the US, but I’m not sure if I would be able to keep that in Japan? Are there many people seeking this kind of work?
After reading through this thread, I’ve noticed that English teachers are desired in Japan, what type of degree would I need to teach English in Japan? Would teaching precollege or teaching post high school be more desired? I assume becoming a professor at a college would be more difficult. Quote:
Hopefully this wouldn’t be considered thread hijacking as well, as it’s still on the same topic! Any information that I receive could also assist anyone else that is hoping to move to Japan. |
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