They are referring to the working holiday visa which is granted under certain conditions to those between the ages of 18 & 30 from CERTAIN and SPECIFIC countries. No that doesn't include the USA.
Oh and if your ever in Roppongi @ a place called Club Vallfarre keep an eye out for me. I'll be the only asian guy in the entire place who only speaks english. Haha. ^^V
I am surprise that they let an Asian to be an English teacher , doesn't matter that you're born here in canada/the states, have perfect accent and have a BEd or something , they all want Caucasian looking people even if you are a white trash, high school dropped out, druggies , etc
What?
I know plenty of asians working as English teachers in Japan (and elsewhere in Asia). I even know American-born Japanese who don't speak a lick of Japanese and are doing just fine as English teachers. And plenty of other asians who do speak fluent Japanese (as well as English) who have no problem getting jobs as English teachers.
Having an international (ie: non-Japanese) background is what most companies are looking for, not whether you're white or yellow. But in a country where the population is 93%+ ethnic Japanese, it just so happens that the people who have any background outside of Japan are mostly caucasian. But those statistics don't mean that being caucasian is the only qualification necessary, or that being ethnically asian hurts every employment opportunity as an English teacher.
You don't as long as you are under 30 years of age but if you want to make decent money you need a bachelors degree and to be TESOL certified.
It doesn’t matter if you are under or over 30, you can still get a job as an English teacher in Japan.
I disagree. Private lessons net you much much much more than if you teach at a school. 6000 yen per hour is the average price for inexperienced teachers for a private and anytime I do them, I charge almost double. Take six thousand yen and multiply by none. Then take that days pay and do it for twenty five days a month. How's that compare with the 250,000 yen you'd make as a base salary. It's a small price compared to big English schools. If you're good then it's not overly hard to do this. If you're not good, then why are you still teaching??
It's not really "experience", it's just having common sense.You could explain how you gained this experience. The way you make it sound however, just about any educated bloke can hop on over here and starting raking in 6000 yen per hour on private lessons left and right, and those who can't are lazy and/or idiots.
As long as you can conduct a structured lesson plan (set a goal for a lesson, set exercises that will help the student practice that goal, and review that lesson's practice), that's all the "expertise" that you would need.
Any "experience" beyond that is just people-skills: knowing how to read students when they're struggling, identifying their weak spots, changing lesson plans on-the-fly to address those weak spots, recognizing what types of exercises the student is successful with and exploiting that mode of thinking to make better/more effective exercises, custom-tailoring goals to meet individual students' abilities/needs, etc.
If you ONLY teach private lessons, you CAN get a work visa. However for the sake of keeping little wii-tards out of this country, I'm not going to publicly announce how, that said, I think Guy knows what I'm talking about along with the rest of the people who have any amount of experience outside of the Eikawa