In a few months’ time, as part of a careers event, I’ve been asked to present some stuff about my time in the JET Progamme during the 00s.
However, I’ve been asked to talk a bit about the process of going to Japan, getting an English-teaching job and some of the pitfalls. For JET, I’m okay with this, because outside of the COVID situation, my research suggests that JET hasn’t changed all that much, so my experiences are relevant.
However, for eikaiwa gakko teaching, I wanted to ask for people’s thoughts on a few things.
During my time over there, I had plenty of friends who taught at private eikaiwa schools like NOVA, along with people who were ALTs (like JET) but for private companies that employed them as contractors. I also knew plenty of people among the JET group and these other groups who taught at things like juku cram schools, night schools, and did private home tuition. And these people were from various places and backgrounds; USA, UK, NZ, Aus, etc., caucasian, people of colour, etc.
So I got a decent spectrum, in my time, of the English-teaching experience.
However, it’s been nearly 20 years since I was there, and I want to find out a few things:
**1) What is the general process to get an English-teaching job for an eikaiwa gakko today?**
Back then, it wasn’t uncommon for someone to fly to Japan as a tourist, and job-hunt when they were here. Often they would fly home, their visa would process, and they would come back.
However, due to both COVID and proliferation of the internet, I *assume* that way of doing things isn’t really viable anymore? Do people apply for the schools/companies directly from their home countries, and go that way?
I’ve googled it and got various responses; what I guess I want to know is, what is “the community wisdom” for this?
**2) Do you \*still\* need a bachelor’s degree to do this stuff? Anything else about qualifications?**
Back when I was there, a bachelor’s degree was a firm requirement for JET; but also, it was very difficult to get work visa without one, so you probably couldn’t get an eikaiwa gakko job either.
That being said, people tended to be able to get to teach English in Japan provided they had some sort of degree. Obviously TEFL/TESOL and the like would probably put them at the front of the queue but few of my friends had this qualifications already.
**3) What happened to NOVA?**
Around the time I was there, NOVA collapsed, and many of my friends were left jobless, and had to scramble for work. Some of them were even left homeless as NOVA subsidised their acommodation, or they rented in a group with other NOVA staff.
However, when I look online today, I see NOVA still exists. Did someone swoop in to save them from bankruptcy? And are they still one of the easier stepping-stones to getting to work as an English Teacher?
**4) Are there any particularly good online resources for info on this?**
Back when I was doing this, the primary place we all went for info was called BigDaikon, which was an internet forum for non-Japanese in Japan. It was pretty acerbic and you had to warn new people that many on the site were really jaded 😀 but regardless, it *was* a tremendously useful community.
Apart from this one, here on Reddit, are there others I should point people at?
**5) Anything useful you want to suggest?**
I’m fully aware that life for a non-Japanese in Japan is a bit easier now than it was then. I understand getting broadband is easier, streaming services mean you’re not limited to watching Japanese TV during the day when off sick, and most importantly, the existence of smartphones and google maps must be absolutely transformative (I loved when Chris Broad talked in his videos about *drawing maps to places* \- this is something we just had to do back then).
Are there any other things you would want people to know, who are perhaps considering this for the first time?
4 comments
Sorry, but if you’re not competent to give the presentation you’ve been asked to or to do your own research, oughtn’t you beg off giving the presentation?
I’d suggest by going back to older posts on this forum and reading, reading, reading. Then you can revise your questions to make them more specific. You’re basically asking us to write you a book, since the answers to your questions will require quite long explanations.
There are also book out there that will be informative.
1. [https://www.google.co.jp/books/edition/Teacher_Narratives_From_the_Eikaiwa_Clas/7W7kzQEACAAJ?hl=en](https://www.google.co.jp/books/edition/Teacher_Narratives_From_the_Eikaiwa_Clas/7W7kzQEACAAJ?hl=en)
2. [https://www.amazon.co.jp/-/en/Brian-Craig-ebook/dp/B00W7XV32C/ref=sr_1_7?crid=6XDW23O5ILWS&keywords=eikaiwa+in+japan&qid=1692309238&sprefix=eikaiwa+in+japan%2Caps%2C147&sr=8-7](https://www.amazon.co.jp/-/en/Brian-Craig-ebook/dp/B00W7XV32C/ref=sr_1_7?crid=6XDW23O5ILWS&keywords=eikaiwa+in+japan&qid=1692309238&sprefix=eikaiwa+in+japan%2Caps%2C147&sr=8-7)
Etc – I’m sure you have google skills.
1) They will not change a tourist visa to a work visa in the country, so it is a waste of time to come as a tourist to job hunt. The companies that won’t hire you from your home country won’t hire you from Japan if you don’t already have a work visa. The companies that will sponsor your visa from abroad don’t care. As long as you have a pulse and speak decent English (preferably native, and preferably you are white), they will hire you.
2) Yes. It is a requirement of the visa.
3) They collapsed and reformed and they are still an awful place to work.
4) Google. There are 10 billion webpages and blogs and articles about it.
5) Recommend they don’t do it. There are infinitely better ways to move to Japan that don’t involve working in terrible conditions for terrible pay. The pay has been decreasing for decades while the cost of living is rising. Come as a tourist or get decent qualifications and come here with a real job.
I’ll be moving to Tokyo later this year to start working at an eikaiwa. I’m American.
Process of getting the job: I searched online job listing sites. I think I used Gaijin Pot the most. I applied to a few ALT and eikaiwa companies. After lots of research I decided I wanted to go the eikaiwa route due to work schedule and location. With the eikaiwa that has hired me, I had to;
– do a phone interview
– have 3 letters of recommendations sent to them, 1 from a friend, 1 from a colleague and 1 from a boss/supervisor
– then an hour long Skype interview with a recruiter (that included normal interview questions and also some role play/scenario bits), then I waited and was offered a job.
After the job offer I had to complete a lot of paperwork for them to review then mail to Japan. And go to the embassy in NYC for my visa (I live in Philadelphia so not difficult).
Requirements: native English speaker, bachelors degree in any field. They did ask repeatedly if I had any teaching and especially language tutoring experience (I don’t).