44 Tips For Getting A Job In Korea (and Keeping It)
Here's a braindump of some tips and tricks for getting a job in Korea, and keeping it once you're here. I'll add to it periodically as I think of more. If you have any specific do or don't questions, or you disagree with any of my advice, feel free to leave a comment. Don't forget to check out my Teaching In Korea -- The Skinny as well, if you missed it the first time.
- Do not get too excited at an offer -- if you have a pulse and degree, you'll get an offer.
- Do apply for several jobs that look interesting.
- Do ask for contact information for previous or current foreign teachers at the school. If it's refused, walk away.
- Do understand that most hagwons (private schools) are run in what you may perceive to be an unprofessional, haphazard manner. Part of it is cultural -- leaving things to the last minute and then PANICing is a time-honoured Korean tradition. How much of this you think you can endure is up to you.
- Do be wary of agents and recruiters. They don't have their spotty reputation for nothing. You will be better off in many (if not most) cases by being in contact with your potential employers directly.
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In Korea, there's F-Mart and D-Mart, L-Mart and G-Mart, and the current top dog of the X-Mart retailers, E-Mart. They are all much of a muchness, and are a microcosmic case study, I suppose, of the Korean predilection (and skill, it must be said) in taking someone else's idea (in this case, a household goods retailer, K-mart (of course)), reshaping it for the Korean market, and barfing it out again, adding only the most cursory Groucho-glasses-and-nose disguise.