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Advice on WHEN to go to Poland to teach English [30]
One thing that's notable - are you registered unemployed in the UK? If not, then do so! now! - the reason is that you can continue to be paid Jobseekers Allowance at the UK rate for up to 3 months if you decide to jobseek abroad. Considering 45 quid a week is about 200zl, it's well worth doing.
With Callan, you just need to listen to your trainer. I trained there once and you just need the confidence of your students. I had a nice bunch so they picked things up quickly. I was a more dynamic teacher then, a leader if you will. Now, I'm more of a facilitator. More CELTA skills are required for what I do now. Trust me, CELTA and Callan ain't real bedfellows.
The trick, as I've found (and this is speaking without CELTA...yet) is to gain the support of the boss in introducing new things to Callan classes every once in a while - mine is perfectly happy and trusts me to teach them something relevant, which usually involves photocopying worksheets or playing a game to make them think quickly. Not entirely teaching - but it does make things far more interesting.
Another thing is the ability to change the questions when being revised - if a school expects you to stick rigidly to the books, then you know it's a money machine and not a school with the students interests at heart. One of the most effective ways (in Callan) to scare people senseless is to change a question :)
No, the rate of pay is fixed as far as I know. I'd maybe see what is on offer in Kraków.
Depends on the school really - but 35zl-45zl an hour seems to be the going rate in Poznan for Callan teachers. If you find a school in a small town willing to hire you as a Callan teacher, I'd even negotiate conditions - you might be able to blag a few traditional lessons a week out of them if you show interest.
I've heard that schools in Kraków are very strict and procedural. They also have in-built speakers to listen in to your lessons.
Goes without saying that you should never work in such a place ;)
But crucially, don't jump at the first job you get offered - make sure you're happy with the place first. Be very cynical as Seanus suggests - and even little things like looking to see how happy the secretaries are will say a lot.
If you're not sure - then ask to observe a lesson before making up your mind. A good school that genuinely wants you will be happy to do this, but a bad school will refuse the request. Again, this gives you the opportunity to speak to the teachers, and their attitude will tell you a lot.