Klaud wrote:
As a native English speaker, with good fluency in Polish, what kind of a job could I get and what the salary would be?
I'd suggest looking for english teaching jobs unless you want to work for absolute peanuts. I'd suggest looking into teaching young children. lots of parents out there are looking for native speakers to teach their kids and because you could walk into their house and roll in Polish with them, it would make them far more comfortable leaving their children with you. The 30-50 white collar crowd generally earns good money in Warsaw and are willing to pay good money to teach their children english. take advantage of it.
as far as teaching adults, you'll be at a great disadvantage being only 18 years old in today's ESL market. you have no business experience and to be honest, limited life experience at just 18. you're underqualified in general.....but with kids, being a native english speaker and fluent polish speaker, you'd be a good find!
Klaud wrote:
Due to American colleges averaging $9,000-$32,000 my parents just can't afford that, which is why we're planning for me to graduate High School a semester early and to move to Warsaw to attend the University of Warsaw to take psychology classes in English.
I think it's great what you're doing but when i read about cases like this, I can't help but wonder what it's going to be like for you entering the job market when you get back to the USA. I've only seen it firsthand once with a Pole, this person had a master's from Poland and she told me flat out that the companies she was applying to simply didn't consider her degree to be equivalent to a master's degree in the USA. she was always at a disadvantage when she was one of many in that infamous "pile of resumes".
I would be interested in hearing about other people out there on PF who have had similar, or different experiences with a Polish degree in the USA.
As a side note, I'd say that the "disadvantage" mostly exists in the beginning. Once you get a job in the USA and prove yourself, people generally stop looking at your education and more at the positions you have held and what you have done in your career thus far.