Are you teaching English in Poland? Where are you teaching? Did you come to Poland to teach English or are you teaching English because you are in Poland and it's the easiest job to get? Where will I work? Are there many language schools in Poland?
Do you have a teaching qualification? What resources are you using? Do you get training where you work? How easy was it to find work? What are the best schools to work for? When should I look for work? Who do I apply to?
How much will I earn? How many hours will I work? Do they pay you enough to live a decent life? Is it enough to support a family? Can you pay a mortgage in the wages of an English teacher? Do you see this as a future for you?
And many other questions about teaching English in Poland. Share your experiences if you will.
1. Yes I am at the moment 2. Northern Poland 3. To teach after a career change 4. & 5. Loads of schools and quite a few sharks. (One job I was offered worked out 10zl per hour for some hours and they wanted me to work in a public school so they didn't have to pay my ZUS!)
6. Yes, CELTA and IHCTEB 7. Have used English File Series, Face2face, Cutting Edge, FCE / CAE Gold, Read & react 8. A lot of on the job training and support originally, now I am left to my own devices as long as I complete the book and the students are happy!
9. Relatively easy to find work but see 4 & 5 10. & 11. Would recommend IH if CELTA qualified - see websites and write to DOS (Now!) 12 Wage varies according to how much work available from 2000zl to 4000zl per month (usually about 3000) - rent and taxes have to be paid from this as I am self-employed.
13. & 14. Struggling to survive and will probably give up soon if things don't get better! 15. Prices have been falsely inflated recently - even if you buy your own flat you still have to pay a monthly charge to the admin ours is 550zl per month.
16. I would like to keep teaching as I love the job but if it don't pay the bills....
Hope this helps. If you are thinking of coming with a family - I would say don't unless both of you can work. Most young polish teachers still live with their families as they do not earn enough to live apart and have any standard of living. At the moment I teach 20 x 45 minutes a week + 2 x 60 minutes - but don't forget you have to prep your lessons and tests and do marking too!
If you can work for a company like IH who deal with most of the paperwork and sh*t you are ok - if not and you haven't got any friends expect a life of hell and bureaucracy! (It's still bad with friends!)
On the plus side Poland is a beautiful country to travel in. (Stay away from the coast in the summer!)
As for summer you may find it better to go back to the UK to work summer schools to help pay your way.
Hi guys, can anyone direct me towards schools in Poland that may employ a native english speaker without a degree???? Ideally Im looking for something to coincide with university in Poland. Any help is greatly appreaciated!
I was teaching with this method for six years until it drove me mad. To be honest the last two years I adapted my lessons, and if they gave me an answer that was grammatically correct and contained the key word, I accepted it.
Too many teachers of this method stick to it like stone it and it becomes repetitive and boring for the student and teacher.
I proved this one year to the director of the school by going through the records of returning students after each semester, and we found that all the teachers who didn't adapt the method had a low return of students.
This changed her mind so much that she dropped this method and turned to another similar method called "avalon", or something like that, maybe you know it Seanus.
I've never taught Avalon but I think, ironically enough, that I wrote some of the material for it. I know it is being used here in Gliwice as I am still in touch with the teachers there.
Adaptation is key to injecting new life into it. I stuck to the book, both for the purposes of familiarity and for observations, but I came into my own with it after a while and would be damned if anybody stepped on my toes.
I trained new teachers in the method as, by that stage, I knew it like the back of my hand.
Avalon have experiences huge growth in the past 18 months or so and much of it has been in Poland
I seem to remember seeing somewhere on the net a map of callan schools in Europe, and Poland was the only country virtually to plastered with blue callan signs.
They must have had good marketing in those days and maybe Avalon is going the same way. I think the first school was in Krakow, with my school in Lublin coming a close second or third.
Callan method has appeared to dominate Poland for sometime. It seems many Polish schools are becoming disillusioned with Callan and moving to Avalon
Callan schools are not actually Callan schools if you get my drift. Just schools using their method. One of the marketing coups was that you could become a 'Callan' school just through using their materials without the financial outlays required by franchised language schools. Another coup was not requiring your teaching staff to be cert qualified
I had some amazing answers to questions over the years. And one of the questions, Would you like the job of a priest? Repeated again..... Would you like the job of a priest? The guy sat there for a while thinking and replied, "no I wouldn't like the job of a priest because I like sex too much", and another student replied, "why should that stop you".
There were so many over the years it's hard to remember them all :)
1. Yes 2. Western Poland 3. Neither, but the second is closer, especially in the beginning. 4. Up to you, dude. If you're not an EU citizen, you need to get the job (and visa) before arriving. 5. Many, many language schools. Relatively few that treat foreign teachers fairly and with respect. 6. Not traditional ESL qualifications, but other, possibly more important ones (plus tons o' experience now) 7. Depends on what I'm doing. Not being British I find the standard textbooks here to be awkward and unnatural. I mostly use real-world materials and my own (and I specialize in advanced learners)
8. Ha! Ha! Ha! 9. My main job found me, besides my best efforts to duck away. 10. That's when the grapevine (among natives in your destination) is for. 11. The private market hires for fall (september) and winter (february) and intermittently for the summer (language camps, avoid if you can) 12. Anyone and everyone you can think of. If you have a target destination use google plus "szkoła językowa" and send out emails and faxes like crazy until you get some leads. If you have contacts on the ground in Poland, work them mercilessly. Getting here is half the battle. Once you're here (legally) you have more room to maneuver and find extra/better work.
13. Depends on how much tolerance you have for private lessons (note: too many private lessons will sap your will to live) 14. Depends on your assertiveness level (employers will try to get you to teach as many classroom hours for as little money as possible, knowing how to put your foot down is a useful skill)
15. Depends. The traditional model is that teachers supplement their income with private lessons. 16. A Polish family (with working spouse) maybe. A non-Polish non-working-spouse family? No. 17. Where? 18. I'm not interested in teaching only English, but I get to teach other interesting things too.
I've never been to Lublin, is it a happening city?
Can be as it has four main Universities with something like 200,000 students and is really lively in the clubs. Harry rates it in his article in NWE nwe.pl/club_corner_full.php?article_id=526
I used to word teaching Callan, did my head in. Learned the books off by heart. He hated children but I found it worked very well for beginners, book 1.
My mouth was wrecked from pronouncing "th" ha ha ha
Stage 1 was just a pounding session. U can't let up or u lose their attention. The trainees watched me one lesson and they told me after that they were wondering when I was gonna take the foot off the pedal. 3 years was more than enough. I've now finished with Profi and will move to Britam FT and Empik PT.
Knowing the books by heart was good as u could wander round the room, keeping the ss on their toes.
lol, yeah I remember. I used to try and introduce the word in Polish to help a bit, but I soon gave up when I encountered such words as angle kąt in Polish and I gave up after that.
I was offered a callan job at 32pl per hour with 20 hours garenteed. Plus 25pl cash for private lessons.
That is low, private lessons I charge 50zl and get 45zl for teaching, that is when I do it now. I only teach at the local Veterinary Institute in the mornings now, and most of my work is done at home proofreading.
26 hours should be guaranteed lowfunk. 25PLN for privates, not good. Having said that, I have charged that to poorer students. I don't believe in pricing people out of 'education'
I used to charge a rich guy 100Zloty an hour and he'd buy the beer. Last time I saw him was when I gave up the drink for a while and just stuck to water. God he was boring.... he just wanted someone to drink with, grand like but after a while you know yourself
lowfunk99
Good thing about Callan is you do not need to prepare, when you know the books, but it is boring as hell
I don't believe in pricing people out of 'education'