Jonni, I am in the here and now and am making provisions for all manner of practicalities. You seem to have read some of those God-forsaken career books which aren't worth the paper they are written on.
Which books do you mean? As an aside I haven't read any 'career books'.
Basil Paterson College in Edinburgh is one of the leading schools in Europe I believe.
Respectable enough.
nd have amassed a wealth of experience in different methods from then on.
That's just dandy, great on a CV, but better if you've got the little embossed bit of vellum to prove it.
a needless roll of the dice. I don't play such egomaniacal games.
A masters' degree or a DELTA is an 'egomaniacal game'?
Thanks to me only having a CELTA and 7.5 years exp as a teacher ;0 ;) ;), I have seen a lot of new countries.
You and me both, and it's nice to have enough money to enjoy the best of them.
I know that distance learning wants to provide flexibility but those that want higher-level degrees must be prepared to undergo intensive studying and continuous mentoring with the Profs/lecturers at your side. You have to chart development, not peek at it from afar.
Very much so. Those aimed at EFL teachers (the better ones - choose carefully) indeed have 'intensive studying and continuous mentoring'.
I see myself branching out into university teaching. There will come a time when the method I teach at present gets too tedious and I will look for sth more challenging. University teaching presents that challenge.
We're coming from the same place. In my case I want to make damn sure it works. Entry level jobs in fourth rate tertiary sector institutions are no paradise.
What is unfulfilling about a language school? The range of topics is broad.
Groundhog day after a few years and even the good ones can feel like sweatshops after a while. And increasingly you will have to compete for lessons with Poles who speak near perfect English, have better qualifications than you and lower salary expectations.
What are you doing now, may I ask?
I have a language school in Warsaw :-)) I like it all, the selling, the hiring and I teach some of the lessons myself too. But the business is only as valuable as the value of the in-company contracts which can (and sometimes do) go in a puff of smoke. And the margin on an in-company lesson (ten years ago at least 100% less overhead charge, now closer to 20%) means a lot of selling for small rewards. I'm ready for a change, and grateful that I have the paper qualifications to give me a choice in this.
Translations show a mature level of development, that I understand Polish well enough to do it. Also, it is but one string in the bow of quivers. Many are in the translation industry and that must be monotonous at times.
Agreed. A company report Pol to Eng can be grindingly dull, a 100 page technical specification Eng to Pol quickly becomes a chore.
but some disillusionment shines through in your posts.
Right now yes, meaning the state and direction of the market in PL compared to other places. I've also seen far too many people here that I don't want to become like.
I sometimes wonder if your questions should be self-directed, no offence.
You've almost hit the nail on the head. My professional journey has always been upward, and I really want it to stay that way. Call it ambition, call it a fear of being stuck in a rut, call it anything.
I would still advise anyone who wants to make a serious and rewarding career in EFL to not stop with just the CELTA.
I know a super teacher here who is approaching 50 and he has no pension and no job anymore.
My point exactly. I'm approaching 45 with a business that could vanish at the stroke of a few finance directors' pens. At least at the moment I'm making a bit more money than I really need - there's a hell of a lot of people in a far far worse situation, including many in PL. Prague and Vienna are full of them. I wouldn't want that for myself, and I'm sure you wouldn't too.
I may want to return to Scotland at some time down the line and what use is my teaching and quals there? That's a matter of conjecture.
Wouldn't you want to return there with a nice nest egg in an offshore bank? A safety net that gives you free choice about when to return, where to live and what to do. That takes either exceptional drive, exceptional luck or very solid professional skills backed up with proof on paper.
I like living in Warsaw. I go to the theatre every week, the opera every month, the philharmonia too. I eat out at the country's best restaurants, have weekends in good hotels, live somewhere nice. I'm lucky. Either lucky or very driven. Most EFL teachers aren't in that situation.
I know a lot of EFL teachers both here and elsewhere. Without exception the ones who live in sub-optimal accommodation, eat at burger bars and have to be very very careful with money and are in dead-end underpaid jobs have only the CELTA and often not even that. The ones who live well and happily have either got real estate back home, higher qualifications, an absence of ambition, a rich spouse or a combination of those factors.
Maybe I sound preachy and patronising. If so I apologise. My point is that doing the DELTA was one of the best decisions I made - it has given me the flexibility to up and leave when I want (important in our profession) and was great professional development as well as being intellectually stimulating. I know a lot of teachers, married with kids, who've gone to the Gulf, to West Africa, to Central Asia (basically anywhere with oil) for their and their families' future. The ones with minimum qualifications had to leave their families back home and remit money like a third-world citizen; the ones with that extra bit of paper could get jobs with family accommodation, health insurance and school fees provided.