Greetings
everyone!
Well, in my
quest of escaping adulthood and shirking typical entry-level positions for
recent college grads, I have found the wonderful country of South Korea. It is there to which I will depart in exactly
one week for a year (maybe more?) of teaching EFL (English as a Foreign Language). I’ll be teaching in a public school in the
city of Ulsan (most likely middle or elementary), but I won’t know for sure
until I actually arrive.
The program
I’m going through is EPIK (English Program in Korea), which is a government
sponsored program that places native English teachers in the public school
system throughout South Korea.
Instead of
applying to EPIK directly, you can apply through recruiting agencies as well,
which is what I did. From what I gather,
some people like recruiters while others despise them. Personally, I had a good experience with
mine.
Now, how
did I get to this point? Let me explain…
It was
around the Fall of 2015 during my second to last semester at GVSU that I called
my parents for our usual Sunday evening conversation. During one particular conversation, my father
asked me something along the lines of, “So Ryan, have you thought about what
you’re going to do after you graduate?”
The better question to have asked would have been, “So Ryan, do you know
what you don’t want to do after you
graduate?” The answer to the latter was
simple; shave, cut my hair, stop shredding the gnar. The answer to the former was a bit
harder. I knew I wanted to ultimately
work in the field of international education, but wasn’t quite ready to really
set down roots anywhere.
Panicked, I
binge-google searched for a couple of hours after that trying to find an answer
to my father’s question. It was during
that search that I came upon some sites advertising teaching EFL in Korea. Free housing, good salaries, the chance to
work with kids. I was all in.
So 2016
came around and I spent the first four months of it finishing up my last
semester of college in Bhubaneshwar, India.
Feel free to read about that experience here.
Following
that, I worked as a German language teacher at Waldsee, part of the Concordia Language Villages. This was a trial by fire experience of lesson
planning, teaching, and grading students of a foreign language. As stressful as it was, I really loved seeing
the progress my students made throughout that 4-week camp.
Waldsee took up the first half of my summer; during
the second half I became an assistant hiking guide with Alta Expeditions for Germans and Austrians visiting the Canadian
Rockies. In all I went on two separate 2
and 3-week tours. We visited Banff,
Jasper, and a bunch of other national and provincial parks; we even visited a
lake with water so pure you can just drink it straight! And of course, we encountered bears. If my favorite Bavarian hiking companion is
reading this, Bergheil!
Following
the guide season, I had a brief stint of Funemployment in which I played a
stupendous amount of Age of Empires
From around
September up until today I’ve worked as a substitute teacher, associate at
Aldi, and truck loader at UPS in order to save up for Korea. I also started the 6+ month long process of
applying to the EPIK program at this time as well.
So now you’re
up to speed!
As you might
expect, I’m a little nervous, but mostly excited. Korea is place I previously did not know much
about. However, the more I learn about
it, the more excited I am to go! So, if
you ever happen to be around Ulsan next year, you’ve got a free place to crash.
Side
note: Bumming around the world and
exploiting local populations is not what I’m about. While I’m all for extended travel, it needs
to be done with a conscience. Because
demand for English is so high around the world, pretty much any shmo with a
Bachelor’s degree and citizenship from an English-speaking country can hop on a
plane and fly somewhere where people will pay good money to listen to him/her
talk. Teaching English abroad is a
tremendous privilege for the lucky few of us on this planet who were born into
English-speaking countries and attended college. Did I pick Korea mostly because it offers
some of the best salaries? Yes. However,
to have a positive impact on Korean children is my ultimate goal when I’m over
there.
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