Comments on: Teaching English in South Korea: Personal Experience https://www.expatify.com/south-korea/teaching-english-in-south-korea-personal-experience.html Travel & Expat Lifestyle Magazine Thu, 22 Nov 2018 18:07:29 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.9 By: Mitcham https://www.expatify.com/south-korea/teaching-english-in-south-korea-personal-experience.html/comment-page-1#comment-10866 Fri, 11 Nov 2011 03:15:04 +0000 https://www.expatify.com/?p=3094#comment-10866 My plan is to teach English first and then transfer to a different career, hopefully one involving my major-physics. I am not too worried about any discrimination with people as much as I would be about the workplace (I want to get my paychecks on time, get what I deserve etc). I’m looking into EPIK for more information; however I do not think I would fully commit until I got a testimonial from another American about the employer. It would be awesome to escape the USA and live in Korea and have a good life but it would also be terrible to go to Korea and get a job that does not pay well, or discriminates etc.

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By: krystal hampton https://www.expatify.com/south-korea/teaching-english-in-south-korea-personal-experience.html/comment-page-1#comment-10392 Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:13:25 +0000 https://www.expatify.com/?p=3094#comment-10392 I will have to disagree with you. I’m in South Korea right now, and although my coteachers and random people might make me agrrivated sometimes it is based upon them not knowing our language and us not knowing theirs. It really has nothing to do with skin color. I’m black, yes I’ve heard Miguk and Waygook several times by Koreans but they always smile and I always go English…boo…Korea is such a witty place. They like to play jokes here a lot and though there may be some discrimination (by what other people say…) I only see it with older generations but that’s only because they cannot speak the language. Just today, while I was out with my Korean girlfriend, We asked this elderly man about more walkways around Gwangju National Museum area. He spoke to her because that’s his language, but not to me. It wasn’t that he was rude, he just didn’t know the language. There are many Africans,African-Americans, and other people of color who live and work in South Korea and do very well for themselves. By no means is teaching English a walk in the park, but it really isn’t bad. Being able to work two hours and have free time…you really can’t beat that by how they pay you.

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By: Amanda https://www.expatify.com/south-korea/teaching-english-in-south-korea-personal-experience.html/comment-page-1#comment-4204 Fri, 23 Jul 2010 14:25:51 +0000 https://www.expatify.com/?p=3094#comment-4204 I recently started looking for a position to teach English in South Korea, however after the common occurance of discrimination I have faced, and the countless reports of these incidents from other foreigners, I am quite discouraged from choosing this country for a teaching position.

I am Canadian, born and raised. English is my mother tongue and I have two university degrees in english, both a Bachelor of Arts and a Masters of Arts from the University of Ottawa. I live in the nations capital and work for the federal government. However, my qualifications have been undermined because I do not have white skin. I have been asked by Korean Employers “Where are you from?” despite reporting my country, citzenship, and qualitifications on all of my applications.

This message is to provide Korean employers who hold this type of prejudice with valuable information: English is the most widely spoken language in the world and in the Western World, a person’s english ablities has nothing to do with skin colour. In my country (Canada), people are not discrimated based on skin colour. Human beings are treated equally, and employment opportunities are based on merit rather than race. I understand that providing a picture helps employers to familiarize themselves with potential teachers who are overseas, however using it for any of the above reasons is highly offensive. I am the female in the attached photo, and my qualifications are just as good as any other canadian with my level of qualification regardless of appearance.

Unfortunately, the future generations of Korean students are the ones most affected by this type of discrimination. If Korean Employers continue to hold these beliefs about skin colour, the students will inevitably miss out on the chance to benefit from a rich diversity of cultures, and most importantly, learn that rascism is ignorant, inappropriate, and a thing of the past.

**Educating students begins with educating teachers**

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