It is a trap that I made the best out of. Gave me a chance to have a stable job for years, travel, have a nice apartment, always have money, enjoy nice experiences, get new ideas and work experience, and meet amazing people. I made the best out of it and it enabled me to live the life I wanted for years.
I’m very happy that my native language is Turkish because grammatically it’s similar to Japanese. While Europeans start spelling, Turks begin speaking. The same happens with the Japanese-they find it easier to learn Turkish than English
I've been in Japan for over twenty years and this is very accurate. I came as an English teacher, did it for three years and became a game programmer. This worked because I had a plan. Unfortunately, I burned out and went back to teaching temporarily, with no plan. I got comfortable and was stuck for *thirteen* more years. For the last eight years of it, my pay didn't change at all. The good news is that I'm back to programming games. I finally escaped the trap. Better not to get snared in the first place.
@@assassin7250 I have a degree in software engineering. This helped, but it's far less important than having a portfolio to show to a potential employer. I used to work with a chemistry grad who became a graphics programmer because he had made some small games and graphics demos on his own.
So the takeaway from this is if you are applying for the English teaching job (human tape recorder) just to get your foot in the door to japan its an ok route with the stipulation that you do everything in your power to find the job you actually want once you get to japan and dont get complacent. Use it as a stepping stone not a career.
This is pretty good advice for any of these type of English teaching jobs. It’s a gap year after uni, or a starting point. You make a little cash, experience a new culture, and that’s about it. Sadly most of the “skills” you acquire in these schools aren’t applicable for jobs back home or in another field. My year teaching in Korea was awesome! Really prepared for what turned out to be 10 years in China, where i did non teaching career jobs. You can get comfortable and can’t speak for Japan, but when I went in Korea the money was pretty good, comparable to my last job in Australia, and the rent was free, plane tickets in and out of Korea was free and general costs were a lot cheaper than Sydney. It can get super easy to get used to it when there isn’t anything waiting for you after your contract is up. I had something in the UK to go to, so staying wasn’t an option.
The funny thing about this video is that Japanese are also treated like a number regardless of how well they perform at the Job. Even Japanese working for a Japanese company isn’t all sunshine and rainbows. Sometimes the pay and benefits aren’t worth it!
I love SAMMIT RAW videos!!! Thank you so much for the info!!! Yes, English "teaching" may be a stepping stone in my case... I am searching for a job in Japan. Good thing I have University winter break January to March to do it!!! I am studying Japanese at University right now and getting close to N3 soon, I guess... However I am already 38 y-o and have experience in so many things including car fixing, a bit of welding and construction, sales, car electronics, etc... Don't be surprised if you do get my resume Sam!!! lol
ive always been curious on this topic i see alot of people always taking this route when they want to move to japan and it always goes sour good to finally know why. PS glad you mentioned the 180sx i was also very curious on that once the vod started.
I loved teaching in Japan…I taught at a university…yes I was qualified, and that opened the door to a very nice job. I taught private lessons on the side. Learn Japanese!!!
Thank you for sharing this. I'm sorry to hear both your stories. Your exit plan is extremely solidl. I wasn't able to do this on time and had to return to my home country. But yeah I really relate to the experience of being treated as a number and how the job quickly loses merit.
Get the proper qualifications and language skills BEFORE stepping foot in the country and then just figure out a way to transfer your career here. As counter-intuitive as it may sound, it's harder to transfer into an actual career-field once you come here as a teacher. Rather than if you had just started out here in your field. Most people come in with this thinking, and then fail to find anything better ---- and end up either stuck in their crappy job forever or end up going back home with nothing to show for it. There is no "foot in the door" with teaching. These ALT/eikaiwa companies exploit desperate weebs who would do anything to live here. Teaching wages have steadily been on the decline (people working here in the 80-90s were making MORE than current teachers) and they continue to get away with the declining wages and conditions because of all the people like you who keep flocking in for the elusive "foot in the door."
Hi, thanks for the update. My wife may be coming to Japan as an English teacher from Nigeria that's if she successful in her interview, as a matter of importance, what's the monthly pay for a Bachelor's of education in English education should she be demanding during the interview? What other tips would you recommend her to ask from her employer? The interview will be coming up on the 3 July 24 so I will be needing your response on time. Thanks
Mate it's the same in Australia aswell. The government makes it's money off international students. They promise them after their studies they can get pr or sponsorship by advising what courses to study as we have a shortage but every 4 years the requirements change means they are stuck as international students for 10+ years, only working 20 hours a week or 2 or 3 cash jobs to make money.. we see it in hospitality all the time. Then they just work to pay school fees they cannot afford and fail school due to not attending because they are working to pay for it...Wasted their best years on a future they were told they could have but couldn't and stuck in a trap until if they are lucky marry someone or go back home where they are now behind.
Spot on! I have a friend who came as an student and worked here for 10 years. He was never able to get his residence and went back home. He feels he lost 10 years of his life.
Mate, been there and done that. :) I used to be an ALT in Tokyo. One School made me get the students to repeat after me 1 to 100 everyday.. human tape recorder. 😂
That’s the way how the young generation thinking. I know two teachers from NZ and Australia that they are teaching for years in Japan. They are both on country side bought their homes for 25k and living happily in Japan,.
Thats what I need in my life right now. I would move to Japan at the drop of a coin and never return to Jamaica where I was born or the US where I live
One of my favorite streamers did English teaching and got out. She is now a very successful singer among other things. I am contemplating whether I want to teach English in Japan or not. This video is helpful
Good to see ya, Riely, and thanks, Sam. Keep up the raw. Aussie perspective of Japan. Mostly 6 and 5 to 9. Wow. "Transition is good, and don't be complacent."🙏 Sugoi. ✌️🤘🇦🇺
Good content and I heard some really good resources out there for people that want to get out of the English teaching gig in Japan. Good stuff, you have earned an subscriber.
Japanese employers, especially the better paying ones are sticklers for bachelor's degrees or master's degrees. If you go to Japan, make sure you have at least your bachelor's degree and life is going to be a lot easier finding a job. Yes, tatemae is a cultural necessity in Japan. Well, you must be polite for the cohesiveness of society. If you want to be a Maverick then don't live in Japan or you'll have a very hard time fitting.
If you want to teach then look to get hired directly by a proper Japanese school, whether it’s elementary, JHS or high school. Pay is relatively good and you’ll get good bonuses twice a year. Other route is to get hired as a university lecturer, but you’d need a masters in TEFL to open those doors. Eikaiwa will use and abuse you.
It obviously wasn't for you both, and fair enough. It is a stepping stone to for example: starting your own school, or teaching at colleges or universities all of which I have done. But it is not for everyone. Thanks for the video! I have enjoyed my life and as you point out as well, it is a stepping stone to the things I mention. But it is true some get stuck working for an English school. Best to branch out and start your own school or get into university teaching.
I love Japan, japanese language, cuisine, culture, rites, mentality and people, but I have to be honest: 1.) the way and the state of japanese everything (education and workflow in general) especially showing in the overboardly hierarchical, rigid, slow, backwards - i.e. adopting new tech or better ways in foreign language education It's a simple supply and demand discrepancy issue. The need for learning english isn't there anymore and the amount of english speaking tourists outweighs the amount of english curious japanese. 2.) The 80s Japan Hi-Tech export to USA economic boom is over (Japan has miscalculated its short-sighted profit maximizing outsourcing to Korea and China greed biting Japan in the ass since the 90s as Korea and then China took over the cheap export labor costs underbidding) 3.) It's the anime culture, being now Japan's current #1 export product (that in fact keeps Japan's Economy still somewhat afloat, the tourism being factually only a mere secondary product of anime popularity) is very revealing! Japan is done, literally dying out due to wrong economic and demographic politics, unfortunately. BTW I now start to get - as to why japanese are so much in love with Germany. Both countries are very much alike in their flaws. 😂
I was trapped in English teaching for 18years in the same company. The first 5 years it was really nice. Like a big family and better pay than any other school in the area. Then they expanded and the shitter overflowed. Haha But I was trapped for 12 something more years. Finally got out of the eikaiwa trap because of my new wife. Never work for any eikaiwa. Period. If you want to get into Japan and all you have is teaching English, at least try to work for an elementary school. That way better and they don’t treat you like a chair in the classroom. But get out of this job as soon as you can. And find something better. Sammir said it already.
@@wudres6462 do what you like. Sign up at some of the job searching companies. Their job is to find you a job. If they do and you start your new job, they get paid.
Should I learn Japanese before traveling Japan to teach English? If so, how well do I need to speak it? I love languages and I'm in my 30s. Also, what is the TEFL program like?
Yes. With N3 you can work in a conbini or restaurant. N2 is classed as Business English but reading is only to the level of a 12-year old!!! N1 is close to native level! Come with N3 and learn N2 as soon as you arrive.
Hey Sam so im an ASE certified master tech and I've been in the automotive industry for the past 15 years but I also have my college degree in English literature. Would being an English teacher be a good stepping stone to get into the automotive industry in Japan or would i be better to try to go straight into the automotive industry?
I have literally ZERO qualifications to talk on this since I one have no degree at all and two don’t even live in Japan BUT I’ve seen for example thrash racing in the past offer foreigners to sponsor their work visa to come and work for them in Japan so long as you have a collage degree (basically a requirement to get a work visa) so maybe other automotive shops would be possible willing to do that on the other hand it does look like a good option especially having a degree in English literature already but I guess like same said immediately start looking for a job in the field you really wanna be in and don’t stay in English teaching for two long
@@vickramos9234 thank you for the information I'll definitely look into it. Maybe my degree will be worth something in Japan because it sure isn't worth anything here in the US.
@@riddlemethis01 it usually gets your application looked at. That’s sad but true a lot these days. I ended up in a C position at a Fortune 500 company. Just a high school diploma. I started several companies, learned a lot and sold a company to the 500 company. Boom your in a top level position. To bad the job sucked. Be careful what you wish for.
@@riddlemethis01sometimes that BA is just a stepping stone to get a master’s in something more marketable. So long as you had good grades and score well on the GRE/GMAT/LSAT/etc. you’ll be fine. Just 2-3 more years of edumacation and a six figure salary if you play the cards right.
Great video 🙏I have friends who taught in South Korea who said the same thing. Basically do your research and go with a public or government sponsored program since working for private schools suck.
I wish I could just move to Japan, I messed up when I was young and have a record because of that so don't think I'll be able to go over there since they are strict on anything like that
@@unclehollywood7100 that's cool, I might look into that. I'm working on trying to get everything expunged of my record. Hopefully when that's done I can go to more countries
@@slim_gs3005 You have to go two or three years without getting in any trouble you can’t have any more offenses and it’s anywhere between two and $5000 to get it done I tried I didn’t get it done and I just walked Vietnam and Teaching here for four years
Paul McArtney enjoyed some jail time in Japan. Paris Hilton was not allowed to enter and was on the tarmac for a few days and sent back, return to sender.
Saw this while looking around at teaching in japan videos, i wanna be a music teacher and am in college for music education. Would you guys know any details about using english teaching as a stepping stone to getting a different teaching job in japan?
Sure, but there aren't many jobs as music teachers in Japan in Japanese schools. At international schools for sure but teaching English in Japan won't help for that. Finish your education, work as a music teacher in your home country a couple years and then you can go on the international school circuit including Japan.
Thats one of my things. I cant work for companys that only see numbers. I have done in the past and quickly realised any longer than 6 months and my mental health goes out the window. So ya id advise to do something that atleast interests you otherwise it could do more damage than good.
Can you do one for those that will work for a university? I'm 2 semesters from finishing my Masters degree for teaching students that are English Learners. I have my teaching degree already.
Well I’ve seen some companies now like NOVA saying they have annual raises. But I definitely don’t want to teach English haha. I do have a spouse visa and got interviews with different companies but all the jobs are not to high pay. Looking for work in Sapporo lol
I know people who’ve been there for 7 years and still working at Eikawa. Does that really look bad in Japan? Is the salary even enough to support a family? Just wondering since I heard the pay isn’t good
Husband has a masters in teaching here in America but he's SUPER passionate about teaching. He always tells me about his kids strengths and weaknesses along with how his day went. I still want to move to Japan though. Oh, and we're childfree so we aren't worried about being overwhelmed with money. I want to escape Memphis crime and culture SO BAD.
I came to Japan after being in China for 7 years. I worked for Nova. What a garbage company. International schools are better. But the one I worked at was run by very poor foreign management. But yeah as a teacher here, you can't grow.
My experience was at Kanda Gaigo Gakuen. At that time, which was many years ago, management was quite good. Never felt like a number.... Now they have expanded and have a university as well.
You always have to have a Plan B in Japan. Companies do not communicate well with western employees. Everything is layered and it’s hard to understand what they really want from you. They won’t say anything to you, you’re supposed to know everything. They think nothing of dumping you as an employee. You are extremely replaceable. I’m wondering if they’ve raised the pay with the change in the exchange rate? I worked for a language school that scammed employees. They required that you lived in their housing which they were making a profit off renting to you. They would rent a place for 18,000 a month and then charge you 40,000 a month for it. They were awful people. I’m surprised they survived. They are in Kofu. I got lucky and found a job working for an American company. I got respected, treated like a human, and decent pay raises. If you’re the English monkey, they’re looking to replace you. Nothing is permanent, be used to being disrespected on a regular basis
Is it possible for a non-native speaker to find a job in Japan? I’m Chinese teaching ESL in China. I’m a proficient English user and have been teaching English for 4 years. I’m holding a master’s degree in Linguistics and a Ofqual- regulated TEFL certificate. Do you think is it possible for me to start my teaching career in Japan?
The least impressive part of weighing up living in Japan is the pay. I would absolutely love to live there, but as a nurse i earn $7-8K AUD per month in Australia after tax so the idea of earning $3K a month is super deflating. Id get into drift racing in a heartbeat 😅. Loved the vid and the recruitment agencies suggestions
If you get comfortable living and working in another country, you are NOT "stuck". That's ridiculous. You made a choice and you have become happy with the results. Isn't that the real purpose of having a job abroad? If making a lot of money is your goal for a job, you probably DON'T need to do that if you are already living in a modern 1st world country.
I was on a student visa for a year. People talk about how English teaching is the job of least resistance for coming into Japan but I couldn't get a teaching job the entire year I was there. I did work part-time at a store though. Many of the students in my language school went back to their country after 6 months to a year, many without getting a part-time job. I would say my interpersonal skills are weak though and I didn't have customer service or teaching experience (excluding the fact I was a TA in college). Based off of my experience, I would say that it's difficult getting a teaching job even though many people make out like it is so.
My question is, why do some Japanese schools require you to be a professional with experience in Education, and sometimes even want you to have a Master's degree, if you are just going to be a "human recorder"? I mean, you don't need any professional training to do that! 😐🤷♀
Not an option for someone not native English speaker! I'm looking to move to Japan as an experienced car mechanic/fabricator. I used to send CVs for English teaching jobs in Japan 10 years ago, but I don't think I would take the BS at my age now. English teaching is for people in their 20s. Now it's more of looking for a decent car garage doing odd and interesting jobs including EV conversions .... or going my own way with starting a company of my own in Japan. Certainly hard to do with Japan's bureaucracy and certifications needed to work on cars.
When I did it, over 20 years ago, it wasn't that bad. But wages have not increased over that time-frame, so the 300,000 yen upper limit for teaching English in Japan have not changed - and likely will be the same another 10 years from now. So yeah, get in and then get out.
Hi! Thanks for the info, just FYI, N1 is the highest level on the JPLT, but its actually not even close to being native level. Even if you pass N1 you are not a 'native level' speaker. Your statement about Japanese people not even being N1 level is very incorrect. As someone who has passed the N1, there is still a lot of work to do to get to fluent, never mind 'native level'
A stable job for at least a year in a country where the cost of living is actually obtainable? I’d do manual labour if I needed to, sign me the fuck up
As long as your paying the boyz that work for you more then 250,000 yen a year the boyz working for you are lucky. I couldn’t survive here on less then 10 million yen a year, feel sorry for them that think this place is worth living in making less then that…good advise in this video…. Don’t work for a Japanese company work for a American or European company and actually get paid well.
if im married with children but i have the degree and i want my small children to enjoy japan as well if i get a job there will my kids be able to come?
what, 3000 a month is "okay, not bad"?!? From where I'm from you make 1800 max, and can live perfectly. Can also be because ~40% of my country is considered "poor".
If you're fluent in Japanese and have the proper qualifications, then there are plenty of jobs. Otherwise, I don't know why people think they can show up in a country where they barely speak the language and have no relevant qualifications/experience, but have a comfy life be magically handed to them.
Living in Japan is NOT the paradise it's made out to be. You will ALWAYS be a "gaijin" (foreigner), no matter how well you speak Japanese or assimilate into the culture.
Well, that’s a lot to take in. But, let’s be serious. How many of us are cut out to be teachers? Most can’t give proper directions 😂 It just sounds like it’s a bigger hurdle then previously thought to live in Japan 😭. How is the market far as trade jobs? About that 180? (Cannot be ignored) 😂
It’s not a trap! For one, you’re probably an ALT and not an actual teacher, do you have your teaching license?then your not a teacher. Also do you have a masters so you can teach at a university?
i left after 3 months because i hated how they monitor you like a jealous wife and you had to take breaks in a tiny closet and sit on a stool designed for a child.
It is a trap that I made the best out of. Gave me a chance to have a stable job for years, travel, have a nice apartment, always have money, enjoy nice experiences, get new ideas and work experience, and meet amazing people. I made the best out of it and it enabled me to live the life I wanted for years.
I’m very happy that my native language is Turkish because grammatically it’s similar to Japanese. While Europeans start spelling, Turks begin speaking. The same happens with the Japanese-they find it easier to learn Turkish than English
Where did you teach? 😊🤔
@@sertdert1006true, but there’s no need for anyone to learn Turkish compared to English, Chinese or Spanish
What was your salary
I've been in Japan for over twenty years and this is very accurate.
I came as an English teacher, did it for three years and became a game programmer. This worked because I had a plan.
Unfortunately, I burned out and went back to teaching temporarily, with no plan. I got comfortable and was stuck for *thirteen* more years. For the last eight years of it, my pay didn't change at all.
The good news is that I'm back to programming games. I finally escaped the trap. Better not to get snared in the first place.
What certificates you need to become game programmer?
@@assassin7250 I have a degree in software engineering. This helped, but it's far less important than having a portfolio to show to a potential employer. I used to work with a chemistry grad who became a graphics programmer because he had made some small games and graphics demos on his own.
So the takeaway from this is if you are applying for the English teaching job (human tape recorder) just to get your foot in the door to japan its an ok route with the stipulation that you do everything in your power to find the job you actually want once you get to japan and dont get complacent. Use it as a stepping stone not a career.
This is pretty good advice for any of these type of English teaching jobs. It’s a gap year after uni, or a starting point. You make a little cash, experience a new culture, and that’s about it. Sadly most of the “skills” you acquire in these schools aren’t applicable for jobs back home or in another field.
My year teaching in Korea was awesome! Really prepared for what turned out to be 10 years in China, where i did non teaching career jobs.
You can get comfortable and can’t speak for Japan, but when I went in Korea the money was pretty good, comparable to my last job in Australia, and the rent was free, plane tickets in and out of Korea was free and general costs were a lot cheaper than Sydney. It can get super easy to get used to it when there isn’t anything waiting for you after your contract is up. I had something in the UK to go to, so staying wasn’t an option.
The funny thing about this video is that Japanese are also treated like a number regardless of how well they perform at the Job. Even Japanese working for a Japanese company isn’t all sunshine and rainbows. Sometimes the pay and benefits aren’t worth it!
I love SAMMIT RAW videos!!! Thank you so much for the info!!! Yes, English "teaching" may be a stepping stone in my case...
I am searching for a job in Japan. Good thing I have University winter break January to March to do it!!! I am studying Japanese at University right now and getting close to N3 soon, I guess...
However I am already 38 y-o and have experience in so many things including car fixing, a bit of welding and construction, sales, car electronics, etc...
Don't be surprised if you do get my resume Sam!!! lol
Good luck bro .. Are you as well teaching English in Japan?
ive always been curious on this topic i see alot of people always taking this route when they want to move to japan and it always goes sour good to finally know why. PS glad you mentioned the 180sx i was also very curious on that once the vod started.
Hey can you explain why it is a famous car I have only seen an s15 on the internet with that livery. Was it street drifting or something?
I loved teaching in Japan…I taught at a university…yes I was qualified, and that opened the door to a very nice job. I taught private lessons on the side. Learn Japanese!!!
My high school shop teacher used to say the underwater basket weaving piece all the time.
Thank you for sharing this. I'm sorry to hear both your stories. Your exit plan is extremely solidl. I wasn't able to do this on time and had to return to my home country. But yeah I really relate to the experience of being treated as a number and how the job quickly loses merit.
signing up to be a human tape recorder , any way into japan and im doing it reguardless of how boring the job is
Get the proper qualifications and language skills BEFORE stepping foot in the country and then just figure out a way to transfer your career here. As counter-intuitive as it may sound, it's harder to transfer into an actual career-field once you come here as a teacher. Rather than if you had just started out here in your field. Most people come in with this thinking, and then fail to find anything better ---- and end up either stuck in their crappy job forever or end up going back home with nothing to show for it.
There is no "foot in the door" with teaching. These ALT/eikaiwa companies exploit desperate weebs who would do anything to live here. Teaching wages have steadily been on the decline (people working here in the 80-90s were making MORE than current teachers) and they continue to get away with the declining wages and conditions because of all the people like you who keep flocking in for the elusive "foot in the door."
Hi, thanks for the update. My wife may be coming to Japan as an English teacher from Nigeria that's if she successful in her interview, as a matter of importance, what's the monthly pay for a Bachelor's of education in English education should she be demanding during the interview? What other tips would you recommend her to ask from her employer?
The interview will be coming up on the 3 July 24 so I will be needing your response on time.
Thanks
@@malachiezinwa8796it’s about the randomized placement after interview. Expect 2-3k per month USD
@@malachiezinwa8796 hi! How was the interview. Hope it's successful?
Sounds like so much whining and nothing more. I can think of a million jobs that are worse than this.
I’m literally a language teacher in Australia, and even though your video wasn’t for me, it was still useful.
"literally"...
Mate it's the same in Australia aswell. The government makes it's money off international students. They promise them after their studies they can get pr or sponsorship by advising what courses to study as we have a shortage but every 4 years the requirements change means they are stuck as international students for 10+ years, only working 20 hours a week or 2 or 3 cash jobs to make money.. we see it in hospitality all the time. Then they just work to pay school fees they cannot afford and fail school due to not attending because they are working to pay for it...Wasted their best years on a future they were told they could have but couldn't and stuck in a trap until if they are lucky marry someone or go back home where they are now behind.
Spot on! I have a friend who came as an student and worked here for 10 years. He was never able to get his residence and went back home. He feels he lost 10 years of his life.
Awesome video as always Sammit. We need more Riley on both channels he's such a cool guy.
Mate, been there and done that. :) I used to be an ALT in Tokyo. One School made me get the students to repeat after me 1 to 100 everyday.. human tape recorder. 😂
In Australia, there’s a stigma of being useless and not being able to land a proper job when it comes to people who go overseas to teach English.
That’s the way how the young generation thinking. I know two teachers from NZ and Australia that they are teaching for years in Japan. They are both on country side bought their homes for 25k and living happily in Japan,.
Thats what I need in my life right now. I would move to Japan at the drop of a coin and never return to Jamaica where I was born or the US where I live
One of my favorite streamers did English teaching and got out. She is now a very successful singer among other things. I am contemplating whether I want to teach English in Japan or not. This video is helpful
A great rant Sam and informative as well you nailed it
underwater basket weaving is a noble job! thats how Ariel the mermaid gets her baskets to carry her things...
Is that the 180SX Goodride Team Reverse car that Daiki used to drift?!
Good to see ya, Riely, and thanks, Sam. Keep up the raw. Aussie perspective of Japan. Mostly 6 and 5 to 9. Wow. "Transition is good, and don't be complacent."🙏 Sugoi. ✌️🤘🇦🇺
Good content and I heard some really good resources out there for people that want to get out of the English teaching gig in Japan. Good stuff, you have earned an subscriber.
Japanese employers, especially the better paying ones are sticklers for bachelor's degrees or master's degrees. If you go to Japan, make sure you have at least your bachelor's degree and life is going to be a lot easier finding a job.
Yes, tatemae is a cultural necessity in Japan. Well, you must be polite for the cohesiveness of society. If you want to be a Maverick then don't live in Japan or you'll have a very hard time fitting.
If you want to teach then look to get hired directly by a proper Japanese school, whether it’s elementary, JHS or high school. Pay is relatively good and you’ll get good bonuses twice a year. Other route is to get hired as a university lecturer, but you’d need a masters in TEFL to open those doors. Eikaiwa will use and abuse you.
What the average pay working within these elementary,JHS or high school? Also can you elaborate more on university and how the system abuses you?
Imagine thinking that only Japanese companies think of people as numbers.
It is true though.. Japan is literally known as a workaholic culture.
Sounds like solid advice. Thanks!
Robert Walters, lol, I used to be a headhunter in Tokyo.
It obviously wasn't for you both, and fair enough. It is a stepping stone to for example: starting your own school, or teaching at colleges or universities all of which I have done. But it is not for everyone. Thanks for the video! I have enjoyed my life and as you point out as well, it is a stepping stone to the things I mention. But it is true some get stuck working for an English school. Best to branch out and start your own school or get into university teaching.
This was very informative! Shout out to Riley for being a badass 🐐
I love Japan, japanese language, cuisine, culture, rites, mentality and people, but I have to be honest: 1.) the way and the state of japanese everything (education and workflow in general) especially showing in the overboardly hierarchical, rigid, slow, backwards - i.e. adopting new tech or better ways in foreign language education It's a simple supply and demand discrepancy issue.
The need for learning english isn't there anymore and the amount of english speaking tourists outweighs the amount of english curious japanese.
2.) The 80s Japan Hi-Tech export to USA economic boom is over (Japan has miscalculated its short-sighted profit maximizing outsourcing to Korea and China greed biting Japan in the ass since the 90s as Korea and then China took over the cheap export labor costs underbidding)
3.) It's the anime culture, being now Japan's current #1 export product (that in fact keeps Japan's Economy still somewhat afloat, the tourism being factually only a mere secondary product of anime popularity) is very revealing!
Japan is done, literally dying out due to wrong economic and demographic politics, unfortunately.
BTW I now start to get - as to why japanese are so much in love with Germany. Both countries are very much alike in their flaws. 😂
green car goes brrr XD love the raw videos guys, more guests too!!! thank youu sam and riley
Im glad you addressed the 180sx in thr background 😂 I was over here like wtf did sam get another s13....
I was trapped in English teaching for 18years in the same company. The first 5 years it was really nice. Like a big family and better pay than any other school in the area. Then they expanded and the shitter overflowed. Haha
But I was trapped for 12 something more years.
Finally got out of the eikaiwa trap because of my new wife.
Never work for any eikaiwa. Period. If you want to get into Japan and all you have is teaching English, at least try to work for an elementary school. That way better and they don’t treat you like a chair in the classroom.
But get out of this job as soon as you can. And find something better.
Sammir said it already.
I’m interested but I’m not sure of any good places to work. Do you have suggestions for work after you get out of English teaching?
@@wudres6462 do what you like. Sign up at some of the job searching companies. Their job is to find you a job. If they do and you start your new job, they get paid.
Should I learn Japanese before traveling Japan to teach English? If so, how well do I need to speak it? I love languages and I'm in my 30s.
Also, what is the TEFL program like?
Yes. With N3 you can work in a conbini or restaurant. N2 is classed as Business English but reading is only to the level of a 12-year old!!! N1 is close to native level! Come with N3 and learn N2 as soon as you arrive.
Love the videos sammit 🔥
Hey Sam so im an ASE certified master tech and I've been in the automotive industry for the past 15 years but I also have my college degree in English literature. Would being an English teacher be a good stepping stone to get into the automotive industry in Japan or would i be better to try to go straight into the automotive industry?
I have literally ZERO qualifications to talk on this since I one have no degree at all and two don’t even live in Japan BUT
I’ve seen for example thrash racing in the past offer foreigners to sponsor their work visa to come and work for them in Japan so long as you have a collage degree (basically a requirement to get a work visa) so maybe other automotive shops would be possible willing to do that on the other hand it does look like a good option especially having a degree in English literature already but I guess like same said immediately start looking for a job in the field you really wanna be in and don’t stay in English teaching for two long
@@vickramos9234 thank you for the information I'll definitely look into it. Maybe my degree will be worth something in Japan because it sure isn't worth anything here in the US.
@@vickramos9234 this is probably the best thing to do I would imagine as well. Thrash is awesome as well!
@@riddlemethis01 it usually gets your application looked at. That’s sad but true a lot these days. I ended up in a C position at a Fortune 500 company. Just a high school diploma. I started several companies, learned a lot and sold a company to the 500 company. Boom your in a top level position. To bad the job sucked.
Be careful what you wish for.
@@riddlemethis01sometimes that BA is just a stepping stone to get a master’s in something more marketable. So long as you had good grades and score well on the GRE/GMAT/LSAT/etc. you’ll be fine. Just 2-3 more years of edumacation and a six figure salary if you play the cards right.
Great video 🙏I have friends who taught in South Korea who said the same thing. Basically do your research and go with a public or government sponsored program since working for private schools suck.
I wish I could just move to Japan, I messed up when I was young and have a record because of that so don't think I'll be able to go over there since they are strict on anything like that
If you have a college degree you can go to Vietnam it doesn’t matter on your background
@@unclehollywood7100 that's cool, I might look into that. I'm working on trying to get everything expunged of my record. Hopefully when that's done I can go to more countries
@@slim_gs3005 You have to go two or three years without getting in any trouble you can’t have any more offenses and it’s anywhere between two and $5000 to get it done I tried I didn’t get it done and I just walked Vietnam and Teaching here for four years
@@slim_gs3005good luck man. I feel if you do the time/pay the fine, you shouldn’t have it hanging over your head forever. That shit is stupid
Paul McArtney enjoyed some jail time in Japan. Paris Hilton was not allowed to enter and was on the tarmac for a few days and sent back, return to sender.
Saw this while looking around at teaching in japan videos, i wanna be a music teacher and am in college for music education. Would you guys know any details about using english teaching as a stepping stone to getting a different teaching job in japan?
Sure, but there aren't many jobs as music teachers in Japan in Japanese schools. At international schools for sure but teaching English in Japan won't help for that. Finish your education, work as a music teacher in your home country a couple years and then you can go on the international school circuit including Japan.
@@WilkinsMichael I'll look into that, thank you!
Is it possible for someone with a teaching certificate for Cambridge Tests (non-university teaching certificate) to get a proper educator job?
Short answer, no.
Thats one of my things. I cant work for companys that only see numbers. I have done in the past and quickly realised any longer than 6 months and my mental health goes out the window. So ya id advise to do something that atleast interests you otherwise it could do more damage than good.
Excellent, thank you
Can you do one for those that will work for a university? I'm 2 semesters from finishing my Masters degree for teaching students that are English Learners. I have my teaching degree already.
Well I’ve seen some companies now like NOVA saying they have annual raises. But I definitely don’t want to teach English haha. I do have a spouse visa and got interviews with different companies but all the jobs are not to high pay. Looking for work in Sapporo lol
I know people who’ve been there for 7 years and still working at Eikawa. Does that really look bad in Japan? Is the salary even enough to support a family? Just wondering since I heard the pay isn’t good
English teaching in Korea & Japan is more like being an English entertainer than actually teaching English
Husband has a masters in teaching here in America but he's SUPER passionate about teaching. He always tells me about his kids strengths and weaknesses along with how his day went. I still want to move to Japan though. Oh, and we're childfree so we aren't worried about being overwhelmed with money. I want to escape Memphis crime and culture SO BAD.
This all sounds like the entire work culture of Japan in general. People just stay working at dead end jobs their whole lives.
I came to Japan after being in China for 7 years. I worked for Nova. What a garbage company. International schools are better. But the one I worked at was run by very poor foreign management. But yeah as a teacher here, you can't grow.
My experience was at Kanda Gaigo Gakuen. At that time, which was many years ago, management was quite good. Never felt like a number.... Now they have expanded and have a university as well.
I'm in China but this info still applies. This will be my 6th year in China, 7th abroad. Gotta call it quits this year
You always have to have a Plan B in Japan. Companies do not communicate well with western employees. Everything is layered and it’s hard to understand what they really want from you. They won’t say anything to you, you’re supposed to know everything. They think nothing of dumping you as an employee. You are extremely replaceable.
I’m wondering if they’ve raised the pay with the change in the exchange rate? I worked for a language school that scammed employees. They required that you lived in their housing which they were making a profit off renting to you. They would rent a place for 18,000 a month and then charge you 40,000 a month for it. They were awful people. I’m surprised they survived. They are in Kofu. I got lucky and found a job working for an American company. I got respected, treated like a human, and decent pay raises.
If you’re the English monkey, they’re looking to replace you. Nothing is permanent, be used to being disrespected on a regular basis
Is it possible for a non-native speaker to find a job in Japan? I’m Chinese teaching ESL in China. I’m a proficient English user and have been teaching English for 4 years. I’m holding a master’s degree in Linguistics and a Ofqual- regulated TEFL certificate. Do you think is it possible for me to start my teaching career in Japan?
Underwater basket weaver major is crazy 😂😂
I'm not doing anymore since salaries for teachers are ridiculously low
What happened to albo?
The colors of Team Reverse...is that Ryusei's car? 👀
What is the car behind you ?
JET Programme maximum term is five years with the exception of during the pandemic where some ALTs and CIRs got took on for a sixth year.
i gues the big question every one have after this.. "what is the yellow stuff in the back" ;)
The least impressive part of weighing up living in Japan is the pay. I would absolutely love to live there, but as a nurse i earn $7-8K AUD per month in Australia after tax so the idea of earning $3K a month is super deflating. Id get into drift racing in a heartbeat 😅. Loved the vid and the recruitment agencies suggestions
hahah love these vids
If you get comfortable living and working in another country, you are NOT "stuck". That's ridiculous. You made a choice and you have become happy with the results. Isn't that the real purpose of having a job abroad? If making a lot of money is your goal for a job, you probably DON'T need to do that if you are already living in a modern 1st world country.
I tried it, was a nightmare.
Please explain. I am planning to go.
@patmtc477 it's not that bad, just don't do it for too long, one year is fun
@@cusrsedstuff8043Can you decide how many years you wanna be there?
@anju5124 you gotta Reasearch where you do it and through what program, but there are definitely ways to only go for a year
@@cusrsedstuff8043 Oh , I was talking about the JET programme where they need teaching assistants.
I was on a student visa for a year. People talk about how English teaching is the job of least resistance for coming into Japan but I couldn't get a teaching job the entire year I was there. I did work part-time at a store though. Many of the students in my language school went back to their country after 6 months to a year, many without getting a part-time job. I would say my interpersonal skills are weak though and I didn't have customer service or teaching experience (excluding the fact I was a TA in college). Based off of my experience, I would say that it's difficult getting a teaching job even though many people make out like it is so.
It was easy i brasil....they had store fronts.....and they were willing to pay well....
I lived Like a prince and used "banks ,brains, books" as my mantra.
My question is, why do some Japanese schools require you to be a professional with experience in Education, and sometimes even want you to have a Master's degree, if you are just going to be a "human recorder"? I mean, you don't need any professional training to do that! 😐🤷♀
Not an option for someone not native English speaker! I'm looking to move to Japan as an experienced car mechanic/fabricator.
I used to send CVs for English teaching jobs in Japan 10 years ago, but I don't think I would take the BS at my age now. English teaching is for people in their 20s.
Now it's more of looking for a decent car garage doing odd and interesting jobs including EV conversions .... or going my own way with starting a company of my own in Japan.
Certainly hard to do with Japan's bureaucracy and certifications needed to work on cars.
might find something with their new visas for skilled mechanics
did you need a 4 year degree to get a english teaching job in japan?
When I did it, over 20 years ago, it wasn't that bad. But wages have not increased over that time-frame, so the 300,000 yen upper limit for teaching English in Japan have not changed - and likely will be the same another 10 years from now. So yeah, get in and then get out.
ネイティブスピーカーにとっては、英語を母国語とする人間としては簡単だし、女遊びが出来るし、魅力的なはず。
I'm not sure if this has been brought up before (because I'm a newbie on this channel), but you look like Nicholas Galitzine!!
English Teachers in Japan be like: "This was the best, but the worst while also greatest idea while being one of my most terrible decisions in life."
I thought that 180 was seized by the police already lol
Hi! Thanks for the info, just FYI, N1 is the highest level on the JPLT, but its actually not even close to being native level. Even if you pass N1 you are not a 'native level' speaker. Your statement about Japanese people not even being N1 level is very incorrect. As someone who has passed the N1, there is still a lot of work to do to get to fluent, never mind 'native level'
A stable job for at least a year in a country where the cost of living is actually obtainable? I’d do manual labour if I needed to, sign me the fuck up
Teaching English in Japan is a stepping stone, not a career.
As long as your paying the boyz that work for you more then 250,000 yen a year the boyz working for you are lucky. I couldn’t survive here on less then 10 million yen a year, feel sorry for them that think this place is worth living in making less then that…good advise in this video…. Don’t work for a Japanese company work for a American or European company and actually get paid well.
SAMMIT BUYS A RX7 FC?!?
Any recommendation on legitimately good Japanese learning tools?
The Genki Books are really good.
>basket weaving
I see we have a fellow anon in our midst
I feel more sorry for the students learning from these teachers who hate them 😂😂😂
Taiwan is better to teach. Has much better lifestyle, better people and lower living cost, as well as easy to own a school
What country has prettier women tho?
Better people? Um hardly.
Cap
if im married with children but i have the degree and i want my small children to enjoy japan as well if i get a job there will my kids be able to come?
what, 3000 a month is "okay, not bad"?!? From where I'm from you make 1800 max, and can live perfectly. Can also be because ~40% of my country is considered "poor".
i like seeing sammit do videos like this never even knew he was a teacher haha thats pretty sick
I don't think he ever was, there are so many contradictory statements and misinformation in this video 😂
Is it just me?
Or does he seem like a person who came to japan just to come to japan? And clearly for the cars
What other way's or jobs are there apart from "English teaching" to get in to Japan? 😇
Be well educated and all doors in the world are open. Degree or PhD or better opens all doors..
@@JohnDoeC78 cheers but that's a very braud answer 🤣,almost like a riddle you need to solve yourself
No.. it doesn't. That's not how things work in Japan. @@JohnDoeC78
If you're fluent in Japanese and have the proper qualifications, then there are plenty of jobs. Otherwise, I don't know why people think they can show up in a country where they barely speak the language and have no relevant qualifications/experience, but have a comfy life be magically handed to them.
100k by the end of the year? Naah
I got a bad case of diarea.
He means the 2020 plauge
I wanna move to japan but am so scared to move out of Australia
Ok ?
Living in Japan is NOT the paradise it's made out to be. You will ALWAYS be a "gaijin" (foreigner), no matter how well you speak Japanese or assimilate into the culture.
Nice cars
Well, that’s a lot to take in. But, let’s be serious. How many of us are cut out to be teachers? Most can’t give proper directions 😂 It just sounds like it’s a bigger hurdle then previously thought to live in Japan 😭. How is the market far as trade jobs? About that 180? (Cannot be ignored) 😂
true about time passing. beware
so what do you do if you only want to do it for 6 months?
It’s not a trap! For one, you’re probably an ALT and not an actual teacher, do you have your teaching license?then your not a teacher. Also do you have a masters so you can teach at a university?
For a second there I thought Justin Bieber had given it all up for efl.
Я прочитав заголовок голосом канібала-пігмея
i left after 3 months because i hated how they monitor you like a jealous wife and you had to take breaks in a tiny closet and sit on a stool designed for a child.