The following three paragraphs were in the E1 & E2 Visas section, and are clearly not relevant to visas. They might be useful somewhere else.
- Firstly, those of you wishing to teach in Korea must negotiate a well-written contract. Although most English teachers work in private foreign language institutes (hagwons), positions are also available in a number of institutions of learning such as in-house language programs sponsored by corporations, universities, governments and private research centers, editing, public relations and advertising companies and private tutoring.
- Private language institutes/hagwons have greatly increased in number in Korea. As a result, the ESL teaching environment in this country has become extremely competitive. As a result, the failure rate for many of these schools is high.
- Students are usually grade school or college level. Classes for business peop[le are mainly conducted mornings and evenings. The work week for teachers averages from twenty to thirty hours. Housing is available for teachers at many of the more successful schools.
Atkinson 15:15, 16 March 2006 (CET)
[edit] Latin?
Um, why is quite a bit of this article in Latin?--Hater Depot 04:20, 12 October 2006 (CEST)
It's just temporary filler.--Galbijim 04:45, 12 October 2006 (CEST)
On another note, why does one entry on this talk page show up as double entries on Recent Changes? Hmmm...must be a bug--Galbijim 04:50, 12 October 2006 (CEST)
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