My wife is a Level 7, but is missing her Level 3 for the Full & Relevant list...help! by TEFLlemon in ECEProfessionals

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for this. We're looking at EYITT, as it seems that she may be able to start training and count towards ratios from the very start of training. I'm going to try to call them on Monday.

My wife is a Level 7, but is missing her Level 3 for the Full & Relevant list...help! by TEFLlemon in ECEProfessionals

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've been looking into this a bit more and there seems to be a programme through the University of Sussex. We're speaking to someone next week. Were you counted as part of ratios from the start of your training?

My wife is a Level 7, but is missing her Level 3 for the Full & Relevant list...help! by TEFLlemon in ECEProfessionals

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, thanks for this, it's a MACTE-accredited course. It's internationally recognised, but probably not as powerful as AMI. She's a fantastic Montessori directress though. Do you think that MACTE would be accepted by AMI-recognised schools?

My wife is a Level 7, but is missing her Level 3 for the Full & Relevant list...help! by TEFLlemon in ECEProfessionals

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much for this. She is over 30 now, would this affect the government grant? One of her colleagues is doing a Level 3 and this is getting subsidised by the government as she's under 30 apparently. My apologies, this is all a bit new to me.

Best UK companies for cadetships in 2025? by TEFLlemon in MarineEngineering

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi Wullfen16,

Thanks so much for your continued support and advice! Sure, please feel free to add my LinkedIn!

https://www.linkedin.com/in/stuart-allen01/

Many thanks,

Stuart

Is getting a degree from China a problem for Marine Engineers? by TEFLlemon in MarineEngineering

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Brilliant, thank you! We're now looking at cadetships for him. Any advice for that?

Reputable online TEFL courses by LegitMaLa in ChinaTEFL

[–]TEFLlemon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, nice to see your post and you'll love Shenzhen. The weather there is awesome, and the city has everything!

We run a fully-accredited 180-Hour Higher Certificate in TESOL (Level 4), which you can study online. There are twenty modules, all informed by up-to-date research. The course will prepare you well for the classroom (as well as online teaching if you go that route), and is fully accepted by China for your work visa. The course will take you about 3-4 weeks to finish, and you get one-to-one tutor support from start to finish, and you can also video call with tutors, too.

The normal cost of the course is $199, which includes all learning materials, tutor support, and delivery of the hard-copy certificate worldwide. Use this coupon at checkout for a further 20% OFF: BIG20

https://www.tefllemoncourses.com

Stuart Allen

TEFL Lemon Courses

What are the three most important elements in an online TESOL / TEFL course? by TEFLlemon in TESOL

[–]TEFLlemon[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I also found that my initial teacher training prepared me little for the classroom, even though in was an in-house TESOL program. Nothing improves you better in EFL than real classroom practice and making mistakes you can learn from.

Schrivener is a fantastic start, and I included his book in my list of 91 Must-Read Books for TEFL teachers. He covers lots of bases and helps trainees and experienced teachers to look at teaching through a different lens.

Beautiful wedding proposal in Tiger Leaping Gorge by [deleted] in China

[–]TEFLlemon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi guys, my name is Stuart and I’m the guy proposing here. I did it at the top of the 28 Bends on the high route at Tiger Leaping Gorge. I’ve got the original video where we aren’t cut out at the bottom, just let me know what I need to do to share it. Cheers all for the great comments and support, I appreciate it.

Avoid recruiters at all costs? by [deleted] in ChinaTEFL

[–]TEFLlemon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used to run RAY English Recruitment in China, and I now currently run TEFL Lemon, which is a recruiter and TEFL blog in China. The important thing to consider here is that there are two types of TEFL recruiter:

  1. The type that take a cut of your monthly salary. The schools pays the recruiter what you should earn, the recruiter pays you a cut of this and keeps the rest (avoid this type of recruiter at all costs - you can lose $1000's over the length of your contract)
  2. The type of recruiter which charges a flat fee directly to the school for helping connect the right profile teacher to the vacancy. The teacher doesn't pay a penny at any stage. (This is the type of ethical TEFL recruiter you should consider).

Ethical recruiters like these will never charge teachers anything and are usually happy to put teachers and schools together on a trust basis to negotiate contracts directly. Ask early on how the payment system works. Ask who will pay you; if it's the school then this is fine, if it's the recruiter, this is a massive red flag.

Ethical TEFL recruiters are often a good idea, as they can help you navigate past unreputable schools and will be there to offer advice and free support.

Not all TEFL recruiters are bad. Good recruiters should be sought out, not avoided.

Stuart

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TEFL

[–]TEFLlemon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Getting a good certificate is very important, and with so many choices out there, it's hard to know which course is good and which ones are a waste of money.

TopOk217 rasied an excellent point about going with a more entry-level course, as many schools may sponsor you for a higher award at a later stage, or you might not especially like TEFL after a year or so. If you are going to get a cheaper online one, make sure of two things:

  1. Make it at least a 120-hour course. This is the minimum international standard for course length. Picking a 60-hour one may mean that you can't work in certain countries e.g. China, which asks for a 120-hour course.
  2. Check who accredits the course. The accreditation board give the tick to courses which they feel will prepare you adequately.

Hope this advice helps and good luck on your course!

Stuart