Travel Blogs by Travellerspoint

Feb 07

Living in Korea

is really cool :)

We love our apartment, we love our jobs, and we love Korea! Our life is excellent at the moment. We are LOVING it! It's pretty crazy too though...

The Korean education system is unbelievable, and probably not very healthy, and something we will certainly be researching. Education - and everything! - is very competitive, and so the poor kids are always studying. Not just studying, but seriously studying, like in-class type studying. They go to school, public school, in the daytime (like kids anywhere do), then in the evening they either go to language schools, or to another private academy to do extra tutorials on maths, science, social studies, or they go to both! Some of them are at school 7 days per week! We found out from some of our older students (16 year olds) that they start their school day (at their public highschool) at 8am, have 2 classes with a 10min break in between, then have lunch at 12noon, then back to class at 1pm, have 3 classes with 10min breaks in between, have dinner from 7-8, then another class from 8-10. THEN the poor buggers get on a bus and head the the academy (next door to us) and have a class from 10:30-1am, then get a bus home, sleep and get up again for school a few hours later. They get 3-6hrs sleep per night, and they're still friendly and beautiful, but they tell me they're tired when I ask (and only when I ask). They have classes with us on Saturdays from 2-4pm, and at the academy next door to us from 5-8pm, and on Sunday they only have the 2-4 class with us. We got to meet these kids, as this week and last week has been spring vacation from highschool... so they had the time to come to more English classes than just the weekend!

Unlike the poor Korean students, we have a cruisy life and an easy job. We have all morning to our selves - from when we get up, until 2pm when we leave to walk to work - to chill out, go shopping, sleep in, do Tae Kwon Do (well, that's certainly the plan for the near-future, anyway!), cook, read, watch movies... We walk to work, so we get exercise - at least 1x 50min of walking per day, and half the time we walk home as well. Our work day is 7 or 8 (the eighth is overtime!) 35-min classes per day, and the kids are mostly excellent, even the brats from hell are generally excellent and really funny. They all have English names too - some with names like Jean, Peter, David, Max, Christie, etc; some with misspelt names like Charls, Poul, and Adme (Adam); and then we have the winner names like Joji Bushi, and BBQ! Awesome.

Our apartment is beautiful and rent free! The general cost of living is relatively low, but it varies, ie a cab ride from our house to work costs about $3, a very small block of cheese costs $8, a 700ml bottle of vodka from the supermarket costs $4, and a watermelon costs $25!

There are loads and loads of tall apartment buildings, all identical and numbered. There are crops grown by the highways, next to canals, next to the airport, within a gap in the industrial area, by the trainlines... No land really goes to waste.

Getting around and communicating is easy enough. Lots of people speak English, and are keeen to practice their speaking skills, and people who say they don't speak any English, often have enough English to be able to say (in English!) that they don't speak it. Our workmates are friendly, and we have gone out for meals and drinks and movies with them! The Korean teachers' english skills vary, but there's certainly enough for us to feel connected. We have another native English speaker that we work with too, and there is (seemingly - we haven't really gone out much yet) quite a foreigner population in Ulsan.

Where we live (and apparently Korea in general!) is very safe. People have their stores with TVs on display out the front of the stores, andd then at closing time they tie the TVs to the table, maybe cover them with a blanket, and go home. No one steals the TVs. And lots of the stores, and all the bigger ones, are open 24 hours, so there are always lots of people about. Our boss assures us that it is safe for us to walk around Ulsan late at night, alone. We walk home from work, often leaving town at around 10pm and getting home around 11, through the city, then industrial areas, then farming fields... the kind of dark and secluded route that we would never dream of taking in Sydney!

ALSO there's a job going where we work if anyone is interested..!!? Free flights, free and really nice accommodation, great pay, cruisy and fun job, friendly workmates - come on! Come over!! Email us, or leave a comment on this page , if you're interested or want to know more. All you need is to be a native english speaker and have a bachelors degree (in anything)!

See some photos of our Korean life at: http://s136.photobucket.com/albums/q164/erinfearn/Korea/Living%20in%20Korea/?start=all

Posted by erinjustin 01.03.2007 00:34 Archived in South Korea Comments (0)

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Ulsan, South Korea

Who would have imagined?


View UK 2007 on erinjustin's travel map.

So a week after our first phonecalls looking into it, we commenced our new positions, teaching english to elementary and middle school kids (6-14 year olds) in the evenings, in Ulsan, South Korea!

Who would have thought?

Our flight here was paid for, our 2 bedroom apartment is beautiful and fully furnished, and our contracts end on the 16th of August, so that we can get to Canada in time for Rochelle and Aeron's wedding!

Love it.

See our photos at: http://s136.photobucket.com/albums/q164/erinfearn/Korea/Korean%20Move/?start=all

Posted by erinjustin 19.02.2007 23:37 Archived in South Korea Comments (0)

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IT'S SNOWING

And things are looking brighter


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Yesterday we sent 43 emails and posted our CVs and photos on 4 websites to get work teaching English, just to see if we can get EXACTLY what we're after - a short contract, to finish before 16th August so that we can go to Canada for Rochelle and Aeron's wedding, and then get back to the UK with enough time for Erin to get in a whole year of work before her visa expires.

Anyway, last night we received phone calls from Korea and Taiwan (in the middle of the night, poor Rhys and Nina!) and this morning we were woken up with a phone call from Korea... followed by another 2! Each of them wanting to offer us a short contract, so now we just have to look at which looks the best!

But that's not all we saw when we woke up - outside was the heaviest snow that Kent has seen in years and years!! So after spending a couple of hours replying to emails and sorting through offers as more came through, we went out into the snow to play!

See our photos at: http://s136.photobucket.com/albums/q164/erinfearn/England/Snow/?start=all

Posted by erinjustin 07.02.2007 20:43 Archived in United Kingdom Comments (0)

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Cold and Unemployed in England

We're not unemployed, we're travelling. And we can definitely still call it that, because we don't have a home either.


View UK 2007 on erinjustin's travel map.

We are still in Kent with Rhys and Nina, whose kindness and generosity has been outstanding, given that our couple of weeks has now actually, today, been a month.

You can see Kent photos at: http://s136.photobucket.com/albums/q164/erinfearn/England/Kent/?start=all

Finding work is a bit of a nightmare. The pay for jobs we want is so poor without GSCC registration...

And we can get that, but to get it, we are required to complete:
a) an application form, which is actually the size of a slim book, and includes details of ALL employers, along with full contact details, that we have had since age of 16, and we must include explanatory details for any periods not accounted for (eg, travel), and provide documentary evidence (such as stamps in passport).
b) a "personal statement", that we have to write, to demonstrate in explicit detail how we have met each of the practice requirments of each of the core competences of a diploma of social work, through our experiences of employment over the past 10 years, and through our multiple related degrees...!
c) "documentary evidence" to support any claim that we have made in our personal statement. This includes degree certificates (transcripts are not enough), and birth certificates (passports are not enough!!!), as well of copies of job descriptions, references from employers, policy documents we've written, meeting minutes, etc etc etc...basically a bunch of documents that take a hell of a long time to get hold of.

And then, once we have these documents, they need to be verified - and since we are not currently working in social care, they have to be verified by 2 people, one being our previous employer.

So to give you an example, for Erin's Bachelor degree certificate to be verified, process = Print out request for reissue and statutory declaration forms, to state that the testamur has been irreplaceably lost. Find a JP and get them to sign it, then post the request. Sent 8 Jan. In a week or so, they get the request and they process it. But being a testamur, a legal document, it must be put before the senate to be stamped with approval. But senate does not meet until 5 Feb. 6 Feb they'll send the degree, arriving hopefully around 10-11 Feb... Then (in theory;) it has to be copied and sent back to previous employer, along with all the other documents that need to be verified), to be verified, and then given to another person whom "has been known to the applicant for a period of no less than 5 years" to be verified again, and then sent back to the UK. Then the verified documents can be added to the application and sent off with £155 PER APPLICATION (which is a lot of money, when paying for 2 unemployed people, with Australian dollars!).

As if this wouldn't be bad enough, we've then got to wait for 2-3 months for the application to be PROCESSED, before we know whether or not our pplications have been successful. Damn!

So we are thinking now about other options so as to get out of England while our applications process, so as to stop watching our hard earned dollars disappear in groceries and train tickets costing pounds.

Ideas have been to travel through India for a couple of months, maybe China, maybe Eastern Europe; do some voluntary work in India or Africa or somewhere else; teach English in Japan or Korea or China or somewhere else; do some other kind of work, anywhere else...!

Any ideas..?

Posted by erinjustin 04.02.2007 19:33 Archived in United Kingdom Comments (0)

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