|
Accepting a
Job in Korea
This is advice
for E2 and E1 Visa holders. Most of the rules/advise
listed here does not apply to F1-2, F4, F5, E5, E7 or
other visa holders. For further information about your
visa limitations, always inquire at your local Immigration
Office before starting a new job.
1. It is
illegal to work without a proper visa.
You must have
the visa sticker in your passport before you can start
work— without exception. If your employer asks you to work
before you have your visa sticker, refuse. Insist on
getting your visa before you teach your first class or you
are working illegally.
2. Your visa
is associated with ONE location.
If your
employer asks you to work at more than one physical
school, you need to get Immigration permission and apply
for a secondary workplace permit. EPIK and GEPIK are
exceptions. EPIK employees can legally work in multiple
locations without Immigration permission.
3. Working
¡°Privates¡± or ¡°Part-Time Jobs¡± without Immigration
permission is illegal.
Working in a
second registered business place is possible (a secondary
workplace) if you have permission from Immigration.
However, working ¡°privates¡±, or tutoring at a
non-business, is illegal.
4. You need
Immigration permission to work at a camp outside of your
primary workplace. It will either be registered as a
secondary workplace (if you currently hold an E1-2) or you
may be eligible for a Temporary Employment visa. Inquire
at your local immigration office before teaching at a camp
to ensure your legality.
Knowing your rights and finding a good school
One of
the most valuable sites for teachers looking to understand
their rights is
www.efl-law.org There are a
number of things you should look for before signing a
contract. EFL-Law.org has a very comprehensive guide to
contract information at
www.efl-law.org/contracts.html
There is also a lot more valuable information on that site
for teachers.
The
Hagwon Checklist
www.hagwonchecklist.com
A free site
that gives teachers a chance to review a school as well as
find multiple perspectives from a variety of teachers
about a school. Teachers submitting their schools rate
them as ¡°great, good, poor or unacceptable¡±.
The
Mother of Greylists
http://www.geocities.com/koreagraylist
This site
provides alphabetical listings of schools in Korea that
have received complaints and the complaints in question.
The
Korean Hagwon Blacklist
http://www.geocities.com/hagwonblacklist/
The goal of
this site is to: ¡° make it extremely difficult for schools
who have previously mistreated teachers to find new
recruits. We aim to do this by letting other teachers, as
well as recruiters, and the schools themselves know who is
blacklisted and why.¡±
The
Korean Schools White List
www.geocities.com/teflgroup/koreawhitelist.html
The mission
statement of this site is to provide information about
decent, "white listed" schools so all teachers (new and
seasoned) will know about the "good schools" that treat
people fairly.
English
School Watch
http://www.englishschoolwatch.org/index.php
This site
provides a forum on which one can ¡°blacklist¡± a school as
well as some helpful information about working overseas.
ESL
Teachers Board
http://www.eslteachersboard.com
Most schools
on their ¡°School Review¡± board are Chinese, but there are
a few Korean schools on the list.
Leon's
Greylist
http://efl.htmlplanet.com/greylist.htm
This page is
for those looking to become expatriate English teachers in
Korea, and/or for those expats already in-country
experiencing labor-related problems. It primarily
functions as a watch list of institutions to watch out
for. Secondarily, this page contains copious amounts of
advice on how to deal with many possible problems in the
Republic of Korea.
Blacklisted
http://blacklists2003.proboards13.com/
Information Sites about Teaching Conditions in Korea
http://www.englishteachingkorea.com/
¡¡
|