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Teaching expats a new life in Belgium

DrWho1234

IT聮S already on the tip of your mother tongue and within a month it could become a money making winner in your expat life.

Sharon Miles from Brussels is one of an increasing number of British expats who聮ve trained to Teach English as a Foreign Language (TEFL), and in doing so changing her life completely.

With the current worldwide economic crunch making job hunting even harder 聳 especially for expats 聳 native English speakers are discovering that a teaching qualification gives them extra leverage in their career aspirations.

And the TEFL training industry says it聮s seen an increase in applications from would-be teachers as a result.

Sharon studied for the Cambridge Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults (CELTA) at the International Teaching & Training Centre (ITTC) on the south coast of England.

Sharon, who moved to Belgium from Reading in January, is now setting her sights on Brussels聮 language schools after researching the job market.

聯My first couple of months in Belgium, I felt really lost,聰 she said. 聯It was such a big change.

聯But I聮m not one of those people happy watching Trisha on TV all day. It聮s all about starting again, getting a job and independence, and meeting new people and friends.聰

The 45-year-old former HR professional left the UK to be with fianc茅e Pete, who works for SONY in Belgium.

聯We聮ve been together for about six years and had a commuter relationship. But it was very hard and the time had come for me to make the leap.

聯It gives me the opportunity to do something new and try a different career. CELTA will give me something concrete to give employers over here.聰

CELTA is an internationally recognised teaching qualification that builds on your native language abilities and shows you how to help learners with their English.

聯We聮re finding that expats find it really convenient to fly back to the UK for a month and combine their training with seeing family and friends at weekends,聰 said Richard Davies, head of training at ITTC.

聯And there聮s still nothing quite like coming 聭home聮 to do their training in a familiar culture. It boosts their confidence and they learn far more as a result.聰

He says he聮s seen an increase in applications from expats considering teaching as the way forward in their adopted countries.

聯We聮ve had people from here going to Belgium, France, Spain and Portugal but also much further afield.

TEFL is also a great way of integrating into a new community if you don聮t have the benefit of children, says Richard.

聯CELTA is designed for people with little or no experience of teaching English,聰 said Nick Charge, examinations manager University of Cambridge ESOL.

聯Students are all ages, from recent graduates to older people who are looking for a career change and even people who have recently retired.聰

See also

Living in Brussels: the expat guideLooking for a Belgian notary for a 1031 Exchange (English-speaking)Unlimited Single Permit 2025Permanent residency- Sint josse brusselsQuestion re 5-year residency and workF card processing timeSwitch to dependent status
greeceishome

鈥淐ELTA is designed for people with little or no experience of teaching English,鈥 said Nick Charge, examinations manager University of Cambridge ESOL.

I have to utterly disagree with this statement. Anyone who takes a CELTA course is in for a shock: it is very intensive and advanced. To get the most from it you need a few years experience under your belt.

My advice is get a basic TEFL certificate (even online if you don't have the budget for a good in-house one) and then take CELTA after a few years.