Teaching abroad can be a great experience for you if you're the one teaching, but it can be a bit less fantastic if you are a non-teaching spouse or partner unable to find a job in your new location.
Sometimes it is possible for an international school to employ a partner or spouse with no teaching qualifications when the host country's employment laws allow this. However, some countries require teachers to have a teaching qualification as well as a degree, and other countries require all foreign employees at an international school be teachers. The rules change from country to country.
It is also possible for non-teaching partners and spouses to secure employment outside the international school. If you and your partner/spouse are considering this option, it is important to confirm how the working visa situation works in your new host country... before you enter that country! If you end up on a non-working dependent visa it can be very difficult to convert it to a working visa later.
Teaching Abroad with a non-Teaching Partner/Spouse
Monday, August 25, 2008
Non-Teaching Partner/Spouse
Posted by Kelly Blackwell at 5:08 PM
Labels: International school, teachers, teaching abroad, Teaching Abroad with a non-Teaching Partner/Spouse
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