Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Higher education

Talk to other parents whose children are preparing for university on our Higher Education forum.

Is a TEFL course worth it?

8 replies

QuintessentialShadow · 13/11/2011 23:39

What can I do with it?

Or Tesol?

I have a BA Ancient World Degree, and an MA Classics. I have been working in accounting and finance the last 10 years. I need to move on to something else.

In the last year I have been teaching Norwegian to speakers of other languages, in English. I did this for my local chamber of commerce in Norway. They were short and intensive fast track courses. I devised much of the curriculum my self, planned the lessons, wrote the course compendiums, and made the exercises, and planned conversation topics, etc.

I am thinking of setting myself up as a Norwegian tutor, or see if I can find work at a college, or for some organization teaching Norwegian in a business environment.

Will a TEFL be any helpful at all? (Aside from the fact that the language is English)

OP posts:
Firefly2 · 14/11/2011 13:19

I went on a 2 day TEFL course and believe me it was next to useless!! Good fun I suppose and a CV booster but that's about it!! I think there are longer courses available and I would recommend looking into these because the 2 day courses aren't worth alot!! Good luck x

QuintessentialShadow · 14/11/2011 14:28

Thanks for replying, the one I am thinking about is 120 hours and have accreditations and university unit recognition.

OP posts:
Acinonyx · 14/11/2011 19:29

I did a TEFL RSA Prep Cert over 20 years ago and I did use it quite a bit - I taught English overseas and in the UK (when at a loose end). You get better TEFL jobs with a Cert - better yet with a diploma. Don't do anything shorter.

Are you thinking that you can apply the same techniques to teaching Norwegian? That's probably partly true - but there is probably a Norwegian equivalent in Norway and maybe there is even something at a distance? I have occasionally used my TEFL Cert as a an all-purpose teaching qualification - I even used it to teach science at a private school in Turkey - they just needed something to show I had any sort of teaching qualification - so in that sense - it might be useful.

3littlefrogs · 14/11/2011 19:33

My ds did a short course before his gap year, and had a great time teaching in a primary school in the far east. It was worthwhile for him, but I suppose it depends what you want to do.

QuintessentialShadow · 14/11/2011 19:47

I am hoping to apply the same techniques, but I also think that it might be easier to explain Norwegian grammar with a proper English framework, seeing as I am comparing it to English most of the time, in that I am explaining in English.

But I am also hoping that it will help in terms of having a teaching qualification. Better than nothing!

There is no equivalent that I know of in Norway, bar a one year full time course in Norwegian phonetics, syntax and linguistics course, coupled with a 2 year full time teaching qualification.

OP posts:
sandripples · 14/11/2011 21:18

I also did the Prep Cert in TEFL about 22 years ago! I found it gave a good frameowrk for teaching concepts (and the approach would work for any target language) and some good basic language techniques (again applicable more widely). So I think it might be useful for you, yes. NOt really from a grammar angle but from the techniques.

QuintessentialShadow · 16/11/2011 13:38

Ok, I have just applied to do a 4 week full time TESOL with this provider They seem serious enough, and are around the corner from my old Uni....

OP posts:
Acinonyx · 16/11/2011 16:48

The Trinity Cert TESOL should be fine - most places (most importantly, including the British Council) will take it as equivalent to the Prep Cert (CELTA). Enjoy {smile]

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread