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  1. #1

    Default Filipino Teachers for Abroad


    Teachers seem to be the next shortage occupation, after nurses. The question is, how do teachers apply for teaching jobs in the US particularly, given the menagerie of State requirements? In addition, the POEA had been exercising its clout such as the issuance of two memorandum concerning E-World Staffing - source link, below:

    http://www.poea.gov.ph/news/2006/PR-...IR_Gibbs_2.pdf

    and this news from the Daily Inquirer:

    Singer Cynthia Patag files case vs illegal recruiters

    By Ma. Diosa Labiste
    Visayas Bureau

    Posted date: June 20, 2007

    ILOILO CITY—Singer-comedienne Cynthia Patag has filed a swindling case against officials of a training agency for luring jobseekers to nonexistent teaching jobs in the United States.
    Patag, with the help of the regional office of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI), filed the case against Norman Gibbs, owner and founder of E-World Resource Centers, and his associates, Montano Ruiz Go, Desiree Gibbs, Cheryl Pagaran and Venancio Diaz.

    With her hopes to become a teacher in the US dashed, and P63,000 poorer, Patag said she wants justice for herself and many others, who shelled out huge amounts and were perhaps deep in debt, just to prepare themselves for teaching positions in the States that never came.

    In January 2006, Patag attended an E-World Resource Centers orientation where Norman Gibbs introduced his company as one that trains all its enrollees, who possess a bachelor’s degree, to become professional educators in the States via the “Passport to Training” program.

    Gibbs promised that his two other companies, E-Worldstaffing.com and E-World Staffing, would be able to send the participants to the States as teachers after six months to 12 months of training.

    However, he said the teachers have to pass tests administered by the American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence (ABCTE), certifying them as “highly qualified teachers.”

    In an interview last February at the West Visayas State University where E-World had an orientation, Gibbs said that he never promised Patag that she could land a job as a teacher in the States.

    But Patag said the Bible-quoting Gibbs has repeatedly told participants that the United States needed more than a million teachers due to the “No Child Left Behind Act,” a federal law signed by President George W. Bush in 2001.

    Under the law, states and districts can recruit teachers using two routes—Praxis (Professional Assessments for Beginning Teachers), which is widely used in the States and the American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence (ABCTE), a new teacher certification for all bachelor degree holders.

    The prospect of working as professionals in the States has attracted not only Patag, who has a Bachelor of Arts in Literature from De La Salle University, but also many others from all over Western Visayas—teachers, government employees, professionals and jobless college graduates, among others.

    Patag paid through the Iloilo office of E-World a total of P63,000 to undergo a “career development and professional training,” register with ABCTE, and for a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) application. The last two payments were in US dollars.

    Patag said that many of the applicants are poor and could hardly afford E-World’s preparation program, which consists of 72 hours of computer laboratory, the purchase of a CD-ROM, seminars, and the purchase of a thick photocopied workbook.

    The ABCTE gives out two online tests, Professional Teaching Knowledge and Subject Area Expertise. Both tests consist of multiple choice and essay. Patag said she knew no one from among E-World enrollees that passed the exams.

    Patag said she did not take the ABCTE exams. She said: “Me, a US high school teacher? What was I thinking?”


  2. #2

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    grabeha! mora pud diay ug DepEd! kusog kaayo mupaak sa mga teachers.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    sayon ra kaayo pagsulod sa US as teachers bai. basta Education graduate ka, 3 years relevant experience, passed the LET and not older than 60 years old, fights na!

  4. #4

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    Hala kayod ta mag-ayo bai...

  5. #5

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    the teaching profession is not for me.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    Quote Originally Posted by junmar4
    sayon ra kaayo pagsulod sa US as teachers bai. basta Education graduate ka, 3 years relevant experience, passed the LET and not older than 60 years old, fights na!
    Exactly! PRAXIS is kinda difficult though. CBEST for California and other accredited states is easier.

    The problem with being a teacher AFAIK is there is no board or state exams outside the U.S. or here in Asia. There are a lot of schools who are into direct hiring though or they have designated agencies to do hiring for them. L.A. public schools are aggressively hiring right now. SPED is more in demand compared to the usual subjects.

    In Illinois, particularly Chicago, it is very difficult for a foreign teacher to be a high public school teacher here because of the certification exams, experience, etc. compared to other states.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    Quote Originally Posted by LytSlpr
    Exactly! PRAXIS is kinda difficult though. CBEST for California and other accredited states is easier.

    The problem with being a teacher AFAIK is there is no board or state exams outside the U.S. or here in Asia. There are a lot of schools who are into direct hiring though or they have designated agencies to do hiring for them. L.A. public schools are aggressively hiring right now. SPED is more in demand compared to the usual subjects.

    In Illinois, particularly Chicago, it is very difficult for a foreign teacher to be a high public school teacher here because of the certification exams, experience, etc. compared to other states.
    bitaw...

    but most education certification department gives 1-3 years temporary teaching certificate for foreign and new teachers. so you have time to prepare. para nako mas better if direct rather than going through money-sucking agencies nga dili ra ba makatabang if magkaproblema.

  8. #8

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad



    basin ang mga korso na pud ani education napud...

  9. #9

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    Quote Originally Posted by dark_phoenix

    basin ang mga korso na pud ani education napud...
    dugay ra... state colleges gani are offering 6 months education curriculum for SpEd sa kadto mga naay bachelor's degree.

  10. #10

    Default Re: Filipino Teachers for Abroad

    i just read in yahoo news that california are firing teachers because of budget cuts. but other states are hiring them.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080418/...ing_teachers_1

    So if you are a teacher... start applying to other states!

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