Sora: Becoming an English teacher in Japan is a trap for foreigners who want to live in Japan Also Sora: Was an English teacher in Japan Sora is foreigner confirmed
@TheGooberGrape9 ай бұрын
LMAO
@beck169 ай бұрын
If you have a CS degree why the hell would you not use it after all that suffering bruh
@oleksandrbyelyenko4359 ай бұрын
I am dead 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@katep.14659 ай бұрын
He's removing competition ;)
@Aom1618 ай бұрын
He’s from Chiba Japan tho😂
@AsuraSK9 ай бұрын
As the 1% that actually studies to become a teacher in their country and dream of becoming one in Japan this is concerning.
@garfunkel69759 ай бұрын
Don't fret over it - if you have actual qualifications for teaching and a degree in education, you can get a high-quality job with one of the premium companies. There, you will have decent pay and benefits, plus the hours aren't crazy. For most foreigners, who do not have those qualifications nor degrees, the only teaching job they can get is at one of the many crappy companies who only offer low-quality jobs with poor pay, no benefits and often mandatory unpaid overtime. These companies only survive because there is a steady supply of inexperienced and náive foreigners to exploit.
@PyraJya-Luquay9 ай бұрын
I think this mostly applies to anyone trying to get a job teaching English in Japan just because they think it's an "easy job" that any English speaker can do. If you're actually working towards a degree with the full intent of teaching English from the beginning, that's completely different. You are literally preparing to do it as a career, not just because you think it's an "easy job." Teaching jobs are never as easy as most people think. They all take years of studying just to prepare for.
@jenleigh42129 ай бұрын
Working at an international school is probably your best bet unless you want to work at a university. There are other options too, but that’s what I recommend.
@AsuraSK9 ай бұрын
@@garfunkel6975 I see, that makes sense. I wouldn't want to teach in Tokyo either, I'd rather go to Osaka or Kyoto if I had the choice.
@alaina.vittoria14849 ай бұрын
If that's your passion don't care what others say about it. As Sora, or "Satoshi", and many others have said, many foreigners come get into English teaching jobs because they think it's a free pass to live in Japan, but honestly these people are probably only love Japan superficially and have no intention of actually contributing to society. I personally love teaching English, I even do it in my home country to Japanese expats here. As much as I would love to work and live in Japan, where I don't have to fly so far just to see my friends, I don't think the best way for me to contribute is by being a teacher because it's not my career. However I am more than happy to volunteer if ever I have the time and opportunity.
@linkletter24719 ай бұрын
On top of becoming a professional Sora Stream Sniper, I'd like to move to Japan and become a cybersecurity expert.
@Cr4z3d9 ай бұрын
Nice!
@leilanilamour51739 ай бұрын
I truly hope this works out for you! 🌸
@alaina.vittoria14849 ай бұрын
Could imagine you having a whole setup in a Japanese van driving around breaking into networks just to hunt down Sora's location to Stream Snipe... 😂
@aphus85049 ай бұрын
good because japan’s cybersecurity is quite frankly ass
@z1lla49 ай бұрын
thanks for crushing my dreams of becoming a professional anime watcher in japan 😔
@Aom1618 ай бұрын
My brother use to have that job. It's real and he worked for Crunchyroll, it was called reviewer. But, they stopped hiring people to review anime DVDs and he lost his job.
@gonewriting9 ай бұрын
I moved to Taiwan as an English teacher, but I'm only moving back to the United States because I miss my family and my Chinese is terrible. Also, getting a job without a year of experience was impossible where I lived in the states, and Taiwan allowed me to do that. I've met some English teachers in Taiwan who think it's terrible here, when really it's an amazing place to live. If you hate your job you'll hate your life.
@choufreakyc9 ай бұрын
I moved to Taiwan to study Mandarin first and then became an English teacher for about 9 months and hated it so much, but knowing their language made it so much easier to teach. I loved Taiwan and stayed for almost six years and found a job at an English radio station in New Taipei City. Many of my expat friends that are still there love Taiwan, but many have now left teaching for better opportunities. Taiwan really is a wonderful place to live, but I agree, if you hate your job then you'll likely hate your time in ANY foreign country. Also, the novelty tends to wear off after a year for most people no matter where you move to.
@greenmoss90799 ай бұрын
Wow you know what ? For some reason I have seen many people move and stay in Japan as far back as the 90's. Yeah they taught English got past it and made Japan their home! Now they have become by ( by no fault of their own and with hard work ) Supper Cool and very kind You tuber influences 😂❤ You can find this Only In Japan
@Genzaijh9 ай бұрын
You are very right! If you hate your job you hate your life. that's why I quit my career in the US and moved to Taiwan. I take half the pay I made in the states, I make less than the average foreign teacher. ( I'm not a teacher I just work for a normal local company. ) But I'm a lot happier, I have more free time to do the things I like. I take better care of my health and stay fit. I couldn't be happier. Ok, improve air quality, stop running red lights would make me happier, but I'll take what I can get and I can always ask people to make better life choices.
this is true, doing something that's not your passion/something you're not used to do will become a nightmare. my friend had to go to mental health hospital because of that
@miyoshiandre9 ай бұрын
Well then there's me who had a dream job/career and it became a nightmare nonetheless. More than 3 years going to therapy because of work lol.
@arjix87389 ай бұрын
@@miyoshiandredo share your experiences
@sigma_delta9 ай бұрын
is your friend work at mental hospital too?
@SystematicChaos7139 ай бұрын
Growing up as a Canadian in Japan I had some experience tutoring English in high school, so I thought I could come back as an English teacher as an adult. But in college in Canada I tried to get a job at an English school, and they gave me a chance based on my experience alone, but the hurdle for actual English teaching in Canada was so much higher that they let me go after one day and told me I should get trained and certified if I really wanted to be an English teacher. That experience taught me not to take English teaching so lightly, and I knew it wasn't for me. But I still wanted to go back to Japan. So I found something I enjoy doing which I could do in Japan, which was translating. I've been working in Tokyo as a translator for seven years now, and I've never looked back.
@SystematicChaos7139 ай бұрын
@coffeevibes6160 In my case, I started by freelancing while I was in Canada. It was something I could do to the side of my studies and other job after I graduated. Once I'd built up that experience, I reached out to one of my clients who was a Japanese company and told them I was looking for a full-time job in Japan. They were already impressed with my work, so they hired me as a translation project manager. The important thing is that this got me a 技人国 visa, which is one of the more powerful work visas, and it allowed me to keep freelancing on the side, and now my freelance work is stable enough I'm considering transitioning into freelancing full-time.
@pluviophile19889 ай бұрын
Yeah but way fewer people have a command in both English and Japanese to be able to be a straight up translator
@ae56648 ай бұрын
Awesome and congratulations!
@Guardian0169 ай бұрын
Paying $100+/m to get lessons from those unpassionate teachers is also a nightmare for students.
@Those2menoverthere9 ай бұрын
It's a part of the reason why English literacy rates are so low in Japan. It also comes down to the fact that they teach it as a bare minimum requirement. So you just have to understand the pure basics to get through school and pass some certain tests. As a result most students will never have any passion for it, and no I am not saying every student NEEDS that passion, just that it's far less likely because of how they try to implement it into their curriculum. I mean it's the same thing for pretty much all of America, usually we're required to choose a language of some sort to study (commonly French, German, or Spanish) and you have to take the classes for a few years between middle school and high school. Sure we learn some things from those classes, but it comes down to the individual to want to keep running with it to actually become fluent. We have no actual NEED to become fluent in the language we studied in school.
@snowangelnc9 ай бұрын
Sadly, that's true. I have a teaching degree and ESL certification, and I love being a teacher. In my 20's I lived in India working at an NGO. English lessons were a part of that. I had one co-teacher that was a Canadian that had no background in education whatsoever. She was very open about her motives for being there; my first month working she told me that the reason she had resented my presence when I arrived because she didn't want to have another westerner around on what was "her big life adventure living in Asia." So yeah, nothing wrong with wanting to have an adventure overseas, but to her the part about working to educate students was just a side aspect that she felt like she had to accept as part of the deal as a relatively easy way to pay for it all. It was sad watching her teach her part of the class. I never said anything in front of the students because she was still a teacher at the NGO and I didn't want to undermine her authority; but there were so many times her students struggled or got confused by her explanations because she had no idea what she was doing. They figured that the problem was with themselves though and not her, since she was the native speaker. The truth is, taking the fact that a person is a native speaker and thinking that qualifies them to teach the language is like thinking that knowing how to drive a car makes a person a qualified mechanic.
@scirocco80179 ай бұрын
agree with all of you. I didn't live in Japan but SEA and have many foreign english teacher(British, Australia, Philippines, etc.). when I got teachers who care and passion about teaching everything was smooth. but then one day come this one specific american man who is like the type of loser who have problems living in his own country and only be here just to have fun in dark side of Bangkok/Pattaya it goes worse real quick. not only the class is confusing, he threw tantrum every time thing didn't get convenient for him, show signs of japanophobia and openly look down on asian. then keep bragging about how america is the best everything else are too ancient compare to it, "I should go to Europe in the first place instead", "your guy are stupid kid I use to be in navy I travel alot and know the world not just from a mare photograph(and ego enough to dare correct native that they get their understanding of their own culture wrong like he is the smartest guy in the world and own this place)", etc. dude for pete's sake just get the hell out of here and keep your tail between your legs back to the USA. like isn't it the common sense to learn to respect the local and adapt to culture of place you want to go? and then if you do that and get discrimination then it on them, but if you be disrespectful and didn't seem to learn shit what right do you have to cry for something you don't deserve to begin with and didn't even try to achieve it.
@uctynguzb9 ай бұрын
over $100 per meter?
@starpeep57699 ай бұрын
Exactly I hate weebs
@kaidorade13179 ай бұрын
Cheat code for living in Japan: have Sora on speed dial!
@BadChase9 ай бұрын
This is on point. Most people who hate living in Japan, did it as an English Teacher or at a job they do not like and attribute it to living here. But if one find a nice company and job living in Japan is really great.
@hanae_chann9 ай бұрын
This is basically an tutorial before you decided to live in Japan or not. Nice one Sora ⭐️
@Trainfan1055Janathan9 ай бұрын
I'm a bus driver in America. I always said that if I was going to live in Japan, I was going to do so being a bus driver or train driver. Though I'm not sure. They put so much emphasis on being on time there, it might be a bit too stressful. I looked at the controls of Japanese buses and it looks like the controls are in the same spot, but mirrored, so I shouldn't have any issues controlling one, but the being on time part is where we have an issue. Where I work, we put more emphasis on being safe than being on time and I'm one of the safest drivers there if ya catch my drift. Those customers will eat me alive! BTW, when you said 罠, that gave me a funny image of the owner of the school shouting 引っかかった!to everyone who signed the contract.😂
@GremoriaParadise9 ай бұрын
it's true, every time someone sigh a contact, they got them trapped for a year and a year worth a of time to find some else who will do 1 year also
@CrizzyEyes9 ай бұрын
It has some truth to it. The worst train accident in Japan occurred because the driver was extremely stressed out due to being behind schedule. It was so bad back then that they'd force you to do punishments for being behind schedule, basically menial tasks that nobody would want to do. Almost like boot camp.
@southcoastinventors65839 ай бұрын
I really think the problem here is unless you have the option of taking a one year working holiday visa, people will naturally gravitate to the easiest visa to qualify for that actually can pay a living wage to someone without any real plan. Problem with that is once they get to Japan they get lazy and get stuck in a routine, not mention they also have poor Japanese skills which you need unless you want to live in Gajin town forever.
@Cr4z3d9 ай бұрын
Ironic
@davidpaiva11049 ай бұрын
To be honest I would never even think in going to live in another country without at least a decent level of that country language.
@deadlymecury9 ай бұрын
@@davidpaiva1104 you can't have decent level of language without everyday practice for several years and that seems impossible outside of said county. I thought I had "a beginner level of Japanese". Already at customs I understood that never mind, I don't know Japanese at all. Textbooks work only when some random dude starts to talk to you with general questions like "何歳ですか?どこから来ました?” out of curiosity. They don't quite work when customs tries to ask you why you have so much cash and medicaments. Or when you receive an email where your bank says your card is blocked because of suspicious activity, please call the support. Preparations are definitely a good thing, but I think just to not be disappointed and crushed with reality - should be treated as preparations for further language learning, kind of "cheat start" when you already know stuff you will be taught so you need less mental energy to get through it.
@FlyffUniverse9 ай бұрын
@@davidpaiva1104as someone who lives in a foreign country as a teacher, I am the only person in my workplace with a decent grasp of the language (who isn't a local). I think my advice is that you don't need the local language, but you've got a great opportunity to learn it and maybe should if you eventually go.
@davidpaiva11049 ай бұрын
@@FlyffUniverse You don't need that level, sure. But you need at least the very basic to survive alone in the country.
@Crownmuri9 ай бұрын
I started living in Japan through Eikaiwa (English conversational school) as well, but it wasn't just for the sake of living (I did take classes in TEFL etc). But I feel we should point out the ease of getting a Certificate of Eligibility for the Engineer/International Relations/Humanies visa with this method compared to other job offers. As a translator the majority of jobs are either freelance, or in-house where HR only bothers hiring people that already have a work visa. That "Game Customer Support Staff" in the video has "working permit" as a requirement. I love Japan. Even after quitting Eikaiwa after a 2 years :) but it was a necessity for growth visa wise.
@BM-lw8bz8 ай бұрын
Thank you for pointing out the hypocrisy of this video. They are not trying to hire foreigners that are engineers. The language barrier, the visa process etc. will deter most Japanese companies from even trying to hire a foreigner. To be fair, most foreigners would probably not enjoy the long working hours and it’s more of a fantasy in their heads.
@Sa-ta-Andagi-9 ай бұрын
wake up babe new Sora The Troll video just dropped
@Maladomani9 ай бұрын
I am a high school teacher here in Canada and went to Japan to teach English in the Kyoto Board of Education. It was wonderful. I loved teaching the elementary school kids. It was not like working in McDonald’s and I still miss It. Being a good teacher is hard, and it sucks that people think anyone can teach.
@Goober-r8b9 ай бұрын
The fact that most of the youtubers saying "Japan's been a nightmare for them have been english teachers. I used to watch AbroadInJapan but idk if he had the same mindset as sora described here.
@alexl11789 ай бұрын
In a video, he said that he enjoyed teaching English and stayed for 3 years before moving onto a different job. He also learned and became fluent in Japanese so his motivations were in the right place. I wonder if not living in Tokyo influenced his experience. I'd imagine that as a win considering he is still there now thriving.
@djdrizzy91399 ай бұрын
Fortunately it is my dream career to teach English in Japan (as a direct hire), and I'm a certified teacher in my home country. Looking forward to teaching in Japan soon!
@lastnamefirstname86559 ай бұрын
thanks for the advice, sora!
@Sophie_chan009 ай бұрын
Living in a country we like and doing something we like as a job is much more worth than living in a country we like but forcing ourselves to do a work we don't really like ✌
@GremoriaParadise9 ай бұрын
and when work is most time spend , agreed
@magicalpj9 ай бұрын
As someone who taught English in Japan AND trained to be a teacher in my own country, I have to say . . . teaching English is Japan was really not great. But I also had the opportunity to teach my actual preferred subject area (social studies) in Tokyo, and that WAS great. So maybe it's just the way English teaching works there. Another thing to keep in mind though is the culture shock. It comes in stages. The first stage is actually very pleasant. Everything is new and great and you're thrilled to be there. It's the second stage where everything becomes frustrating and awful and you start missing home. It can take months or even years to hit that stage. But for anyone wanting to live in Japan or any other country, realizing that you hit that stage of culture shock is the first and most important step of working through it. And, for the love of God, try to do something else beside teaching English unless you specifically want to become an ESL teacher.
@Icarus9759 ай бұрын
What are good high paying or decent jobs in Japan if I can know or speak decent Japanese
@magicalpj9 ай бұрын
@@Icarus975 That very much depends on your degree. My non-Japanese, non-English teacher friends were mostly lawyers, but I also knew people who worked in logistics and as distributors. For people who do want to go the teacher route, I recommend going to Japan with a master's degree or higher and applying to universities.
@rafacs1.639 ай бұрын
John rejected his dream of being a policeman and in turn rejected the dream of being a computer teacher just to come to Japan to work as an English teacher. I definitely don't want to be like John.
@jarviscreations9 ай бұрын
Bro I really look forward to your videos lol
@Nezumi--9 ай бұрын
i admit, i didn't live in tokyo... and i did quit after a year but that was coz of visa and covid stuff lol ... i actually teach music back home and have a degree in english lit, so teaching in japan was just an obvious choice for me as i genuinely dunno what else i'd be doing other than songwriting or art. and i loved living in japan. i loved teaching there too because it wouldn't matter where i live i'd be doing that work anyway, i think... as for missing family, living in japan i did miss my family i think... but i have time blindness which does make it easier, two days ago or two yrs doesn't feel much different, as sad as that might sound. but i did meet other foreigners who were teaching there who simply should have never gone into teaching. and some foreigners who shouldn't have moved to japan. They complained about the very things i found helpful lol like they hated the silence on the trains and stuff... (meanwhile, i can't take public transport back home because people are too nosy/noisy/unpredictable and it gives me panic attacks... i felt calmer in the crowd during osaka's rush hour than back home on a semi-empty bus O.o ) i think it's important to assess the "why". why move to japan? for anime? for the culture? for the teaching job? for fun? and actually think about the answers and what those answers actually mean for the individual.
@iamtheoneandonly_9 ай бұрын
This channel is my favourite place to learn about RASENGAN.
@livyintheskywithdragons9 ай бұрын
Actually this is great advice for life anywhere, do what you love ❤
@lordsetsuna22879 ай бұрын
Wow what a timing. I just got back from holiday in Tokyo, and after taste it for the first time i come to had a feeling want to living in Tokyo. Thank you this video made me realize i should come to love what i had first before forget everything and move on Tokyo. Perhaps in the far future, or maybe for another timeline.
@aadesh_kale9 ай бұрын
What a useful information! Thank you Sora for providing us with valuable information in entertaining skits ❤
@josealves21289 ай бұрын
Living anywhere doing what you hate is bad. This video is awesome! Eye opening for a lot of people!
@hover-1eagle4089 ай бұрын
Great video sora, been liking the live streams to keep up the great work
@Section.97 ай бұрын
As a former english teacher who lived in Korea for 3 years - legitimately hated 20-something year olds who came to korea to "work" but really just used the job as a means of being in the country without actually doing the job. Ended up picking up the slack for so many women (unfortunately i met very few male teachers where i lived) that were only interested in Kpop concerts and shopping.
Yeah Sora you and that indonesian guy helped me dodge a bullet. So thank you and I will get a job in the film indsutry over in Japan. I will just need to talk to my Japanese teacher about it first since he knows more about the Jet program than I do.
@azubruh87879 ай бұрын
Finally a video
@ImRezaF9 ай бұрын
ooh yuki setsuna
@azubruh87879 ай бұрын
@@ImRezaF yeah
@tgrey56479 ай бұрын
""Professional Anime Watcher" 😭💀💀💀💀
@clinton41619 ай бұрын
This is good advice. Though I'm going to try it because I think I might actually like teaching English. I like learning languages and I already like explaining things about the English language to a Japanese friend of mine. So it might be a good fit. Won't know unless I try.
@NickAlex089 ай бұрын
Try it don't listen to him. People that want to live in Japan have to start from somewhere, there's nothing wrong being an English teacher for a few years. Just as long as you're teaching English, do it with sincerity and care for your students, even if you know it'll only be for a few years.
@georgehandle54339 ай бұрын
great video
@EggSandwichyoi9 ай бұрын
YESSSS NEW SORA POST
@penguinmaster79 ай бұрын
personally, i'd rather live in Shibukawa. i could also do yokohama if i really wanted to be "near" tokyo but not necessarily "in" tokyo
@PyraJya-Luquay9 ай бұрын
Ah, yes! The fallacy of getting an "easy job" that really isn't that easy to begin with because people think that "It's my native tongue so I can probably teach it." English teachers in the US, iirc, are required to have a bachelors degree (4 years of post-secondary education) minimum. That's also not taking into account the positions that require a masters or a doctorate/Ph.D. I remember that one of my professors in college cited her personal experience as an example during a lecture, wherein a lot of her time was dedicated to office work and conferences (this was back before the internet became heavily used for that sort of stuff). Just going off that, there's no way I would pursue such a career in my own country (US), let alone a foreign country (Japan). I'd rather air on the side of a stable job in Japan, not an easy one that actually isn't easy.
@nanaholic019 ай бұрын
Speaking from personal experience - becoming an English teacher is the easiest way to get a working visa to come to Japan since they hand them out like cookies - there's nothing wrong with using that as a starting point. Plus entry level jobs in Japan which lets you use English is going to pick from people that are already in Japan before they try sponsoring someone to come over to Japan because people already in Japan can start work quicker, and the company has to do WAY less work to get that person to settle into a new country - that basically means that unless you are an experienced professional with unique skills, getting a job in Japan before you come over is not that easy. The only issue is a lot of those English teachers never bothered to plan their second step after coming over as an English teacher - which is to skill up their Japanese and start looking for other jobs in their original fields of study, and then they became jaded and pissed at Japan. Fun fact - at my IT company every English speaker foreigner were one of the "engineering degree holder coming over to Japan as English teacher" in this video, including me. We all just had the foresight to make and execute our plan to get out of English teaching as soon as we could.
@Genzaijh9 ай бұрын
Find a way to get your foot in the door. Improve your Japanese and look for other opportunities. It's reasonable. I double people check where these people go after quitting their job. I think some stay just they change their type of work.
@matthewcrownn9 ай бұрын
Lol this is all so true. I had a lot of comments on my videos from people who seemingly hate everything about their life in Japan -- I bet most of them were English teachers too. Although I was also an English teacher -- RIP.
@neonkaiju9 ай бұрын
Sora, delivering the tough love.
@JerryO19959 ай бұрын
Yeah if I actually try to land a job in Japan at some point, it will most definitely be as a software engineer. I didn't go through so much work in my life to end up as an English teacher.
@martianunlimited9 ай бұрын
We have the same problem in New Zealand, where people would take any post graduate course in order to get a post-study work visa after getting their graduate degree. Regardless of whether or not the course matches their undergraduate qualification, matches their interest or has any job prospect. Needless to say many of them end up jobless after finishing and had to go back after their work visa is up because they had to work minimum wage jobs that wouldn't qualify them for a residence visa.
@adamNZ20246 ай бұрын
I live in New Zealand and find that upsetting. The education services should be more transparent and honest with qualifications matching the job market and salary expectations. I got my job contract withdrawn because they said I don't have a valid work visa. I've been a resident since 2005...
@lemondedeale81629 ай бұрын
I love this type of videos like the ones you were doing years back 😉
@fma649 ай бұрын
Honestly if I were born in an English speaking country, I would also have tried the English teaching route for a while. Even being an IT engineer here (Tokyo), teachers still seem to earn more and have less working hours
@officialcrit66859 ай бұрын
Currently I am struggling to decide whether or not I would like to work as a english teacher. I am on my last semester, writing my dissertation for my bachelor's degree in japanese studies. I'm going to Kyoto this fall as a exchange student for a year. I have a top 3 tier list of professions that I can see myself working as and one of them are some sort of a language teacher, but I haven't decided between my native language, english or japanese (I imagined having an foreign perspective of the language could instill a new perspective of learning the language). The only thing that stops me from doing it at my home country is that you need additional 5 years of college education added on top of the language education to become an official teacher and there aren't any professions inbetween. The reason Japan looks so tempting is, first of all I obviously like Japan enough to get a major in japanese studies but also the oppourtunites that are available. I was planning to get a part time as a english teacher or some sort of a job during my exchange studies, but I'm still a bit hestitant. For the moment I'm just in a headlock of some sort.. If anyone has any experience at all of seriously teaching english, what was your thought process?
@straightjacket3.5199 ай бұрын
I wanted to be so many different things growing up. My first job was a landscaper. Ten different jobs later and a few computer classes and now I am a landscaper except I only work ten hours a week for the same pay I made working 40 hours a week 20 years ago. My only regret is that I wasted so much time trying to reach for the stars when time was the thing I wanted most.
@SeeASquaRE9 ай бұрын
The punchline of john wanting to be a "professional anime watcher" was sublime.
@NEONDEMON-n2h9 ай бұрын
JAPAN is my dream I will do anything to live there I don't care what people say.
@mumfromouterspace9 ай бұрын
Yes. A job is a job. That means they can still find something fun to do.
@GremoriaParadise9 ай бұрын
you will hate japan and then you want to go to a fantasy world after dying in japan
@soniasquishy9 ай бұрын
I think I'd rather be the foreigner working customer service.
@AND-tu7ob9 ай бұрын
Indonesia mentioned let's go
@cahyowwsono9 ай бұрын
Let's go
@wongwaras3569 ай бұрын
"Ada Indonesia cuyyy!" wkwkwk
@Valerie939 ай бұрын
卵が好き
@coffee-is-power9 ай бұрын
Uabo
@gyoren_3219 ай бұрын
本当にありがとう こんな動画は重要と思うよ
@spinner78019 ай бұрын
What a great educational video! I’m going to work at my dream job in Japan. Making Eneloop batteries.
@-grey8 ай бұрын
I was an English teacher in my own country in Paris. I left and became a UX Designer remote to live abroad. 😂
Haha! That's close to my experience: interested in computers, decided to live in Japan after watching anime, got a math degree, then became an English teacher in Japan. However, I enjoyed teaching, and have no regrets for the 3 years I lived there. But it did get to the point where I had basically fulfilled my dream, and teaching kindergarten-level English everyday was no longer stimulating. So I moved back and now have an occupation related to computers. I had originally envisioned myself permanently living in Japan, which didn't work out I had expected. But the experience I had living there was amazing. It just became time to change my occupation to something else that I was interested in.
@xcicada9 ай бұрын
wym? I joined JET for the high paycheck and adorable loving children
@bowlingvanjapan40995 ай бұрын
This is why I drive go karts on the streets of Tokyo for a living.
@tmyoshimura6217 ай бұрын
This show is so great.
@itsaUSBline8 ай бұрын
The episodes of Trash Taste where they had Pete on as a guest are great for a bit of insight into teaching English in Japan. He's got some great stories about it. Also, Tokyo is incredibly expensive compared to more rural areas of Japan, so the low pay is going to bve an even bigger issue there. But as far as the "doing something you're not interested in fatigues you after a while" part, that's just what working is. I don't know a single person in my home country who's doing a job that they want to be doing and don't hate it. Finding work you find fulfilling is rare and not all that realistic.
@jamesgoatcher9 ай бұрын
I taught 15 years ago for 9 months and while the work sucked, the cramped living spaces and commuter culture drove me away prematurely. I thought the difference was something I'd learn to embrace but the opposite happened.
@alexsatri_8 ай бұрын
so inspiring!
@TheGoldenDunsparce9 ай бұрын
Being an English Teacher whose title is ALT and jumps from school to school every other day must be hell. I was lucky and, while studying Japanese like I came to Japan to do initially, I was able to casually search for a job and joined a "Man-to-Man" Conversational School where students were all adults and came to chat. It was actually fun and felt like younwere chatting with friends and talking about meaningful things rather than repeating after a recording or reading sentences from textbooks over and over. Don't become an English Teacher from a recruitment company that will screw you by squeezing every drop of life you have and trap you by paying for your visa and apartment; save up money and visit Japan on your own (you can stay up to 3 months) and search for a conversational school that'll give you a visa, and get your own apartment in a location you want to live.
@rookbranwen80479 ай бұрын
Got it, instead of becoming an English teacher and going to Japan, I should become a DJ and hang with Hardcore Tano*C and Psycho Filth Records.
@zanzoken9 ай бұрын
I am software developer for 10 years. But getting a job in japan is not as easy as you make it out to be. 1. A lot of companies (even on english Job pages) require you to be almost a native speaker (N1 or N2 japanese as a must have). 2. A lot of japanese companies do not want to help you get a visa. So they also require you to have a working visa already. 3. Most jobs in my field IT are very badly paid. Software developers are only getting 6-8 mil yen per year. Which is very low payment for software developer in europe. Of couse depending on the amount needed to live in tokyo this might be fine (although i expect tokyo to be quite expensive) 4.If you are not in IT it seems almost impossible to find an english speaking job only in Japan unless it is being an english teacher or working at a konbini. 5. You might still end up at a black company and will work way over 40 hours per week anyway. Do not get me wrong. I can talk basic japanese and if i would live in japan i would 100% try to become fluent as fast as possible. But trying to get N1 first and only then being able to get a job is a bit tough. I know I will get a lot of comments like "yeah duh what do you expect, if you want to live in japan you should be perfect in japanese". But I have to say this is too short sighted from Japan. They need professional workers since they lack that. And other countries show it works as well to start with English only. In germany you can pretty easy get a job with no german knowledge.
@ImRezaF9 ай бұрын
Comparing Japan with Germany is pretty wild for me considering german is much similar to english, linguistically. In one way or another, you have to be able to read kanji especially if you working in like japanese companies.
@vali695 күн бұрын
From what I remember N1 is like an intermediary level, comparable go B1 or B2, and there's no C1 and C2 equivalents.
@TofuBoy19 ай бұрын
Satoshi is like the narrator of an anime. _He can see through you._
@fluffyfly29879 ай бұрын
Pizza rollz
@benamarasarra65349 ай бұрын
I actually want to teach languages to people when I'm older, right now i just make Japanese friends online and help them learning English but maybe one day I could become a teacher there. I'm also working hard to learn Japanese coz i found the language interesting so talking with native speakers really helped
@dariosusman9 ай бұрын
Yep. Never be so impulsive when confronted with such decision. :)
@levienkon9 ай бұрын
My cousin’s fiend definitely got a English teacher job in Kyoto after graduated from college with a bachelor of chemistry… he chose to live in Nara and have to travel almost 4 hours by train everyday because the rent in Kyoto is extremely expensive… By the way I’m in Japan as well but I’m doing code simply because I’m not a native English speaker.
@MunetsuguTakeno9 ай бұрын
Thanks Sora you inspired me to become an english teacher in Tokyo time to move!
@gyoren_3219 ай бұрын
さとしみたいなヤツはみんなの隣にいてほしい…w
@teshyatan73469 ай бұрын
Can't wait for the next video: John becomes a PAW for his 2nd job for living in Japan! 🧒📺
@Retro_Jet9 ай бұрын
Japan Airlines… HERE I COOOOOME!!! 🤣🤣🤣
@Mefistosteles4849 ай бұрын
Hey Sora! Recently Japanese's most beloved streamer, Johnny Somali, has been released from prison. Would you react to it or will you just ignore that bastard? I would understand if you do so but it would be interesting to comment his release and his future from now on in Japan.
@Fooleen8 ай бұрын
i once had a heated discussion with some npc online and she tried to convince me that working as a teacher SHOULD be paid little or shouldn’t be paid whatsoever, because it’s a devotion not a regular job. and i’ve heard so many stories from my fellow teachers who encountered soooo many other people who disrespect teachers in this way and think they’re freaking robots! working 24/7, having no time to even go to the stores, not having time to take good care of yourself because of work work work work, stressing out like crazy, not getting a fair payment are things that people don’t want to take into consideration when they choose to be teachers applying for these twinkle twinkle ads from china, korea and japan looking for english teachers lol it’s a trap!
@Ferrumnand9 ай бұрын
A Professional anime watcher? Sounds like a new profession! lol
@한을정-g1l9 ай бұрын
How to say hello at the first class and how to say how are you after a year lmfao😂😂😂
@voidahl16679 ай бұрын
It's incredible how many people don't think it's just like living anywhere else. Living in japan seems like entirely what you make of it
@deadlymecury9 ай бұрын
Well, apart from that living in Japan has some backgrounds perks that at first you appreciate but then forget they exist. Such as a) working by-default and time table public transport. b) fast and accurate delivery including regular post. c) a lot of "comfy places" (parks, public places, various terraces and other green zones) in the cities and also hiking trails and nature within relatively short train ride. d) overall crime level, zero issues with locals (even drunk af) and also polite drivers ate least in cities (seriously, I stopped paying attention to cars on crosswalks and stopped attempts to analyze if driver an asshole and will run red in front of me - which was crucial for survival in my country). e) you can learn that for example Spy x Family s2 releases soon just because you've seen a poster on train - without that I would definitely missed it completely. f) tons of places with yummy stuff - probably because it's quite easy to run small business in Japan? So it's the same like anywhere else because your job and your family / future family / friends and social activities takes at least 70% of your life leaving the rest to hobbies but not "living in particular place" experience. But also different because of background features making your life easier and more convenient. Though of course there are also cons. You don't need to worry about burglary - cool. You need to worry about earthquakes and somehow prepare your home in a way that furniture would not fly in the room destroying everything around, itself and you - that's kinda sucks... You always need to check heat insulation if you are looking for new place to live or you will freeze to death in winter / will have huge utilities bill because of heating and will die from heart attack - that is also sucks...
@deadlymecury9 ай бұрын
@@TotallyNotBrandon well, just imagine that it's always 10c in your toilet or bathroom for three months because of crappy window / thin wall etc. Also I'm not saying that you will freeze to death - I just saying that you need to pay attention to that stuff. Because one thing is when your temperature drops from 24C to 18C without heating during night when it is -3C outside. And completely different thing when it drops from 24C to 15C despite heater turned on in the same conditions.
@KantoCafe7159 ай бұрын
I like the appearance of Satoshi 😅 his presence creates balance
@2lazy2laze459 ай бұрын
Darn And here I was preparing to be a professional anime watcher
@Megalodon.6669 ай бұрын
if i ever go to japan, i would want to meet mio kudo.
@StangeGirly009 ай бұрын
My name isn’t John actually it’s Keagen and I want to live in Tokyo and teach English, but actually always did want to be a teacher! It’s always been my dream job, and also I LOVE Japan! So of course I want to do that!
@Senaru9 ай бұрын
zesty ass thumbnail 😂
@UmmYeahOk3 ай бұрын
4:53 I actually was once a professional animé watcher. It’s a real thing. Think quality control. The pay is pretty good considering the workload, but don’t expect it to be a living wage. You definitely will need to live in a dual income household or have a roommate who also earns an income.
@earthboundisawsome9 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in New York but grew up on the other side of the country; honestly I'd want to live out in a small town in Japan. The big city is cool, but i feel like it would be nice to get away from it no matter what country you're in
@whimsicalVanilla5 ай бұрын
I once considered teaching English in Japan via the JET program or something, but was worried I'd be placed at a school in the countryside of a prefecture where everyone speaks a dialect I don't understand. ^^;; I think another contributor to the "Living in Japan sucks" problem is that the JET program doesn't require knowledge of Japanese, so a lot of people go without learning the language first. One of my profs in college told me that it's not a good idea to teach English in Japan (short-term) unless you have a solid plan of what you want to do career-wise in your home country when you return.
@Catwoman14647 ай бұрын
I was a waitress and worked at a german bar during my time in japan, it was unfulfilling so I eventually returned to my country, but I loved the historical places and hanami, as well as the beautiful nature.
@agotsaule9 ай бұрын
It's really hard to get a visa in any other sphere unless you're a professional with experience. It becomes even harder, because lots of companies don't take online interview and you actually need to live in Japan for 6~ months to get a job. There's no other way except teaching english I think. It may be different for other countries, but for mine it's like that. Even though Japan is really close.
@dubuyajay99649 ай бұрын
Ok...head to Osaka. Got it. XD
@89TStefan9 ай бұрын
I studied two different subjects, namely Japanese Studies and later business informatics (This becomes relevant later). And just to tell a story. During my Japanese studies days, I have had many airheads there who thought the same, going to Japan, teaching English, living an easy life there. Aside from the fact that maybe 25% of startes in Japanese studies even are able to finish the subject with a degree, even those who graduated didn't have anything of an easier life at all. They are basically foreigners with below-average Japanese language proficiency and no meaningful qualifications at all. Not to mention it is the same here. Having studied Japanese studies in Germany doesn't make you earn anything at all. And that's how they were treated in Japan, Eikaiwa-Sensei has a really low standing there. Many of my former mates from university tried that, and almost everyone returned after a year or two. And among those who were there for a few years, I could say I only know one guy actually being successful, but not as an English teacher but self-employed and owning some sort of business there. Plus, you have trouble with visa Issues all the time, your payment is shit, even compared to Japanese standards and there is no respect at all. Different story,: I went to university again, studied business informatics as said above, worked in the meantime as a software developer, had training, worked for some AAA companies and am now working in core banking with oracle database technologies, PL/SQL and deep knowledge about securities. Worked for one year in Japan, got a five-year-visa because of need and profession. In a year, I made almost three times as much money as the average japanese citizen and had a very decent life there. Went back due to family issues (nothing to do with Japan), but I am already preparing for the next time going there. Stayed in Tokyo during that time and never had any other issues. Conclusion: It is depending on what you do, how you prepare to live there and what kind of qualifications you have with Japanese not being that relevant compared to other hard job qualifications. Personally, I learned until JLPT N2, so I am able to communicate at least in many everyday subjects, but am far from being fluent, which doesn't matter that much, if you are introverted and don't care so much about too many japanese friends in Japan. Might be an issue for being extroverted and being shocked about people being far more reserved. Basically, if you have a good foundation, studied the right subjects, having some job experience in some good or well-known companies, you can have a lifestyle which is far better than in many other countries while also considered to be rich, having some of the finest females in the world, and many problems such as toxic working culture won't even apply to you when you work for an international company. However, don't plan, just go, being already mediocre in your own country with bad qualifications and Japan won't come down easy on you. Japanese materialistic reality is nothing compared to those cute cartoons or Japanese dramas...
@NJDJ19869 ай бұрын
Looks like John Handkawk's living dream to teach English in Japan wasn't a dream come true after all! GGs John!
@GrandGobboBarb9 ай бұрын
the doing an occupation you don't like makes your life hell is such good advice. like when i went to university and studied mathematics my family kept asking "what will you do with that?" as a dumb teenager I thought they were just being demeaning and then i had to get a job as a software developer that I hate because there aren't really many jobs for rotating 4-D balls in your head.
@vickslab46089 ай бұрын
I'm already a professional anime watcher. 🤣
@AzumiRM9 ай бұрын
My hubby never taught English. He came to japan at 18 and studied at tokyo institute of technology for 9 years to become a security professional for a large electronics manufacturer. Now that we have moved to the UK, he works in a university, teaching. It was a pain to get his PhD recognised here as his thesis was in japanese and his papers were all in japanese. A family member is not allowed to translate them so we had to hire a person from London. It was worth it in the end though.