Getting hired as an ESL teacher is only half the battle — the other half is the paperwork. Immigration authorities are strict, and a single missing or…Read more
A teaching portfolio is the single most underused tool in ESL job applications. Most applicants send a resume and cover letter and stop there. But a…Read more
Knowing how to write an ESL cover letter — not just filling in a template, but actually composing one from scratch — is one of the highest-leverage skills in…Read more
A standard professional resume will get you a job in your home country. But ESL employers — especially in Asia and the Middle East — have very different…Read more
For every great ESL job out there, there are listings designed to lure inexperienced teachers into bad situations: underpaid, overworked, stranded abroad, or…Read more
Every experienced ESL teacher has a list of mistakes they made in their first year — things they wish someone had warned them about. The good news is that…Read more
If you spend any time browsing ESL job listings, you'll quickly notice that a large share of postings come from recruiters rather than schools directly. For…Read more
One of the most common questions new ESL teachers ask is some version of: "If I start today, when can I actually be in a classroom?" The honest answer is that…Read more
One of the most confusing parts of starting an ESL career is figuring out where to actually find jobs. Unlike most industries, ESL hiring happens across a…Read more
Landing your first ESL teaching job can feel overwhelming. There are thousands of schools, dozens of countries, endless job boards, and a steady stream of…Read more