Lukas
New Member
Posts: 9
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Post by Lukas on Oct 12, 2016 21:49:25 GMT 8
Reading your introductions, guys, made me realize how much I still have to learn. Which is great and thank you for that. Let's take a look at my history. I grew up mostly in Poland, but was surrounded by English, speaking this language was something i could always do (very helpful in a non-English speaking country, school-grades-wise). I'd studied Teaching English and Logistics at the same time, at the University of Poznan, Poland. Graduated in 2011 only with bachelors in teaching English and TEFL (turned out it was the ONLY thing i could do). After graduation though, still lying to myself, I took the job in logistics (as it required fluent English). With time , I ended up teaching English to the rest of the staff, as a part time contract on top of my full time fleet manager contract. Then i realized that teaching is actually quite nice. It was 2012. I quit the corporate logistics and moved on to teaching in couple of language schools in my hometown (all part-time, Poland is not a good country for teachers). In 2013, i found an advertisement for DieCai Kindergarten in Chongqing, applied immediately, and landed in China two weeks later. Spent a year in the kindergarten, learning all sorts of flashcard games and activties, that I also found useful in i2. After the first year, I went back to Poland and Ireland for a while, but had craved to go back to China. And so I did a little bit more than a year ago, came straight to i2, and that's where I feel really good. I've earned a lot in a relatively short time here, and I'm looking forward to learning more and more. Thanks and have a nice evening
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Post by Aaron David Screaton FTM on Oct 13, 2016 12:07:37 GMT 8
Another person who it would seem teaching just reached out and snatched you! Its great that you are now able to implement and revisit your studies and make them directly applicable to your day to day job. And maybe in time you can share more and more of those activities that you have acquired over the years as you can never have too many, and usually we have too little.
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