enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. JET Programme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JET_Programme

    The Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (外国語青年招致事業, Gaikokugo Seinen Shōchi Jigyō), shortly as JET Programme (JETプログラム, Jetto Puroguramu), is a teaching program sponsored by the Japanese government that brings university graduates to Japan as Assistant Language Teachers (ALTs), Sports Education Advisors (SEAs) or as Coordinators for International Relations (CIRs ...

  3. Assistant Language Teacher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assistant_Language_Teacher

    David L. McConnell, Importing Diversity: Inside Japan's JET Program (2000) Bruce Feiler, Learning to Bow: An American Teacher in a Japanese School (1991), later published as Learning to Bow: Inside the Heart of Japan; Eric Sparling Japan Diary: A year on JET (2005) Nicholas Klar, My Mother is a Tractor: A Life in Rural Japan (2005)

  4. Teaching English as a second or foreign language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teaching_English_as_a...

    In Cambodian schools today, however, English is taught from grade seven and is the most popular foreign language studied. Adults can learn English with informal education programs. [38] Professional, institutional, and governmental motivations exist for teaching and learning English as a foreign language. [39]

  5. Link Interac Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link_Interac_Inc.

    Interac is Japan’s largest private provider of professional foreign teachers to the Japanese government through its ALT program. As one of the largest non-government employers of foreign nationals in Japan they employ nearly 3,500 staff in Japan across a network of 13 offices. Around 3,200 of these employees are non-Japanese.

  6. Education in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Japan

    The ministry recognizes a need to improve the teaching of all foreign languages, especially English. To improve instruction in spoken English, the government invites many young native speakers of English to Japan to serve as assistants to school boards and prefectures under its Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (JET).

  7. Hello Work - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hello_Work

    Tsuchiura Public Employment Security Office. Hello Work (ハローワーク, harōwāku) is the Japanese English name for the Japanese government's Employment Service Center, a public institution based on the Employment Service Convention No. 88 (ratified in Japan on 20 October 1953) under Article 23 of the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. [1]

  8. Aeon (eikaiwa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeon_(eikaiwa)

    Aeon (株式会社イーオン, Kabushikigaisha Īon) is a chain of English conversation teaching companies in Japan. [1] It is considered one of the historical "Big Four" eikaiwa schools . [ 2 ] The company operates 320 branch schools throughout Japan, and maintains staff recruitment offices in New York City and Los Angeles .

  9. ECC (eikaiwa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECC_(eikaiwa)

    ECC Foreign Language Institute (ECC外語学院, -gaigo gakuin) is one of the major private English teaching companies or eikaiwa in Japan. [1] It is part of the ECC group. [2] ECC (Education through Communication for the Community) is based in the Kansai region of Japan and also has many branches in the Chūbu and Kantō regions.