僕らの目指す未来 一つになる

Nov 12, 2013 22:25

Hello new friends from the Johnny's friending meme! It's nice to meet you all. ^_^ I never really know what to write for intro posts, so I'll try to cover some information that I think is important about me, do something I've been thinking about doing for a little while, and then open the floor to questions ( Read more... )

arashi, music, abc-z, list, v6, work, kisumai

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faded_lace November 14 2013, 03:03:35 UTC
Generally, it seems like if you request a place with a lot of open spots (Hokkaido, Hyogo, Nagasaki, Kagoshima, Fukushima, Aomori, Gunma, Ishikawa, Kobe-shi, and Shizuoka are the top ten) you'll be a lot more likely to get it (I know that seems really obvious, but that's based on people I know, not just common logic, I promise XD). I think Osaka and Kyoto are the two most requested prefectures in the whole program, so the chances of getting them are pretty low, but you never know! Personally, my advice would be to choose to pick your second and third choices strategically so that you can get most of what you want even if you don't get exactly what I hoped for. I put Chiba as my first choice, since I know people there and would be close to Tokyo, but then Gunma as my second, and it's worked out really well being in Gunma, since it's still only 2 hours out of Tokyo. ^^

As for consulate, sorry, I saw on your userinfo that it says you're located in the US. So I meant what consulate within the US (I went out of New York) or, if I assumed incorrectly, what country? Sorry if I made a stupid mistake. ^^;;

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xanithofdragons November 14 2013, 03:08:30 UTC
Mostly I want to go to a place in the Kansai region, so I was thinking about having Osaka as my top choice and then another Kinki prefecture for my second choice, but then I'm not sure what to put for my third choice, since so many other prefectures sound interesting. Or if I should put the Kinki region in general for my first choice.

Ah, no, it's okay, I just wanted to be sure whether you meant which country or which city. I'll be going through the Chicago consulate.

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faded_lace November 14 2013, 03:19:38 UTC
I didn't put any regions so I can't say how effective that is, but I think putting what you really want first, a more reasonable nearby prefecture or city as your second, and then someplace you like in a different region as your third choice sounds good (since that's what I did |D;;) If you just put Kinki you might end up pretty far from Osaka, but if you don't mind that then it might help, since you'd be flexible to anywhere in that region? XD;

Oh, okay, awesome~ Someone who was in my city last year went from there, and I think she had a good experience. ^^ New York is the worst, since it accounts for a huge portion of the JETs from the US, so there's a million people who go through there, the interviews are a hot mess, and your chances are lower. XD;

At any rate, I hope you get in! I'd love to meet up sometime. ^^

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xanithofdragons November 14 2013, 17:17:25 UTC
I know someone who actually ended up getting his first choice for placement, and his first choice was Osaka prefecture, so it seems worthwhile to put what I really want down first. If Hyogo is one of the places that usually has more open spots, that would probably make a good second choice. Thank you for your advice.

I'll probably have more questions about the process if I can get through to the interviews.

Yeah, it'd be really nice to meet up sometime. ^_^

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faded_lace November 14 2013, 23:22:57 UTC
Yeah, no, there definitely are people who get their first placement... I remember my first year, someone coming in with me got the one mainland Tokyo placement and everyone was super jealous. XD; It can often really depend on what they're looking for... if there's only one Osaka (or wherever) placement opening and they're looking for a 30+ man from Australia with no Japanese, then you're just screwed. XD; But if they're looking for a young woman from the Chicago area (they actually can get specific, what with sister cities and stuff) with high Japanese skills, then you're home free, you know? XD; Both Hyogo the prefecture and Kobe the city have a really high number (if you add the city placements to the prefectural placements, I think they'd almost have as many as Hokkaido, though I don't remember now), so they're really good safe choices.

But I'd be happy to give any help I can! Please do let me know if you have any other questions, because I'd be happy to answer. ^^

Good luck!

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xanithofdragons November 15 2013, 04:53:44 UTC
There's this: http://cal.dpi.wi.gov/cal_ie-chiba-ss my college advisor told me about, and apparently Chiba and Wisconsin are sister states? xD So it really seems like there's all sorts of things different schools would request that I probably wouldn't even think of.

Even though I tried applying last year and didn't get in (but I applied for the CIR position, which may have lowered my chances), I'm still pretty last on what sort of experiences and skills are good to write about on the statement of purpose, so if you have any advice about that part of the application, it'd really help!

Thank you!

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faded_lace November 15 2013, 06:06:00 UTC
There you go XD; Depending on what Chiba is looking for, you might be requested there. XD; It really depends. I know my city prioritizes Japanese ability above everything else, so sometimes we end up with really weird breakdowns depending on who applied that year. Last year we had almost all girls, and this year we have almost all Americans. So... yeah. It can be really surprising XD;

Obviously since I don't work for the JET programme, I really can't say for certain, but in my experience, they're looking for someone who studied abroad and has teaching teaching experience. I think that in the past, they had a lot of people who got to Japan and then bailed because they couldn't deal with living abroad or with being in front of a bunch of kids all day, so they want to know that the candidate can do those things. The people I've known who didn't get in are the ones who emphasized their general knowledge of Japan or their love of Japanese culture too much, rather than more relevant, less esoteric qualifications. Personality wise, I also think it plays to your advantage to seem versatile and flexible rather than confident. They almost always ask something in the interviews about what you'd do if you were placed in the exact opposite placement as you wanted, and they don't seem to like people who present themselves as people who would know what it will be like without going first. They rather seem to prefer someone who seems up to a challenge and realizes that every part of Japan and every school system is different, and the experience may be different than their own abroad or previous Japan teaching experience, and they're ready to tackle that.

But that's just my way-more-than-two-cents worth based on the people I've known who got in and didn't get in (I've known quite a few of both from college, so that's my compare-and-contrast pool XD). I'd be more than happy to read your SoP if you want, and give you my opinion, if you wanted ^^ Please let me know if there's anything I can do to help~

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xanithofdragons November 16 2013, 05:44:57 UTC
It's probably one of my biggest disadvantages in applying that I don't really have teaching experience and I don't have experience working with children. orz I'll definitely consider your advice while I write my SoP, though.

In a way, I don't have much of a compare and contrast pool, since pretty much everyone I know who applied (and with whom I'm still in contact)got in, so it's hard for me to tell what doesn't work. I don't really know what kind of writing style works for something like a SoP, or what phrasing works well, so I probably do need to have someone read it over (even though I'm always embarrassed to think about people I know reading things I've written.)

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faded_lace November 18 2013, 00:58:50 UTC
Well, I think if you play that off in enthusiasm for working with kids in the future, it will be okay. I basically feel like reg flags go up when it seems like the person isn't focused on the job of working with kids and instead is just focused on Japan at large (even if they really are looking forward to the teaching bit and just didn't say it enough in the SoP).

Yeah, in the past three application pools (so the 2011, 2012, and 2013 intakes) I've known five people who got in and three people who didn't, so it's not exactly a hugely wide sample pool. XD; But in my experience, what they want is something pretty straightforward and honest. I hate showing my writing to people, too, but I think having someone who was already in JET and someone who was in a hiring position for an education job really helped mine a lot. Good luck! ^^; I'd be happy to read it if you wanted.

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xanithofdragons November 20 2013, 02:45:21 UTC
Thank you so much for all your advice. I'm going to pm you with the text of my statement of purpose. I'll probably also ask my mom to look over it since she works in education.

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faded_lace November 20 2013, 02:49:38 UTC
No problem! Seriously, feel free to ask me anything. And I'll take a look at your statement of purpose when I get a moment! Do you have a deadline? I'd like to really take the time to look at it next to the JET programme website and stuff like that, so I don't want to rush, but if you need it by like tomorrow or something, I can just give it a quick read-over, too. ^^

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xanithofdragons November 20 2013, 05:27:09 UTC
I'm planning to mail it out Thursday (I'm still waiting on one letter of recommendation that I should get tomorrow.) Yeah, I'm sorry that I'm not giving you a lot of time. I was hoping to have a draft done earlier, but I know myself and I know it takes me longer to write things than it probably should. ^^;

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faded_lace November 20 2013, 06:29:56 UTC
Oh wow XD Okay then, I'll try to look over it either today or tomorrow. Hopefully I can still give some helpful feedback. ^^;

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