i-to-i’s Blog

Ditch Your Backpack – Grab Your TEFL Certificate!

Going travelling, backpacking… whatever you want to call it, it’s become a rite of passage for those taking gap years both before and after university. But is it really the best way to experience another culture, or do you just spend weeks flitting from place to place with little to show for it but snapshots and kitsch souvenirs? If you really want to experience another culture, we reckon it’s time to ditch your backpack and grab your TEFL certificate. Here’s why:

Spending time with people just like you isn’t experiencing another culture

Ah, hostels, the spiritual home of the backpacker. Great for cheap accommodation, but is spending all your time with other backpackers who are just like you really making the most of your time abroad? Hell, you could have just stayed home!

Opt to teach abroad and your working life will be spent surrounded with locals – both students and other staff. Great for getting under the skin of the country’s culture.

She's got her bags packed... why don't you? (Photo: Matthew Barker, Peru For Less)

You’ll be paid to be there

Unless you’ve got a bulging bank balance, spending any length of time in a country is out of the reach of most travellers. That means quick hops here and there, only seeing the ‘don’t miss’ sights that guide books rave about. With TEFL, you’ll be getting paid to be in a country for anything from six to 12 months, which means you can experience everything a country has to offer (not just the selected extras) and not feel like you have to cram it into too short a time.

You’ll get to know the people whose country you’re visiting

While it’s easy to pass through a country and have nothing more than a few brief exchanges with waiters and taxi drivers, teaching abroad forces you to get to know the people you’re teaching, working with, hell, even living with. Sometimes cultural differences can be a bit of a challenge, but you didn’t fly half way around the world to have everything run like it does back home! Before you know it, you’ll be mastering local drinking games, cracking jokes with your boss and making friends with the old lady who lives in the apartment next to yours.

You’re already qualified to do it!

If you’re a native English speaker, you’re already qualified to teach English abroad. Yes, you might need to do a TEFL course in order to get your hands on the best jobs and not make a total mess of your time in the classroom, but you don’t need any previous teaching experience or the ability to speak another language.

Don’t just take snapshots – be in the picture yourself

Go to any major tourist attraction and you’ll see backpackers snapping away, trying to peer into a totally alien culture. Want to know the best way to get to know the place you’re visiting? Stop hiding behind your camera and dive in feet first – get to know people and you’ll soon find that you’re not on the outside looking in, you’re in the picture yourself.

You’ll get the lowdown on the coolest stuff in town

Have you ever read a guidebook for your hometown? Flick to the bar and restaurant section and I bet the cool bar you and your friends go to on a Friday night isn’t in there. By the time that book hit the shelves it was already out of date. That’s why working abroad is so great – because you’ll make friends with so many locals and long-term expats, you’ll know exactly where’s good to go at the weekend and not in yet another dodgy tourist bar.

So, what do you say? If you’re ready to ditch your backpack and grab your TEFL certificate, make sure you download a free copy of the Graduate’s Guide to Teaching and Travelling Abroad, to show you how to make it a reality: http://www.onlinetefl.com/graduates.html.

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