[nobe-l] introduction and seeking an advise

James Fetter jfetter at nd.edu
Tue Mar 1 20:30:54 UTC 2011


Another possibility that just occurred to me is the federal government. 
Since you're in the D.C. area, and since Russian is one of the target 
languages for employees of various federal agencies (i.e. State, CIA, 
etc), there may be opportunities to teach in that arena. The 
bureaucratic aspect of that is certainly an issue, but it may be worth 
looking into nevertheless. The site is www.usajobs.gov, through which 
you can search for jobs in most agencies. And federal jobs actually have 
benefits, at least at the moment.

On 3/1/2011 3:21 PM, bookwormahb at earthlink.net wrote:
> Oh Yes, I forgot about that. James is right!
> Private tutoring  is big and you can make a lot of money; you'd have 
> to learn to set up a cooporation though.
> You can teach at the college or university level with a masters.
> Another idea is if your english is good you could tutor english to 
> Rusian speakers.
>
> Ashley
>
> -----Original Message----- From: James Fetter
> Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2011 3:10 PM
> To: National Organization of Blind Educators Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [nobe-l] introduction and seeking an advise
>
> Tatyana,
> I'm afraid that Russian is not widely studied in public schools, perhaps
> at some private ones. It may be possible to teach at the university
> level with just a masters, since many universities hire language
> teachers who only have a masters, albeit often on a part-time basis, at
> low pay, and with minimal benefits. It may be worth looking at the jobs
> section in the Chronicle of Higher Education for instance. The site is
> www.chronicle.com. The academic job market is pretty bad as well, but as
> a native speaker, you may have an edge. Also, there's private tutoring,
> though I have no idea about how that industry works. I hope this helps.
> All Best,
> James
>
>
>
> On 3/1/2011 2:02 PM, Tatyana wrote:
>> I'm not sure that Russian  is studdied in schools. My be some adults
>> want to learn Russian, I think it's not so great population interested
>> in Russian. And I don't know how to find out about it. I see adds
>> about Spanish mostly.
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Hank & Dawn" <illibrium at yahoo.com>
>> To: "National Organization of Blind Educators Mailing List"
>> <nobe-l at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2011 5:12 AM
>> Subject: Re: [nobe-l] introduction and seeking an advise
>>
>>
>>> I am not teaching yet,  but I wanted to suggest looking into teaching
>>> Russian.  Or maybe becoming a translated.  Don't let fear stop you.
>>> Dawn Scott
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>
>>> On Feb 28, 2011, at 17:25, "Tatyana" <tagriru at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello all,
>>>> I'd like to introduce myself. My name is Tatyana,
>>>> I'm blind, I live in Maryland near Washington DC.
>>>>
>>>> I recently got   my Russian diploma transferred into US equivalent.
>>>> I have a  master degree in education and I'd like to find a job.   I
>>>> don't have any  working experience in the states, and have no
>>>> knowledge about studying or  working in the US public schools as well.
>>>>
>>>>  After  graduation, in Russia, I  didn't work as a teacher in a
>>>> school. The only experience I had with teaching is practicing  in a
>>>> children school while studying in a college in Russia. It was 15
>>>> years ago.
>>>>
>>>>   My vocational counselor  from blind services suggests to use my
>>>> degree in education and conceder   a job in a public children school.
>>>>
>>>> I          have  great doubts  as  a blind plus not native English
>>>> speaker,   and  one who  neither studied in US schools, nor had
>>>> general knowledge about them, should I work toward getting teacher's
>>>> job or something else.
>>>>
>>>> I have tons  of questions and uncertainties. Please help me decide
>>>> on that.  What the pros and cons are in my situation. I think I'd
>>>> prefer part time job in general since I'd like to have more time
>>>> dedicated to my family.
>>>>
>>>> Please write to me
>>>>
>>>> tagriru at gmail.com
>>>>
>>>> Thank you very much to all.
>>>>
>>>> Tatyana.
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>>>>
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