Hot Topics | |
---|---|
ichigo partygirl wrote:Although why you would choose to live in NZ over the UK is a puzzle to me.
Best of luck - if you come back to NZ send me a PM, i live there about 2/3 of the year.
Ghost wrote:I have a friend who has been living in Japan the last 5 years on a spouse visa who has no degree but has had no difficulty finding work, although he has had to find 2 jobs on occassion. But would a uni degree be really important to find work as a translater?
gomichild wrote:It's not the work - it's that having a degree is a requirement for a working visa.
Ghost wrote:But would a uni degree be really important to find work as a translater?
Ghost wrote:Ah if its that case then it shouldnt be a problem as my gf and me will probably be married by the time my student visa ran out, if we are still together by then that is.
aquamarine wrote:Fuck me.
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Ghost wrote:..I have been offered a managerial position at McDonalds in New Zealand which means I would be on about 1,226 yen and hour plus of course lower cost of living, the job isnt great but after 3 or 4 years..
Charles wrote:IMHO, if you consider spending the next 4 years working at McDonalds an attractive option, you need to take a long hard look at your life.
Go back to school. It will give you more options.
Iraira wrote:1) If you want to be a translator, that means you will be generally sitting in front of a computer for at least 8 hours a day...can you feel those arteries hardening?
Iraira wrote:2) You will "be corrected" on your work by people who cannot speak English at all, even though you are correct. Can you suck it up, apologize for your mistake, and take them out for a dozen beers to preserve the revenue source?
Charles wrote:IMHO, if you consider spending the next 4 years working at McDonalds an attractive option, you need to take a long hard look at your life.
Go back to school. It will give you more options.
Iraira wrote:Also, ask yourself these very very important questions.
1) If you want to be a translator, that means you will be generally sitting in front of a computer for at least 8 hours a day...can you feel those arteries hardening?
2) You will "be corrected" on your work by people who cannot speak English at all, even though you are correct. Can you suck it up, apologize for your mistake, and take them out for a dozen beers to preserve the revenue source?
3) Do you have a field that you can sell yourself as being an expert in? If so, then really get familiar with the terms, concepts, etc., in Japanese for that field.
4) Do you have someone sitting next to you now, or will in the future, who will provide you with the constructive criticism and translation advice for the next 3-5 years to get good at becoming an ace translator in the field you are working on becoming proficient in?
(note: if your answer is "my Japanese gf helps me, when I translate"... jaa...you get the point.)
I'm not raining on your omatsuri, you just need to know what's looming in your not so distant future should you decide to embark on the landmine-filled Translator's Road.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:At least if you manage a McDonalds you'll actually have some marketable experience if you go back to the UK. The same can't be said if you teach English.
By the way, how do you expect to get good enough at Japanese to be a translator without serious academic study of the language? Going to a Japanese language school doesn't count.
nottu wrote:Now Charles, your sounding very practical about college ed unlike some of your previous ivory tower stuff - is the world getting to you?
Ghost wrote:Well looking at the school's website it says that you do get qualifications and tests so I assumed that there would be something that I could use towards a job by the end of it. As I said before the instructor job was just an example, I would probably go back to teaching as I already have experience doing it.
As for the degree in McDonalds, it will be in catering and hospitality and is from the NZ government and not from a hamburger university. From what I have heard from friends of mine in Japan it doesnt really matter what subject you have a degree for, it is just a minimum requirement mainly for getting a work permit, although obviously this isnt the case in specialised fields it does apply for most teaching jobs which are not in high schools or universities.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:I guarantee those qualifications and tests don't mean shit to anyone.
Is NZ degree a bachelor's degree or some kind of technical degree? I ask because your need a bachelor's degree for the visa.
By the way, going to NZ to manage a McDonald's and get a degree in something you don't seem to have much interest in just to get a Japanese visa in the future has to be one of the dumbest ideas I've ever hear.
ttjereth wrote:It still beats moving to Japan to be an English teacher and hoping to somehow magically become good enough at the language in anything less than 5 or 6 years of study to be able to translate professionally all to be with a girl with whom you don't think a relationship would last if you aren't right there next to her the entire time
;)"Yeah, I've been always awkward toward women and have spent pathetic life so far but I could graduate from being a cherry boy by using geisha's pussy at last! Yeah!! And off course I have an account in Fuckedgaijin.com. Yeah!!!"
Ghost wrote:...no FG comedy posts please ...blah, blah...McDonalds in New Zealand...blah, blah....ended up teaching english for 8 months for GABA (2 months) and Bing Bang Boom Club ...
Iraira wrote:sounds like a 1970s sit-com....what's the girl's jiggle factor? On second thought, it sounds like one of those ABC After School Specials....all of them starring Meridith Baxter Birney or Robbie Bension on drugs.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests