Teaching in Thailand

Thailand is a country many Brits choose to visit. Cheap prices for food and accommodation are a big factor, but not many people consider working out there permanently. Many of those who do make the switch, teach English in Thailand schools, and there are very good hourly rates for English Graduates teaching abroad. You can earn around 25 dollars an hour if you have formal qualifications, meaning you can easily afford accommodation, food, and nights out on a regular basis. It’s a smart move for those who want a different lifestyle, but be warned you may not be welcomed back with open arms when you return home. You will have to prove you’ve worked hard when you were out there and have since become wiser, more experienced and more educated.

Half of Primary School students meet standards

The Department for Education has published results for year 6 tests, showing that just 53% of students are meeting standards. The tests involved reading, writing and mathematics, and as a rule of thumb, the expected standard equates to the previous 4B level. In 2015 69% of pupils aged 11 and 12 reached level 4B in the subjects that were tested, so this is seen as a huge drop. A DfE source said: “These results show that our children and teachers are capable of achieving the higher standards we expect of them and vindicate the reforms introduced by Michael Gove and continued by Nicky Morgan. The biggest drops worryingly come in mathematics and reading, and it piles pressure on teachers to meet higher standards.

Finding work after travelling

When you’ve spent a year or several moths travelling and you’re now feeling refreshed and ready for work, you may find that work isn’t ready for you. Opportunities can be heard to come by when you’re returning from travelling and as the saying goes “it’s always easier to find a job when you’re already in one”. That said, just because you decided to do a spot of travelling doesn’t mean every employer will look down on you like you’re satin. Some business owners will like that you’re a seasoned travelling with lots of life experience under your belt, whilst others may think you’re a bit of a waster but it’s up to your to prove them wrong. So long as you can prove traveling has helped you build skills or helped you develop in some way, you’ll be able to get the job you’ve always dreamed of. You may just need to be a bit patient to start with though.

Job Searching Online

The way technology has entered in various fields like teaching, instructional, behavioural and instrumental design is major. For example, the most important activity in the education sector is teaching with the main aim of teaching is overall development of child. Teaching is both arts as well science. Technology for teaching has been developed with help of modification brought up in teaching mode, skills, feedback devices, learning devices. Four basic elements basically involved in teaching are planning, organizing, leading and controlling.

From e-books, to teaching software, live online classes, online tests, online admission process, online answer sheets and feed backs, online query solving facility etch have made education quite simple process in itself. Now people don’t have to wait for long to get results and to stay in array for getting admission. It has also reduced use of paper to great extent which has helped to conserve forest in other way.

The Potential Impact of Brexit on Employment

Employment levels is one of the most important metrics modern societies have to determine how well things are going. Unemployed people end up being poorer, less satisfied, unmotivated people, so unemployment is a thing to be avoided.

One of the biggest concerns about the risk of the UK leaving the EU is the damage it will do to businesses that depend upon inter-European trade to thrive. The fear is that leaving the EU will create such a loss of trade that many of these businesses will have to lay off their staff, flooding the market with a multitude of new workers.

While this fear isn’t totally unfounded, we can say that it isn’t a certainty either. International trade agreements, the kind that would protect any major fallout like this from happening, are pretty standard around the world; the chance of us getting cut off from trade are doubly unlikely thanks to the trade-imbalance the UK has with the rest of the EU (we buy more than we sell).

If Brexit has an impact on the levels of migration, which seems to be the motivation behind many people wanting to leave, then the lower levels of immigration could see an increase in demand of workers above and beyond what the UK is able to provide.