Which jobs allow you to see some of the world?

Which jobs allow you to see some of the world?

Other urls found in this thread:

eslcafe.com
ajarn.com
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

Astronaut

researcher. Conference trips everywhere
t. researcher

private military contractor

Nigger slave shipped from Africa to the colonies

military

but its kind of shitty too

Contractor

Funny, it's true also!

refugee

Construction site supervisor in Congo.

...

...

Escort

cheeky chuckle there

What are you researching?

At least you get to kill hadji's. How's Afghanistan? Would it be a nice country if it wasn't at war for the past 40 years?
What kind of contracting?

Archaeologist.

Something in the natural sciences like marine biology or ethnobotanist.

Working for the Speedwagon Foundation

My dad was a Petrolium Engineer and he always had to travel for work. Literally all over the world, all over Europe Asia America Saudi Arabia and stuff. He bases himself out of sydney and just flys out to the sites where he needs to work and he will stay out on site for as long as he is needed, if its a 3 month job he might go out for a month then come home for a week or so and then head back out after that. When i was in highschool though he was working on site for like 6 months at a time sometimes cos of dem school bills

English Teacher, though you not being a native speaker means you won't get many gigs.

Nuclear maintenance technician. Though you'll spend most of your time in China and Russia these days.

I'd be really interested in becoming a English Teacher, but I only have a associates and I'm not sure if they allow you to do it with less than a bachelors.

Traveling to Asia and finding a decent girl to settle down with probably wouldn't be a terrible way to go if the US continues to get worst

CIA
>see the world
>make new friends
>subvert them

You won't get to bring friends.

Cruise ship worker/entertainer

You can do it with no degree in many South American countries. In China, it depends on the province but it's moving towards needing a degree everywhere in order to qualify as an "expert" for visa purposes. That's true for South Korea and Japan as well. Thailand requires one now though you can show up and teach illegally but you'll be paid just enough to pay the rent so don't bother. Vietnam definitely requires one. So, yeah, go back to school and get a bachelor's but don't go into a great deal of debt just for a degree.

Hitman

Cheers, just read a Tintin book this morning (Cigars of the Pharaohs).

As for jobs I teach college and get around fairly well.

>see big guys
>don't get to bring friends
>expose their master plan

How does this actually work? I am not a native English speaker, nor did I study English, but I did have a lot of English courses and assignments during college. Can I qualify for becoming such a teacher by doing tests like TOEFL?

Thanks for the info. I've thought about potentially going back to school for a bachelors in in a few years once I have some more money saved up. My associates is in comp. networking,do you know would it matter what bachelors I get? Also if I could potentially do some computer work while I'm over there that would be nice, is there a demand for that?

travelling nurse, lots of years of school but worth it if you have no attachments

rapefugee

TOEFL can help show that you have obtained fluency enough to teach. The problem, like I said earlier, is that you're not a native English speaker. Many schools and governments want people from USA, Canada, UK, and Australia. You can still get jobs in many places but it'll be harder to find places that will hire you because you aren't a native English speaker. It's also harder if you're not white.

It doesn't matter what your bachelor's is. Just that you have it. Now, if you're trying to teach in a legit International school, you will need to be a certified teacher in your home country, which usually means a B.Ed. or M.Ed. or a STEM degree and state certification. But most jobs are in cram schools or foreign gov. schools which don't have such stringent requirements.

Check out:
eslcafe.com
ajarn.com
for some more info and jobs

LiveLeak editer.

>Also if I could potentially do some computer work while I'm over there that would be nice, is there a demand for that?
I'm not sure about that. Places like South Korea and Japan have plenty of native computer people so you might wanna consider freelancing programming jobs through the internet. Keep quiet about it if you do, though, because you'd probably be violating your work visa and subject to taxation.

sensible chuckle

R A R E
A
R
E

Thanks for the information. I'll keep all this in the back of my mind and if I don't really have any reason to stick around I'll start going down this path. Have you actually done any foreign teaching work?

I'd like to run a sweatshop or some outsourced call center in India because I want to live out my fantasies of being a modern day viscount in the Raj. Do any business anons know the best route into this? International business degree? Economics? All I want is money and power over a large group of lower caste indians who worship and fear me.

No but I've been planning to go for several years now. Working and trying to pay off my student loans as fast as possible before I go. I already have saved up a sizeable amount in Roth and 401k for my retirement which can also double as an emergency fund. I've heard stories about old guys in Thailand who are stuck there teaching illegally and barely make enough to survive. Make sure you plan ahead if you do go and always have a backup plan in case things go south.

i'd like to know more