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Apr 30, 2016

English Teacher Side Hustles

English Teacher Side Hustles photo


The other day I asked if there was an HDMI cable I could use for my self introductions in classes. It took less than five minutes for a teacher to go find the HDMI cable and it to appear on my desk. And I was almost too scared to ask.


The English teacher in Japan job is really funny sometimes. It’s really based on attitude and willingness to try. My small ability in Japanese is a huge help as long as I’m not scared to explain around things I don’t know how to say, which is a lot. I find Japanese people are super nice and helpful if they see I’m making an effort. Their hard work rubs off on me and I feel like I’m being lazy if I don’t put in a little effort too. Somehow I’m able to work a lot harder when I live in Japan than when I live in America.


Sometimes I think of this as the “immigrant factor” which is probably a real social phenomenon documented by sociologists, but something I have never looked into. I think the entrepreneur inclination is stronger for the generation immigrating to a new country. For example, when you’re new to a country, you can have a fresh perspective on things and see opportunities in a different way. Maybe there’s more motivation to hustle to avoid failing miserably. As Seth Godin said, 100 years ago, no one had a job. Things are cycling back in the freelancer direction.


This might be a way longer conversation than I have in mind, but I want to ask current foreigners living in Japan (and elsewhere) what they do as side jobs. All the long term ALTs / English teachers I’ve met have side jobs. This is most likely a result of needing to provide for a family, because a (technically) part time ALT job probably isn’t going to pay the bills if you’re supporting a partner and child. There are several options for side jobs as a native English speaker in Japan. A part time Eikaiwa job is definitely a popular choice, but I’ve met people who do something like exporting on the side.


English Teacher Side Hustles photo


The first time I lived in Japan as an ALT, within two months of arriving, I had a side job – I occasionally worked at an Eikaiwa. Most of the time I only worked at their “International Parties.” All I had to do was show up for a couple hours, eat snacks and drink can chu-hi (my favorite), and chat with other guests. It was easy money as long as I showed up, and a nice way to meet people who might want to hang out sometime. I also worked there a few times at their conversation cafe which was kind of a tea house format. It was a lot more difficult because you never knew who would show up – sometimes no one, sometimes people who were a little too friendly, sometimes people who had really different levels of English. The point was to get all the guests having a conversation where they were speaking equally, which is impossible even within the same level. It wasn’t hard to find something interesting to talk about, but it still feels a little forced at first.


This time I felt the urge to find a side hustle right away too, but didn’t have much energy to put a lot of effort into it after work. During the spring break, I got an opportunity to work at a small camp in the area for a couple days, which was super fun. I love ESL camps and had never gotten the chance to work at one in Japan before. Now I’m putting more effort into finding students to tutor.


English Teacher Side Hustles photo


With an instructor visa, usually your company wants you to ask for permission before doing any other work. I think it’s mostly so you don’t get into trouble with illegal work, taxes, or bad performance at your primary job.

Most native English speaking foreigners living in Japan work as an ALT or at an Eikaiwa, as an English teacher. There are some who work as programmers or translators, etc. but they can pass JLPT (Japanese Language Proficiency Test) level N1 or N2 to qualify for that type of work. See this great podcast series, Making Money NOT Teaching English, for some examples.


If you are living in Japan and working as an English teacher with a side hustle, what do you do?

How much time do you spend on the side job and how does it fit into your schedule?

Why do you have a side job?

Do you hope to be able to quit your day job and have your own business someday?

Have you already turned your side job into your primary job?


Helloalissa Blog

helloalissa

helloalissa

Kanji and design nerd.


1 Comment

  • ConeHead

    on May 2

    Alt here and y side hustle is teaching. You can't go wrong there. They want to learn English and I kind of don't care if they learn or not. I teach, you pay. You don't learn and that's on you. You can pay some more and I'll teach some more. Simple.