Hi,
Can anyone give me uptodate details of the salaries/package offered by IS Brunei?
Thanks
IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
Re: IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
No replies but so many viewings.....really?
So what are the average salaries like at international schools in Brunei?
So what are the average salaries like at international schools in Brunei?
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Re: IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
No personal info. but this was from another forum earlier in the year:
Depending on school
Top of scale B$ 77000
Accom supplied however many pay extra
health covered except you must pay $30 for each visit to doctor
If you have chn you pay some fees, exam costs and books
Other school top closer to 55000 I would think
health covered and housing
FWIW
Depending on school
Top of scale B$ 77000
Accom supplied however many pay extra
health covered except you must pay $30 for each visit to doctor
If you have chn you pay some fees, exam costs and books
Other school top closer to 55000 I would think
health covered and housing
FWIW
Re: IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
Many thanks. Also, I was told by one Head teacher there that to work in a school in Brunei it seems you must be a certified teacher (even for admin/support roles) - otherwise the school can't get a work visa for you.
Reply
@Nomad68
The accuracy of that depends on the definition of "certified" in regards to teacher and the description of the responsibilities. If you have "interaction" with students children you need to be a qualified educator. If you do back office accounting and office management and dont have contact with students you dont. The real distinction lies in what is certified, as an ESOL teacher with a "certificate" from somewhere "not necessarily a Cambridge/Trinity certificate) would likely fulfill the visa requirements for an English Support Instructor, and anyone with a Bachelors degree could qualify for a visa as a teaching assistant. The issue recently has been enforcement, as long as the IS filled in the documentation correctly little was ever confirmed or validated. Recently, there has been more enforcement, which has caused problems, and resulted in an increase in recruitment requirements, as ISs dont want to risk being placed under a magnifying glass by immigration and labor authorities.
The accuracy of that depends on the definition of "certified" in regards to teacher and the description of the responsibilities. If you have "interaction" with students children you need to be a qualified educator. If you do back office accounting and office management and dont have contact with students you dont. The real distinction lies in what is certified, as an ESOL teacher with a "certificate" from somewhere "not necessarily a Cambridge/Trinity certificate) would likely fulfill the visa requirements for an English Support Instructor, and anyone with a Bachelors degree could qualify for a visa as a teaching assistant. The issue recently has been enforcement, as long as the IS filled in the documentation correctly little was ever confirmed or validated. Recently, there has been more enforcement, which has caused problems, and resulted in an increase in recruitment requirements, as ISs dont want to risk being placed under a magnifying glass by immigration and labor authorities.
Re: IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
@PsyGuy, I am a LMS so although I teach research skills among my other duties, it has not been an absolute requirement (in my personal experience) that I be a certified teacher. When I applied to a school in Brunei the offer was withdrawn on the grounds that the school could not get a work visa for me as all staff in schools have to be certified. It may have been baloney but i think the Principal was being honest as he genuinely was very keen to hire me. In fact it was one of the fastest job offers I have had and was made during the interview. It's moot now given the way Brunei is heading.
Reply
@Nomad68
Thats not true, there are ETs in Brunei that dont have professional educator credentials. They can get visas so you can get a visa. The recruiter likely found a more qualified candidate. Im sure the recruiter was very keen to hire you, and then found a candidate that they were more keen to hire. The fact that they offered you a contract during the interview could just as easily be an indicator of their desperation as much as their impression with you. You could just as easily have been a safety candidate for them.
Thats not true, there are ETs in Brunei that dont have professional educator credentials. They can get visas so you can get a visa. The recruiter likely found a more qualified candidate. Im sure the recruiter was very keen to hire you, and then found a candidate that they were more keen to hire. The fact that they offered you a contract during the interview could just as easily be an indicator of their desperation as much as their impression with you. You could just as easily have been a safety candidate for them.
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Re: IS BRUNEI - SALARY/PACKAGE
@Nomad68
If the head teacher in question works at an international school, s/he is either woefully ignorant or lying to your face. There are local schools that hire ITs - maybe these visa requirements apply to them, but not ISs?
If the head teacher in question works at an international school, s/he is either woefully ignorant or lying to your face. There are local schools that hire ITs - maybe these visa requirements apply to them, but not ISs?
Discussion
@coin_operated
I cant see how a DS would have less restrictive hiring requirements than an IS. An IS may have credentialing requirements for accreditation, but those wouldnt have any bearing on a visa. The recruiter is either an idiot or a sociopath, and likely both.
I cant see how a DS would have less restrictive hiring requirements than an IS. An IS may have credentialing requirements for accreditation, but those wouldnt have any bearing on a visa. The recruiter is either an idiot or a sociopath, and likely both.