E2 Transfer Job in Gyeonggi, Korea
Little Fox Co., Ltd
Daejeon, South Korea
Posted 27 days ago
Little Fox Co., Ltd is looking for E2/D10/F visa holders in Korea for teaching elementary school students at their branches in Gyeonggi. The positions offer a full-time type of employment with a salary starting from 2.5M, plus housing or housing allowance. Basic benefits such as pension, insurances, severance, 11 paid vacations, one-way flight, and more are included.
Candidates must have a clean criminal background check and be from the USA, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, or South Africa. The job locations include Namyangju, Wirye, Yongin, Anyang, and Daejeon with different start dates and working hours. Interested candidates must already be in Korea with their documents ready. Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted for an interview.
To apply and for more information, visit https://recruit.littlefox.com/jobs or contact jobs@littlefox.com
Candidates must have a clean criminal background check and be from the USA, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, or South Africa. The job locations include Namyangju, Wirye, Yongin, Anyang, and Daejeon with different start dates and working hours. Interested candidates must already be in Korea with their documents ready. Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted for an interview.
To apply and for more information, visit https://recruit.littlefox.com/jobs or contact jobs@littlefox.com
Please mention that you found the job on Teast for the school's reference.
You need to be from one of the following countries to teach English in South Korea: United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. If you’re not from one of those, you can still teach in most other countries. This rule is specific to South Korea’s visa issuance.
Schools receive many applications and may not reply to everyone. If you don’t hear back within a week, move on to the next job.
Never pay to apply. Never pay to “buy something now and get reimbursed later.” Always verify you’re speaking with the actual school (not an impostor). Scams do exist—be careful.