English Teacher
Anubaan Chiangmai School
Chiang Mai, Thailand•Full-Time•Competitive Salary
Posted 8 days ago
Anubaan Chiangmai School is currently seeking applications for the role of English Teacher, exclusive to foreign teachers. We are looking for qualified individuals who are eager to contribute to student development and support the school’s teaching objectives.
Qualifications:
- A Bachelor’s degree in Education or a related field is required.
- Previous teaching experience is preferred.
- Candidates should be active, responsible, and open to learning.
Responsibilities include a full-time teaching load of 16 to 18 solo teaching hours per week.
Interested applicants are invited to submit their CVs from now until the end of December 2025. Please send your application to sap@abcm.ac.th. For additional inquiries, you may contact us at the same email address.
Qualifications:
- A Bachelor’s degree in Education or a related field is required.
- Previous teaching experience is preferred.
- Candidates should be active, responsible, and open to learning.
Responsibilities include a full-time teaching load of 16 to 18 solo teaching hours per week.
Interested applicants are invited to submit their CVs from now until the end of December 2025. Please send your application to sap@abcm.ac.th. For additional inquiries, you may contact us at the same email address.
Please mention that you found the job on Teast for the school's reference.
Please review the requirements to teach English in Thailand before applying. If a post says “NES” or “Native English Speaker”, it usually means applicants must be from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa (sometimes it’s a preference, not a hard rule).
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.
Watch out for agencies that charge fees or take a cut of your salary. Good agencies are paid by the schools—not by you. If you’re unsure how they make money, ask. If they say they take a percentage, that’s a red flag. Avoid them and let us know so we can ban them.
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.