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Study Abroad in Italy: Study Abroad Italian
By: Jessica N. Johnson (justin) 2007.02.24

Cristina was one of my favorite English students. We were about the same age. She had a great sense of style. She was always showing up for class in some combination of motorcycle boots, a crochet sweater, chandelier earrings, and a funky scarf that on her looked fabulous, but on me, like the floor of my closet threw up. Unlike most Italian women, she left her hometown, and moved to Padova to pursue a career in publishing. We were both relatively new to town, far from friends and family, and during our hour-long conversation classes, we bonded over the people and places we missed from our respective homes.

We always met on Thursday afternoons during her afternoon pausa. One day, we decided to meet an hour earlier, have lunch together first outside the office, and then return for class. On my bike, on my way to meet her, I practiced in my head how I would politely refuse if she offered to pay for my sandwich, how I would tell her that we were meeting as friends and therefore we should split the cost of lunch. It wasn’t an issue. We ordered at the bar, paid for our respective sandwiches and spritz, and then found a table. We always spoke in Italian, when not actively engaged in an English lesson, and I continued chatting away in my, clumsy but nonetheless can-get-my-point-across Italian as we sat down.

She turned to me and said, “You speak Italian, and I speak English for practicing.” I felt a subtle shift of mood. It may sound selfish, but I didn’t want to spend the next hour listening to her piece together the words she needed to form a rudimentary sentence. I didn’t want to correct her mistakes, and modify my speaking, using simple words and tenses to make sure she understood. I wanted to have an actual conversation, gossip, relax, and then start teaching. I didn’t want a watery two hour session that was neither totally one, hanging out, nor the other, working. Teaching English in Italy can be an ideal way to earn enough money to live on and by live on, I mean rent an apartment, eat, and buy shoes, and at the same time, maintain enough flexibility to travel and partake in Italy’s endless artistic, epicurean, and recreational diversions. Even so, it takes patience to get started, and the line between paying student and friend can be easily blurred. The economics of teaching English in Italy aren’t only the Euro exchange rate; it’s how you balance friendships, schedules, payment, travel, and a wineglass and textbook at the same time.

LIVE TO TEACH OR TEACH TO LIVE?
The easiest job to snag when traveling or living abroad is teaching English. While actual certified, experienced teachers will cringe at this notion, in many places around the globe we are qualified simply by virtue of being native English speakers, given how great the demand is. Present day Italy is no exception. The Italian economy is in a precarious position right now as they too watch their manufacturing jobs scamper away to Romania, and China. Further compounding the situation is a drying up of research funding at the university level, precipitating a considerable brain drain of the country’s top scientists, engineers, and researchers, all looking for positions overseas, and all looking to improve their English speaking abilities.

It’s difficult to get started. Initially, one has to decide where to teach, and in Padova, like in many mid-sized Italian cities, there are three basic options: international schools, instruction centers, and going solo. Padova is home to two private English instruction primary schools, Villa Grimani and the English International School of Padova. Both schools serve children ages 2-10, and the International School also includes a middle and high school.

On the plus side, these schools will take care of securing working papers, including the all-important codice fiscale and permesso di soggiorno (fiscal code and work permit), essential for working legally in Italy. They also help find housing for new teachers. The money is decent, approximately 1,195 euro a month, certainly enough to live on in a modest fashion, with enough left over for weekend excursions, eating out, and some occasional retail therapy. While certainly helpful, it is not necessary to know Italian.

But it’s a real job! Who moves to Italy to arrive at 8 am every morning? As with most real jobs, it means you have to actually show up five days a week, severely cutting into travel time. Remember, working can really get in the way of not working.

THE BENEFIT OF ENGLISH THEFT
The second option is to contract with one of the half dozen English instruction centers operating throughout Padova<s/trong>. These franchises, which include Wall Street, CEPU, and the Oxford School of English, have sprouted up all across Italy and Europe. They provide private conversation classes for executives and professionals seeking to improve their ability to speak English. The major benefit of working for these schools is that you don’t have to do any marketing or lesson preparation. You set your schedule with them, show up, students will be waiting (and if they cancel, you still get paid), and lead students through an already set curriculum.

They’re also a great place to get your feet wet. I taught English as a Second Language (ESL) before, but it’s not like I spend my free time endlessly ruminating on the difference between the past perfect and present continuous tenses. Working for a language center enabled me to raid their materials and relearn how to distinguish between countable and uncountable nouns (strawberries, eggs vs. bread, pasta, for the uninitiated). The principal drawback is that you earn between 12-14 euro per hour, which is then taxed at 20%, so your take home is approximately 9-10 euro. Also, these schools need to ask for official working papers, “in teoria” anyway. When I worked at one of the Oxford schools in town, they never asked me for working papers, which was helpful, since I didn’t have any, and they paid me in cash each week. A friend of mine works for a local multicultural language school and they did ask him for his codice fiscale. He also didn’t have one. They decided they needed a teacher more than they needed to obey the law of the land.

These schools also provide a convenient introduction to future private students. The furbo, or more clever, students are there to audition private instructors, who they can then hire for private classes. By removing the middleman, students pay half what the schools demand, and teachers can double their salary. As there is a revolving door of both students and teachers, I didn’t feel too guilty when I departed with a handful of students in tow.

GOING INTO PRIVATE PRACTICE
Which brings us to what I believe is the optimal option; building a steady stream of private students. The going rate is 18.50 euro an hour, tax free, students typically come to you, talk for an hour, pay, and leave. You can schedule classes Tuesday through Thursday, leaving four glorious responsibility- free days for travel and exploring, thereby ensuring the best of both worlds, making enough to support yourself, but working just enough so that it doesn’t actually feel like work. I set up shop in my miniscule one-bedroom apartment, and we sit around my cleared off kitchen table. Each student is operating at a different level, and I plan each lesson accordingly. I use the Headway textbooks, which are available at Feltrinelli, the local international bookstore, with my beginner and intermediate students. With my advanced students, I gauge their interests during the first class, and then select a newspaper or magazine article, which I think they will like. I build our hour-long class around reading the article, which enables them to practice their pronunciation, discussion, and a short writing assignment on a theme related to the day’s topic.

Beginner students are more difficult to work with, and here I feel that it is essential to have both knowledge of their native language and the mechanics of teaching ESL. Otherwise, you’re doing them a disservice, and they will pick up on it fairly quickly and move on. Many universities offer introductory Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) courses. Check out the course offerings at TEFLInternational.com, TEFL.com, and TEFLworldwideprague.com. There are hundreds of on-line courses and location-specific courses offered everywhere from Rome to Bali that offer TEFL certification for $295 to $1,500.

Private lessons require patience. Students do not materialize overnight. You need to make signs, post them in the international bookstore, cafes, and local shops. The bulletin boards at the local hospital are another good bet since all Italian doctors have to learn English to present papers at international conferences. I recommend putting some effort into your sign. Most signs are plain, simply listing basic contact information. I decided to play up that I was offering American English, and by using clipart featuring Americana such as Marilyn, Elvis, a baseball player, the Hollywood sign, and the Statue of Liberty, I created a simple but eye catching flyer to hang up around town. Also the longer you stay in one place, the more students will find you. After establishing an easygoing rapport with my local fruttivendolo, she asked me to come by once a week to tutor her daughter who is preparing for her college entrance exams.

AND THE STUDENT BECOMES THE MASTER
Going from the security of a 9-5 job to the structured schedule provided by the English learning centers to freelance freedom can be a risky endeavor, but the payoffs are well worth it. I now have the extra cash and flexibility to afford to live (rent, food, shoes) and travel. It also doesn’t take long for students to meld into actual friends, leading to invitations to grab a beer and watch a football match at the local pub, after hours so to speak., Also, in exchange for mastering the intricacies associated with phrasal verbs and the infinitive of purpose, my students enthusiastically teach me how to appreciate the rhythms of life in the Veneto. That’s a lesson you can’t get for only 18.50 euro an hour!

LOWDOWN: MONTHLY BREAKDOWN OF COSTS

  • RENT: 350-450 euro
  • UTILITIES: 50-70 euro(sometime separate, sometimes included in rent)
  • DSL: 35-65 euro
  • CELL PHONE (required Italian accessory): 50 euro
  • GREAT FOOD & FINE WINES: 150-200 euro
  • LIVING LA DOLCE VITA (or, sweet life, for you English learners) IN ITALY: PRICELESS (shameless appropriation of corporate slogan, but true)

    Illustration by Bonnie Yoon

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