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I appreciate your assistance in this matter.
It's strange that they would include kindy's in those regulations, and that is not what I've heard from every immigration source. Not doubting your answer, just theirs. It's too bad they don't put it in print anywhere online. If there is such a source please put the link in any reply you might give.
I would like to ask a clarification question regarding your response. Are you including tutoring under the term 'teaching' position' ? According to the Educational Board a Native Speaker F2 who graduated high school can home tutor if you bring them your diploma. Am I misinformed in this? The only other jobs are the entertainment or physical labor jobs I have been doing, however you are quite often taken for granted and mistreated and I'd like to know all my options.
Why do the regulations seem to be different for foreign women who marry Korean men? They appear to be enforced much differently in my experience. They seem to be able to legally do many more jobs than men married to Korean women are, regardless of qualifications. This may be because more women change their citizenship to Korean than men do. Which brings up my last question. Why does Korea not allow foreigners to hold dual citizenship as do many other countries in the world?
If I wish to be able to do more jobs legally in Korea, I'd have to change my citizenship to Korean and send my Country of Birth a paper denying my citizenship, which I am definitely not going to do.
Thank you to you and your staff. |
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