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Teaching English in QatarBack to Tefl World

Over the last few decades Qatar has made a concerted effort to provide a world-class educational environment for its people and so has many attractive contracts for TEFL teachers.  As with other countries in the Gulf region,  the tax-free salary* lures teachers who couldn’t dream of earning the same amount at home.  The capital city Doha has a wide range of organizations you can join such as the rugby and sailing clubs as well as the Hash Harriers or Natural History Society which may help explain why a lot of teachers stay for year upon year.

*Unfortunately, this does not apply to Canadians who are taxed at home, but often the salary factors this in to the final package.

Capital
Doha
Currency
Rial
Area Code
974
Languages
Arabic (official), English commonly used as a second language

Blogs

TEFL in Qatar: an interview with a teacher working in Doha Tuesday 04 Jul 2017

Have you ever thought about going to Qatar to teach, or perhaps return there after a few years working elsewhere?  One of our team, who spent three years in Doha, caught up with a former colleague who is still working over there to see how things have changed.  We discuss some of the most common questions raised about life for TEFL teachers in Qatar and the changes which have occurred over the last few years.


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My Worst First Day of Teaching at a New School Monday 03 Feb 2020

When I think of my worst first day of teaching at a new school my only consolation is that it is unlikely that I’ll have a worse experience in the same situation.  A cohort of native English-speaking language teachers and myself had just arrived in a Gulf state at the beginning of the second semester to enhance the English teaching at high schools for boys throughout the country.  On the plane over I’d opened my Lonely Planet guide for the first time and read that my destination city was described as the most boring place on Earth – not a good start.  Then, on the inset day before the students returned, my British colleague had an anaphylactic shock after eating something we’d been promised didn’t contain nuts – he almost died. 


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TEFL in the Middle East: an interview with a teacher who has worked all over the Arabian Gulf Friday 12 Aug 2016

Have you considered working in the Middle East, particularly in the Arabian Gulf?  Adverts encouraging tourists to visit the area show images of amazing shopping centres, beautiful beaches lined with palm trees, four-wheel-drive vehicles hurtling up and down huge sand dunes, and usually someone with a falcon on his arm gazing over a spectacular desert sunset.  But what’s it really like?  Here we interview a British teacher, Dave, and ask him for his reflections on working in countries around the Gulf. 


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English teaching organisations in Qatar

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