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TEFL Peru
TEFL course and TEFL Jobs in Peru
The Spaniards’ first impressions of Peru, when they sailed down
its coast for the first time in 1528, were of barren beaches and man-eating
savages. It was not until they began their now-legendary journey to
the interior, through ochre desert and lush river valleys, up and over
snowy passes, and into the sublime, magical realm of the altiplano that
they realized what they had stumbled upon: a people every bit as advanced
as the ancient Egyptians, with the most intricate stone construction
in the history of the world and an abundance of what the Spaniards most
wanted: gold. In Cusco, the capital of the Inca empire, the Spaniards
found miniature gold figurines in the shape of jungle insects, 4-inch-thick
temple walls made of gold, shields and vases and even hand plows -
all made of gold.
The TEFL course takes place in Cusco, which today is the primary destination
for nine out of ten travelers to Peru. The school that offers the TEFL
is a state-of-the-art facility with modern technology and a complete
library of resources for TEFL teachers. Demand for English teachers
in Cusco is high.
In Cusco, you can wander the city’s cobblestone streets, marvel
at the Spanish colonial cathedral and monasteries built atop massive
Inca walls, eat alpaca steaks and fat ears of sweet corn and stroll
around the main squares in the evenings. Nearby but reachable only by
train - or by multi-day trek along the world-famous Inca Trail
- is the other world of the Incas: Machu Picchu, the mountaintop
city on the edge of the Amazon jungle. The lowland Amazon jungle is
a 45-minute plane ride form Cusco.
Despite four centuries of Spanish domination, Cusco remains in a tug-of-war
between Spanish and Inca cultures. Though the Spaniards destroyed the
Inca buildings in an act of domination, they had enough common sense
to leave many of the bulging, seamless stone walls as foundations. These
walls line many of Cusco’s narrow cobblestone alleys, which thread
among the many baroque churches and convents the Spaniards built here.
Part of Cusco’s power, and a reason visitors linger here, is the
uneasy cultural tension evident in places like Coricancha and even hotel
lobbies, where seamless Inca walls are nestled incongruously among arcades
of Spanish arches.
Cusco is at 3,400 meters (11,150 feet), and most people who arrive
here feel some form of soroche, or altitude sickness, which can range
from a headache and the chills to more serious ailments. The best plan
is to visit the Sacred Valley, 2,000 feet lower than Cusco, early in
a Cusco visit in order to help the acclimatization process.
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Every
month around 30,000 people visit the site, apply for
a TEFL course and start a new life teaching TEFL abroad! Find
out more about their experiences.
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Welcome to Cactus TEFL, the advice and admissions service for TEFL courses around the world.
By providing information and prices for all TEFL course formats, we remain deliciously impartial and are ready to listen to your individual aspirations and advise you accordingly.
Use this site to compare prices, download an application form and apply directly, and then to find a TEFL job. Remember we're really people behind a website, so call us to chat about your TEFL or gap year dreams! |
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