Archive for Greek language schools

The importance of speaking Greek in Greece

Learning Greek is key to finding a job in Greece, true or false? This is both true and false.

True

Speaking several languages, including the local one, will make you more attractive to an employer on paper and in person. It is good business sense to hire someone who can speak to everyone, rather than someone who is limited to communicating with only a few. Even employers offering summer jobs in tourist spots prefer people who are bilingual in Greek.

Reading, writing and speaking Greek will undoubtedly increase your chances of finding work, simply because the whole job market is open to you and make you more competitive. It will help you stay in your field and perhaps even get you a position on par with the level you attained back in your homeland, instead of settling for less.

Lastly, although being fluent or proficient in Greek does not guarantee you a higher salary, it gives you the power to negotiate a salary, rather than allowing your employer to use it as leverage to pay you less.

False

While learning Greek, even at a basic level, will help you in everyday activities and make your transition smoother without being dependent on others for help, I and several people I know can attest that it is not necessary in finding some jobs.

There are programmers/technicians at IT companies, secretaries at Greek and multinational companies, editors and proofreaders at publishing houses and ELT schools, tourist industry workers, administrators at universities, some teachers of English, personal assistants to Greek professionals — all of them do not speak Greek at a fluent or even basic level because their company has a UK, German, Spanish, American or otherwise non-Greek speaking clientele or industry focus.

A significant drawback is that the entire job market is not open to you, in fact you won’t even be able to read the majority of newspaper ads/classifieds without knowing some Greek. The good jobs for native speakers of another language without fluency in Greek have no turnover and come available once in a blue moon, only to be filled through connections or recommendations by relatives or friends without ever being advertised.

Vacancies that open up more often or continuously advertised in “foreigner” newspapers are usually less than desirable jobs with high turnover. There is a reason. These companies count on the fact there is a continuous supply of non-EU citizens who will work illegally, accept a lower salary, cannot demand IKA (insurance) and bonuses (Easter, summer and Christmas), work unpaid overtime and settle for being treated poorly or exploited in other ways out of fear of being fired or otherwise unemployed.

You may be fine with that as a means to stay here and support yourself, but your life and career will rarely advance beyond these “recycled” jobs into a more professional realm. Those who aren’t picky and enjoy routine and stability may find this just fine; others seeking growth and opportunity should know that your career will top out very quickly without connections.

And if you one day intend to return to your homeland or migrate to another country, a prospective employer may not be sympathetic about your job situation in Greece, and it will be difficult for you to regain the position you once held.

Contrary to popular belief that international experience is looked upon favorably, I’ve found that many multinational companies see you as unstable, unfocused or a flight risk (aka, you’ll leave again), unless the move abroad was for good reason — company transfer, family reasons or accepting a golden job opportunity with a recognized brand, institution or NGO. Many well-known job agencies I consulted in New York, Stockholm, Madrid and Miami say that it’s often better to leave this period off a CV if there is no significant or related experience to contribute, as it will only raise suspicion.

In Life

It is a widely held belief that most Greeks speak English and Greece caters to an English speaking population. That’s both true and false. In affluent areas, larger towns and areas frequented by tourists, many know some English, especially younger people. However, you will still find a lot of ATMs without the option for English even in big cities, 95 percent of bureaucratic forms are in Greek, and government Web sites offer slimmed down versions of their Greek counterpart. Further, public sector offices (dimos, eforia, nomarxeia, IKA, OAED, etc.) are staffed by people who will insist on speaking Greek, except in rare instances.

There are people who live here for years without bothering to learn Greek even at a basic level and do fine. They congregate with people speaking the same language or multilingual Greeks, manage OK at the grocery store and are dependent on a friend, girl/boyfriend, spouse, child or lawyer to do the translating and bureaucratic legwork for them. Greece remains a mysterious stranger to them.*

That’s fine, I suppose, but I’ve found that having even a basic command of Greek does wonders. With some grasp of the language, independence and confidence replace isolation and fear, knowledge chips away at ignorance, and closed doors inch open. You feel like a functioning adult again with a full life instead of a helpless child, and Greece feels more like home than a foreign country.

Learning Greek isn’t the easiest thing in the world, but it’s not the most difficult either.

* Getting familiar with Greece using wisdom from this site does not count as knowing something or having your own first-hand experience.

Jump start your job search

You can start your job search with the links I’ve provided in the third column by scrolling down to the heading “Jobs, Homes and Auto Ads in Greece” and clicking anything that interests you.

Many sites are bilingual with the best jobs usually listed in Greek.

Related posts

Common jobs for Americans/non-EU citizens in Greece

Free Greek language lessons

Why don’t you speak Greek fluently?
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Why don’t you speak Greek fluently?

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A question I get a lot is, “you’ve been in Greece for 10 years, why don’t you speak Greek fluently?”

According to these niche groups, the answer is:

a) Greek men: Greek is a rich, but difficult language. (I agree with the rich part, but that’s no excuse)
b) Greek women: You do not have confidence to speak. (That’s funny)
c) People back home: You must be lazy or something. (No natural talent in the area of languages like my friend Ti who speaks 12 languages, but lazy…no)
d) Friends of all nationalities: Who cares? You already know English, French and Spanish, that’s enough!

The real answer is none of the above.

From nothing

When I first arrived a decade ago, there were no relatives to give me a home and support me financially, nor were free Greek lessons being offered. I did not have a boyfriend/husband, a permit or a work contract. That means I stayed in a cheap hotel, then invested my savings in securing an apartment (deposit and rent), a few basic essentials (pots/pans, cleaning supplies) and a 220V radio to hear some music.

I signed up for basic Greek lessons at a rate of 575 euros for 60 hours, a considerable amount of money, even by today’s standards with the majority of university educated people my age earning only 700 - 800 euros. How is it possible to pay rent, electric, phone, food and transportation in addition to 575 euros in Greek lessons on only 700 - 800 euros? I don’t know.

My classmates were nothing like me. A German boyfriend of a Greek woman, a diplomat’s wife, an English retiree, Swedes on paid sabbatical, spoiled American teenagers and a pregnant woman from Yugoslavia married to a rich Greek citizen. I was the only person with a need to find work and a permit.

Although I felt learning Greek was crucial to my success — and Kyria Rosa was the best teacher I’ve ever had (she’s mentioned in “Dinner with Persephone” on page 216) — it was also clear that survival was a higher priority with money running out. Empty interviews, “Brits only” rules and canceled appointments to teach English and Internet savvy to business professionals forced me to accept bar work on a faraway island where I at least had free shelter, food and a little money.

The unexpected

I returned to California for a family emergency with the money I’d saved, worked two full-time jobs while there and returned to Athens when things were clear for another go. Enrolling in Level 2, I also found full-time work and tried to balance this with lessons and homework. Since the salary was not enough to pay basic expenses and support Greek lessons, I took a second job to compensate. By the end of Level 3, it became too much to the point I only slept 3 hours a night and needed to quit.

At around the same time, there was a domino effect. My boss failed to draw up the necessary papers to finalize my contract, I became illegal and then he refused to pay me because he knew I had no legal standing to complain to the labor board. My boyfriend flew into a jealous rage after stalking and seeing me talk to another man who was a friend, broke into the house, stole my remaining money and a bunch of other things to sell, then flooded my apartment by leaving the bathtub running. I cleaned everything up, accepted a job in Sweden to pay my rent while gone and returned to find my landlord had changed the locks and rented my apartment to someone else using my things. I fled this apartment and filed a lawsuit against my landlord for the rent and deposit he owed and the things he stole. To pay the lawyer, I accepted a job in New York and came back to Greece to try again, only to get robbed within five days of arrival…OK, well you get the idea. No need for me to drone on if I haven’t already. ;)

Aside from survival, not being in Greece for continuous periods and unexpected drama, my jobs have entailed speaking and writing native English perfectly. It’s the primary reason I’m hired. My colleagues are fellow expats or Greeks speaking highly proficient English, and this has been true of my Greek friends and boyfriends.

It’s also about employers and money. My bosses often refuse to give me IKA, which means I pay for my own insurance (ensima) costing upwards of 250 euros/month to retain my residence/work permit. And because I’m a single woman, I’m seen as needing less money for equal work and am told to find myself a husband to relieve any financial burden. To prove my point, a single American male co-worker hired at the same time doing the same job earned 300 euros more.

Always learning

The opportunity to truly practice Greek came after I intentionally moved myself to a predominantly Greek neighborhood where no one spoke English and choosing to deal with bureaucracy myself, instead of hiring someone to help. Whatever Greek I know is because of my choices, not because I’ve had a measly 120 hours of Greek lessons over 6 months.

In finally settling into a legal salaried job with IKA some years ago and having the time to take Greek lessons again, my Greek salary is not high enough (then or now) to pay my rent, electric, phone, food, transportation, water AND Greek lessons now costing 690 euros for 60 hours. I would need to earn 1400 euros/month to break even, and 1400 euros/mo is a near impossible salary to attain as a non-EU citizen without connections. As many of you know, the cost of Greek lessons alone is more than the minimum Greek salary of 668 euros. I might not be able to afford it, even if I lived at home with everything provided for me.

There are cheaper and free options. I’ve attended the cheaper ones and learned that you get what you pay for, and the free ones clash with a work schedule that my boss is unwilling to change. This works out fine because the class I need is available only once in a blue moon, so there is a huge waiting list and I haven’t been able to enroll for 2 years. Should the class ever open and I quit my job, then I no longer have the right to attend free classes because non-EU citizens require a residence/work permit to enroll; and in order to keep my residence/work permit, I must work. Friends mean well when they say they’ll help teach me, but they never do and have family, work and financial obligations of their own.

That’s OK, though. Even without fluency, I’m doing just fine with Level 3 Greek as my fourth language. I even manage to surprise the occasional Archbishop with Orthodox Christian greetings and scare off kamaki boys who think they’re hitting on a tourist. 8)

Related posts

The importance of speaking Greek in Greece
Free Greek language lessons
Conversations from my life as a foreigner in Greece that no speak good English

Photo: Nassau County Library
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Free Greek language lessons

The Ministry of Education’s Institute for Lifelong Education (IDEKE) offers free Greek language lessons (levels 1-4) to EU and non-EU immigrants at more than 40 56 locations around Greece.

After completing all four levels consisting of 100 150 hours instruction and passing a written and oral examination, successful students are issued a certificate that EU citizens can use to show proficiency and non-EU citizens need as one element to apply for a long-term EU-wide residence/work permit.

IDEKE classes are the only ones recognized by the government, although applicants who paid for lessons elsewhere can potentially skip to the appropriate level or get a certificate by testing out.

EU citizens need only show their passport, while non-EU citizens must show a valid residence/work permit and a letter from their employer certified by police. The yearly total enrollment limit — not for each class, not for each location, but for the whole lot — is only 3,000 students, so don’t be surprised if there is a waiting list.

Where to register for courses

In Athens:

Aigaleo
24 Mavromichali & Kountourioti
1st floor
Tel: (210) 598-0060
E-mail: kee-aigal@sch.gr

Halandri
Rizareios Ecclesiastic School
1 Rizari
Tel: 2106823964
E-mail: kee-hal@otenet.gr

Ilioupoli
521 Vouliagmenis Ave
5th Gymnasium, 3rd floor
Tel: (210) 996-0905
E-mail: keeili@otenet.gr

Kato Patissia
53 Dagkli Street
Tel: (210) 854-1078, (210) 854-0566
E-mail: kee.ath@ideke.edu.gr

Paiania
1 Ioannou Metaxa
Tel: 2106664788
E-mail: mail@keen-anatol.att.sch.gr

Piraeus
88 Tzavella Street
3rd floor
Tel: (210) 422-0056
E-mail: mail@keen-peiraia.att.sch.gr

Elsewhere on the Mainland

Amfissa
47 Flouriou
Tel: 22650-29308
E-mail: amfisa4@otenet.gr

Argos
29 Danaou Street
Tel: 27510-69131
E-mail: kee-arg@otenet.gr

Arta
Street of the Perifereia & Fleming
Tel: 26810-21453
E-mail: keeartas@otenet.gr

Drama
Prefecture building
1st Iouliou & Chrysovergi Corner
Tel: 25210-58313
E-mail: keedra@otenet.gr

Edessa
Nees Ergatikes Katoikies - Stasi Smareka
Tel: 23810-28842
E-mail: mail@keen-pellas.pel.sch.gr

Florina
111 Megalou Alexandrou Street
Tel: 23850-25133
E-mail: mail@keen.flo.sch.gr, keeflor@yahoo.gr

Grevena
End of K. Taliadouri Street
Prefecture Bldg
Tel: 24620-76520
E-mail: mail@keen.gre.sch.gr

Halkida
Karagianni & Antigonou
Tel: 22210-77724
E-mail: keeevia_@otenet.gr

Halkidiki
Emmanouil Pappa and Nikiforou Foka Streets
Polygyros
Tel: 23710-21772
E-mail: keehalk@otenet.gr

Igoumenitsa
8 Kyprou Street
Thesprotia
Tel: 26650-29024
E-mail: keethesp@otenet.gr

Ioannina
12 Stadiou and Tzavella Streets
Tel: 26510-65905
E-mail: keeioa@otenet.gr

Kalamata
129 Nedontos Street
Messinias
Tel: 27210-94236
E-mail: mail@keen-kalam.mes.sch.gr.

Karditsa
27 Allamani & Blatsouka
Tel: 24410-77614
E-mail: kee-kar@otenet.gr

Karpenisi
Next to OAED
Evrytanias
Tel: 22370-80894
E-mail: mail@keen.eyr.sch.gr

Kastoria
11 Megalou Alexandrou Street
Tel: 24670-22216
E-mail: keenkas@otenet.gr

Katerini
69 Irinis Street
Tel: 23510-25605
E-mail: mail@keen.pie.sch.gr

Kavala
Prefecture Bldg.
20 Eth. Antistaseos
Office 216 - 2nd floor
Tel: 25102-32481
E-mail: keekav@otenet.gr

Kilkis
27 Ag. Athanasiou
Tel: 23430-23556
E-mail: keekil@otenet.gr

Komotini
42 Irinis
Plateia Irinis
Rodopi
Tel: 25310-81809
E-mail: keekomo@otenet.gr

Korinthos
Anno Assos
Taxiarhon Street
Tel: 27410-89427
E-mail: mail@keen-korinth.kor.sch.gr

Kozani
1st km Ptolemaidas
Galatias National road
Voulgari Bldg
Tel: 24630-55709
E-mail: mail@keen.koz.sch.gr

Lamia
154 Leof. Kalyvion
Tel: 22310-31163
E-mail: keelam@otenet.gr

Larisa
2 Aiolou Street
Tel: 2410-555247
E-mail: mail@keen.lar.sch.gr

Megara
1 Mouseiou - Ground floor
Tel: 22960-81018
E-mail: keedytat@otenet.gr

Mesolongi
3 Favrou Street
Tel: 26310-55386
E-mail: mail@keen-mesol.ait.sch.gr

Οrchomenos
Municipal Office
Tel: 2261035122
E-mail: mail@keen.voi.sch.gr

Orestiada
Evros
9-11 Vas Konstantinou Street
Tel: 25520-22224
E-mail: kee-evr@sch.gr

Patra
Pontou & Kalavryton Streets
Tel: 2610317236
E-mail: kee_ach@otenet.gr

Preveza
Kolokotroni Street - 2nd Eniaio Lykeio
Area of the Hospital
Tel: 2682089449
E-mail: keepre@otenet.gr

Pyrgos
Ilias, Petropoulou and Patron Streets
New town hall
Tel: 26210-36001
E-mail: keeil@otenet.gr

Serres
11 Dytikis Thrakis & Avdiron
Tel: 23210-97520
E-mail: kekser@otenet.gr

Sparti
Lakonia
13 Aikaterini Grigoriou Street
Tel: 27310-25475
E-mail: mail@keen-lak.lak.sch.gr

Thessaloniki
8 Ethnikis Amynis
Tel: 2310219939
E-mail: keenthe@sch.gr

Thessaloniki
33 Elpidos
Tel: 2310-587004
E-mail: keepol@otenet.gr

Trikala
31 Valaoritou Street
3rd gymnasium
Tel: 24310-27790
E-mail: mail@keen-trikal.tri.sch.gr

Tripoli
22 Elef. Venizelou Street
Tel: 2710-232524
E-mail: kee-ark@sch.gr

Veria
12 Olganou Street
Imathias
Tel: 23310-75330
E-mail: keenima@otenet.gr

Volos
Cheironos & Anapavseos Streets
Magnesia
Tel: 24210-24167
E-mail: keemagv@otenet.gr

Xanthi
44 Plateia Emporiou
25410-83143
E-mail: keexan@otenet.gr

On the islands:

Chios
George Kaloutas Centre
Kampos
Tel: 22710-81615
E-mail: keechiou@otenet.gr

Corfu (Kerkyra)
Alykes River
Regional Periferia building
Tel: 26610-23345
E-mail: keekerk@otenet.gr

Crete
Hania
32 Giaboudaki
Tel: 28210-72707
E-mail: keexania@otenet.gr

Crete
Ag. Nikolaos
Xirokampos - 2nd Gymnasium
Tel: 28410-25719
E-mail: keelas@otenet.gr

Crete
Nea Alikarnassos
13 Dionysiou
Tel: 28102-44500
E-mail: keeirakl@otenet.gr

Crete
Rethymno
Pl. Pigis
Tel: 28310-71454
E-mail: kee-reth@otenet.gr

Kefallonia
9 Pl. Vallianou
Prefecture Office - Ground floor
Argostoli
Tel: 26710-25402
E-mail: mail@keen.kef.sch.gr

Lefkada
11 Kapodistriou
Tel: 26450-23494
E-mail: keelefk@otenet.gr

Lesvos
Mytilini
2 Vournazon Street
2nd floor
Tel: 22510-47633
E-mail: keelesvo@otenet.gr

Rhodes
102 Anno Damaskinou Street
Tel: 22410-31727
E-mail: keerodos@otenet.gr

Syros
2 D. Vafeiadaki
Ermoupoli
Tel: 2281089224
E-mail: keekykl@otenet.gr

Want to see it in Greek?

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Go to their website at IDEKE.

What’s on the final test?

According to the Athens News, the final exams are held twice yearly in February and October; those who don’t pass the first time can retake the exam for an undetermined fee. The test is “transparent” and consists of two sections and their respective parts.

Section 1

Part I: Reading comprehension
- Demonstrate the ability to comprehend simple texts from everyday life, such as announcements, instructions and directions
- Match a photograph or illustration with the appropriate written description

Part II: Aural Language
- Listen to recorded dialogue and match answers to pictures

Part III: Basic Writing Skills
- Write short paragraphs
- Fill in a mock application form with personal details
- Write a complaint
- Describe a daily event

Part IV: Knowledge of Greek history and culture
- Answer questions about basic historical events and culture
(Format is unknown)

Section 2

Active dialogue/conversation with a proctor consisting of questions about work/studies, describing a person or objects familiar to the applicant.

* I do not have a copy of the test and am under the impression there are different versions, in addition to variations depending on the proctor.

Related posts

The importance of speaking Greek in Greece
Why don’t you speak Greek fluently?
Conversations from my life as a foreigner in Greece

Article last updated February 17, 2008