I applied through other source. The process took 6 days. I interviewed at Mount Pisgah Christian School (Seoul)
Interview
This is MountPisgah located in Korea. A private English school. The owner cold called me asking if I am interested. He was looking for a person with good scholarship and who speaks English. Interview was no use once he decides he likes the candidate.
I applied online. I interviewed at Mount Pisgah Christian School in Jan 2016
Interview
Quick phone interview question about skills and routine. Unfortunately I was asked about faith. Even though the interviewer tried to dance around what was really being asked, its flat out illegal. Also you will be "encouraged"/required to teach a class. Check the job description and see if teaching a class is mentioned. Offered in person interview, declined the offer.
I applied online. The process took 3 weeks. I interviewed at Mount Pisgah Christian School (Alpharetta, GA) in Mar 2015
Interview
I was called for a phone screening interview which lasted around 30 minutes, where I was asked about my faith mostly. After this, I was contacted by email for an in-person interview. The day started with a greeting from student life coordinator which lasted about 30 minutes. From there, I taught a lecture for 50 minutes. Lunch with the science department followed, which was fun, but also a fairly rigorous interview process. From there, 30 minutes with the head of upper school who seemed no less than 100% certain I would be getting an offer, and soon. After this, back for another talk with the student life coordinator and the upper school dean (~30 min). From there, on to the assistant head of school for about 30 minutes. Overall, the interviewing and talking with faculty was very enjoyable, and I felt positive coming away from it all, and it seemed as though it was mutual. After this, I heard nothing back from them until I inquired by email where I was told that another candidate was found which was better suited to their school.
Interview questions [1]
Question 1
If you are approached by a student who has borderline faith, and asked "As a scientist, how can you believe in God when science has proven that He doesn't exist?"