Our Japanese au pairs!

As I mentioned, now you can see our Japanese au pairs on InterExchange Au Pair USA’s public website without applying as a host family. You don’t need to commit to be a host family, yet can see au pairs, actually, ALL currently available au pairs right now through the public web site.

The screenshot of the available au pairs page is below:

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The page includes au pair’s photo, childcare hours, driving experience, swimming level and a brief introduction.

When you are interested in several au pairs, then, you can sign-up, but you still don’t need to pay application fee at this point. As a fact, you don’t have any financial obligation until you are matched with an au pair.

So, please start reviewing au pairs, of course, I will have to say Japanese au pairs.

More Japanese au pairs will be added on the page in shortly.

Now our Japanese au pairs are on InterExchange’s public website

How was your summer?  Now 2016-2017 academic year has started.

Today, I would like to announce our partner, InterExchange Au Pair USA’s updates on their public website.

Now, you can review shorter profiles of ALL au pairs from featured au pairs page.  If you would like to review detailed information, then you can create an account with InterExchange as a host family with no financial obligation.

For example, to see our available Japanese au pairs, you can simply go to InterExchange Au Pair USA’s public website (interexhange.org), and click host an au pair. Now, you will see the featured au pairs link.  If you want to see Japanese au pairs, select language as Japanese, then, Japanese speakers will be appeared on the screen.  You may even sort the au pairs by age, childcare hours, driving experience, or earliest arrival month!  It is great!!

Hope this will help you find an excellent au pair for you.

 

Introducing Mai, Japanese au pair to you!

Mai is a 26 years old Japanese au pair with a unique background. Mai was born in the Philippines. Her father is Japanese and mother is from the Philippines. Her family moved to Japan when Mai finished elementary school. Since then, Mai has been in Japan and now she is fluent in Japanese, English and a local language in the Philippines. Not only speaking fluently in those languages, she read, write, and understand in Japanese and English.

Mai enrolled a four year university in Osaka, Japan and majored in English. She experienced studying abroad in Oklahoma for one semester and also went to Canada for working holiday program. She is active and love sports.

As for childcare experiences, Mai has been working part time as a baby sitter for few years. One of her clients are from overseas, so they speak in English.

Mai is currently also working at a moving company, and she started driving at work from this year. Obviously, she is comfortable driving.

If you are interested in our Japanese au pair, Mai, please do not hesitate to contact us. You may check our currently available au pairs.
The full list of our available Japanese au pairs can be viewed upon signing up as a host family with InterExchange Au Pair USA’s website without any financial obligation.

What to ask to Japanese au pairs?

When you have an interview with a prospective au pair, you may have already prepared some questions. I would like to suggest several questions you may want to ask when you talk with Japanese au pairs.

1: In addition to asking the au pair’s childcare experiences, ask if she/he has siblings.
I do agree the longer their childcare hours are, the better. But you may also want to find out au pairs have siblings and she/he has been getting used to taking care of her/his brothers and sisters. Living in a bigger family and experienced watching their siblings are practical experiences. If they have several siblings, they normally good listeners, and they are getting used to do some house rolls.

In Japan, many families have only 1 child or maybe two nowadays. But somehow people who want to be au pairs tend to be raised in big families. Since they grew up in a big family, they naturally like kids and good at being with children. Therefore, they think becoming an pair is very attractive.

2: Ask if she/he likes traveling alone.
You may be surprised to hear, but it is common that Japanese nationals live with their parents’ houses even after they graduated from universities or started working as professionals. I, too, went to my university from my parents’s house. I left there when I had a career, but it was physically impossible for me to commute.
You can still see if the au pair you are talking with is independent or not by asking if she/he likes to travel alone. I see many au pairs living with their parents, but love to travel by themselves within Japan or overseas. People who love to travel by themselves do not hesitate asking questions, tend to go out and find friends, and tend to adjust themselves quicker. If they love to travel overseas by themselves, they normally have minimum skills or survival English skills and therefore, they improve English faster.

3: Being silent also means something.
Japanese people tend to think carefully before saying something. We have learned the beauty of silence when we were child. I think it is influenced by ZEN culture. I learned over the years by living in North America, people here normally do not like silence. People in North America tend to think if somebody does not say anything, that means the person is bad or does not have any idea. In Japanese culture, silence has meaning. Silence means people are thinking carefully, organizing their ideas before speaking.

I tell my au pairs that try not to make excessive silence (maybe more than few seconds) when they speak with prospective host families. Yet, you may face a situation that you will have to be bit patient before Japanese au pairs speaking up. Please tolerate few seconds and they will answer.

Japanese au pairs may shy in the beginning. But they are all passionate about becoming au pairs. Let’s have interviews with Japanese au pairs!