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  1. The only job you can get in South Korea as a foreigner with no Korean language skills is teaching English, and, in order to legally teach English, you need a four year college degree. Even if you speak fluent Korean, it is tough to get a job without at least a four year degree. Korea is very anti-immigration and pro higher education. You have to have one of those legal gigs in order to on-line a half decent life there, the more grey-area, tutoring type jobs make the government paperwork murky and only really work for people who have another person's income/residency to lean on (the person “moves” there on a tourist visa and lives with family or a significant other, and gets a little bit of money from hustling grey market side-gigs.)

    Besides all that, the working environment in South Korea suuuuuucks. You are expected to work way more than 40 hours, the managerial system is hierarchical and unyielding, and you will be pushed around and expected to be very prolific, work-wise. If she's never worked before (and can't even get it together enough to finish an American four year college degree in a decent amount of time) she is going to be in for a shock. In unlikely event that you make it there, she is going to haaaaaate it, I can guarantee it. Don't move there because she's insisting that will be the only way she will get a job, because I'm sure she won't be working to any significant degree for very long.

    It seems like she is unhappy with her life and has set her mind on this idea that the “problem” is her location rather than it being an internal issue. Everyone is responsible for their own happiness. Putting the child in language school so you can lean on them in a new country you want to move to for nebulous reasons is wrong as hell. If I were you, I wouldn't support this idea, but you can also challenge her to write down a workable, realistic plan for how she will make this happen, in order to get an idea of how much research she's actually done into the realities of relocating.

    I doubt she has any practical knowledge of what life for a foreigner actually looks like there, but I also doubt that will change anything. You may have to put your foot down in this one, or, if it looks like she'll never finish school, it may just peter out and (best case scenario) be one of those annoying conversational quirks you have to online with forever.

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