School backgroundSchool image

Teach at Sarasas Pittaya School in Thailand

Map pin iconThailand
World iconK-12 School
Building iconPrivate school
Close Icon
Check iconInternationally accredited
Close Icon
Check iconInternationally accredited

Latest teaching jobs at Sarasas Pittaya School in Thailand

Megaphone icon
Stay tuned for new positions at Sarasas Pittaya School. In the meantime, check out our job board for more teaching jobs worldwide.
Megaphone icon
Stay tuned for new positions at Sarasas Pittaya School. In the meantime, check out our job board for more teaching jobs worldwide.

About Sarasas Pittaya School

Sarasas PittayaSchool is a private Thai school of 3,000 Thai-Chinese Buddhist students from pre-Kindergarten to Grade 12. The Bilingual Programme is taught by Foreigners and English by Native English Speakers and mirrors what is taught by Thai teachers. We also have a Thai Normal Programme where the students are taught all their subjects by Thai teachers. We were established as the founding school in 1964 of the Sarasas Affiliated Group of schools, the number of which to date is 37.

There is no need by a Foreigner to know or use Thai in a bilingual classroom. We follow the Thai National Curriculum as laid down by our Ministry of Education andrequire staff to have a degree and possibly a qualification in the teaching of English together with some teaching experience.

Sarasas Pittaya School contact information

Address: 376 Sathupradit Road,, Bangkok, Bangkok, 10120, Thailand
Phone: +66 81 751 4769

Thailand at a glance

Country information

Capital: Bangkok

Language: Thai

Population: 66,720,153 (20th)

Currency: Baht (THB)

Government: Unitary Parliamentary Constitutional Monarchy

Major Religion(s): Theravada Buddhism

Climate: Tropical

Country quick facts

Checkmark Small Icon
Thailand holds more Guiness World Records per person than any other country.
Checkmark Small Icon
Not wearing underwear is illegal.
Checkmark Small Icon
The famous energy drink Red Bull originated in Thailand.
Checkmark Small Icon
Instead of 3 times a day, Thais eat 4-5 times a day
Checkmark Small Icon
Thailand houses the world’s largest fish, the 12-meter Rhincodon typus.
Checkmark Small Icon
A nuclear family in Thailand is rare because most people live in large extended families.
Checkmark Small Icon
One-tenth of all animal species on Earth live in Thailand.
Want to become a licensed teacher

Earn a US teaching license with our Teacher Certification Program (TCP).