I hope you are comfortable singing and dancing and always being cheerful. You will be every bit as much the charatcter of an English teacher as you would be if you were inside a Mickey costume. They have a method, and, reading between the lines, they expect you to put on a certain kind of face at all times. My understanding is that If you break character at Disney, you get fired pretty fast. I would hope they are more lenient with English teachers, but I would not be surprised if they have not industrialized English teaching the same as they industrialize cartoon character acting. That is their culture.
The main impression I get is that you have to convey a sense of wonder at all moments. That is the Disney way. It’s not bad, but it’s not something I could maintain. A sense of wonder is important, but it should be real, not acted. Now you can fake it til you make it, and I have pretended wonder in order to feel it, but like I said, doing that all the time would get old so fast, I’d turn into David Sedaris.
But if you can stand that, then I say go for it. Living in China is quite the experience. My sister has been doing it for over a decade. She’s traveled all over the country, from TIbet to Mongolia, Uigur to Shanghai, Chengdu to god knows where. She loves it. But then, she’s free to do what she wants. She is self-employed. All she has to do is stay on this side of the Chinese censors.
The standards are hygiene are different. It’s very crowded. The houses are smaller and crammed close together and loud. If you don’t speak the language you’ll need to learn to speak and read if you want to feel any ease in getting around.
But it will be a wonderful thing to live there, and if you make friends, that’ll be even better. Let us know if you apply and if you are hired.