To be qualified to be a French Teacher most schools will require that you have the proper teaching credentials, be certified to teach, and have at least a Bachelor's degree. Since yo are wanting to teach a specific language the school might require that you also have a degree in the language. Though living abroad in France is good for the experience, you still need the credentials.
There are English teachers in France. But every teacher in France has to obtain a certificate, for which it is necessary to speak correctly French. So it is exact to say that there are few foreign teachers, but French teachers abroad aren't not that much either.
That's abroad if you're living in another country. That's home for the French.
French legionnaires are very often deployed abroad, but their barracks are located in France and they are free to go anywhere in France. For foreign-born legionnaires, a residency permit is issued by the state.
If you have a degree and TEFL qualification you will be able to teach English abroad. In many places you do not need a TEFL qualification. You don't in most of Northeast Asia. If you're considering teaching in Asia check out The Starters Guide...
The French and the English were some of the first people that started settlements abroad
"Credit argicole ile de france" is a bank account in France. It has a network of ATM machines to make withdrawal and payment in France and abroad, it also provides one with a French chequebook.
Henry VIII went abroad when he attended the famous ' Field of the Cloth of Gold' near Calais in northern France, in order to have philosophical discussions with the French King, Francis I, and to see whether France was an Ally or an enemy. He also went abroad to France to fight against them.
French people mainly take their holidays ... in France. So do about 80 million people visiting France every year (maybe partly due to the affordable costs of visiting: France is ranked only 9th for the revenue generated from tourism, despite being the world's most visited country). That said, a good number of French people also like to take a holiday abroad, to get a change of scene, to be confronted with new cultures, or to enjoy the sun while it is winter at home.
The French Foreign Legion enlists after fitness and health tests. They do not recruit from abroad and applicants are asked to come to France first to take the tests. They French Foreign Legion do not concern themselves with your legal status, except that it gives an accepted applicant legal status here.
There are a very large amount of schools that can arrange for you to study abroad in France. The University of Minnesota, Morris is an excellent public liberal arts college that has an international exchange program. American InterContinental University will arrange everything for a student to study abroad in France. Arcadia offers great study abroad programs with tons of help for students that are interested.
Basically no,
French citizenship is relatively easy to claim when you are born from at least one French parent - even if you're not born in France. A good time to do so is when reaching 18 (age of majority in France) If your father is living abroad (from France), the simplest way to claim french nationality is to go to the French Consulate. At that stage he wil be asked to fill in some forms and constitute a dossier which will include some proof of the French citizenship of his own mother, identification documents and lineage.