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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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htrain
Joined: 24 May 2007
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:07 pm Post subject: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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Let me open by saying I'm not trying to create another thread where people end up dissing each other and resort to name calling. This is a genuine question I have been thinking about for over a month.
First off:
I have worked in all three. I find a very interesting dichotomy here between lowly-hagwon workers (hogwon hogs) and public school teachers. PS teachers tend to assert that their job is better and more important. Then we have university jobs. The people in uni positions claim they are in the best situation because they get the most vacation time and teach the least amount of classes.
When I worked at a uni in China I found the students to be lazy and my job to be boring. When I taught public school I found my co-teachers to be OK at times, but I had plenty of lazy ones and plenty of out of control 40+student classes. Hagwons I have found to be fun and entertaining, offering a greater monthly wage, and more straight-forward.
I have a masters degree. I don't know which is the better option:
A.) Uni. 4-5 months off, 15 classes a week. More prep time, more meetings, higher standard, 2.0-2.2 mil won with no housing. Ie; 1.6-1.8 after housing.
B.) Public school. Similar vacation to a hagwon, 8:30-4:30 M-F and 2.3mil won with housing. Plenty of time to surf Dave's and plan classes.
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing.
I understand that uni offers tons of paid vacation, but I'm here to work and I don't like lots of time off. My uni friends find it hard to get extra jobs for 1 or 2 month periods unless the camps fit in perfectly. Some find they have little time to work extra classes because of their choppy schedules schedules and office time. Some work 9am-11am M-F and have heaps of time to work other jobs. I'm sure every uni is different, but this makes me wonder if the hagwon is the best place to be overall, depending of course upon your personal goals.
What's your opinion? |
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Major Kong
Joined: 29 Oct 2007 Location: South Korea
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:28 pm Post subject: |
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Resume wise, University. Life experience(character building), Public school. In retrospect(when you're really old), Hagwons, for the stories you can tell. |
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twg
Joined: 02 Nov 2006 Location: Getting some fresh air...
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:37 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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htrain wrote: |
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing. |
The way you described your options, this sounds like easier work for the same money and more benefits.
It's a no brainer, I figure. |
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the_beaver
Joined: 15 Jan 2003
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:38 pm Post subject: |
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A good, or decent, university. |
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esetters21
Joined: 30 Apr 2006 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:42 pm Post subject: |
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Ummm..well. I've only been here a couple of years and still work in a Hagwon .
Could I work in a public school or university job? Sure, I could. I was a graduate assistant teacher in graduate school in the geography, communications, economics, english, and planning departments in my time there. I taught public middle school at home as well after attaining my teaching certificate.
Although those uni and public school positions intrigue me a little here, I am basically happy enough where I am at this point in my life to keep teaching those little buggers in my hagwon. It comes down to your priorities and goals at this stage in your life. I'm not here to make as much money as I can; I guess is what I am trying to say. I am enjoying myself, and like to see the academic development of my students in my hagwon. |
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funinthesun
Joined: 16 Jul 2007
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 9:49 pm Post subject: |
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the_beaver wrote: |
A good, or decent, university. |
im in the epik program (public school)and this is my seventh month here. i heard that the conditions of epik change a lot depending on where you are. luck depending on location. also heard that is the case for university jobs as well. uni jobs can go from fantastic wages and conditions all the way down to quite horrible..
my situation is great actually, good school, good overtime, friendly co teachers, lots of time off and class prep time...
i wouldnt want a hogwan - too much hassle in my experience...
good luck to you, hope you make the choice that makes you happy |
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esetters21
Joined: 30 Apr 2006 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:02 pm Post subject: |
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funinthesun wrote: |
the_beaver wrote: |
A good, or decent, university. |
im in the epik program (public school)and this is my seventh month here. i heard that the conditions of epik change a lot depending on where you are. luck depending on location. also heard that is the case for university jobs as well. uni jobs can go from fantastic wages and conditions all the way down to quite horrible..
my situation is great actually, good school, good overtime, friendly co teachers, lots of time off and class prep time...
i wouldnt want a hogwan - too much hassle in my experience...
good luck to you, hope you make the choice that makes you happy |
Yes, we all have a different perspective of happiness. I actually like to be busy, work, and be productive. I guess that I spent too many years in managerial corporate jobs in America. They tainted me. I like to feel like I am earning my keep . |
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VanIslander
Joined: 18 Aug 2003 Location: Geoje, Hadong, Tongyeong,... now in a small coastal island town outside Gyeongsangnamdo!
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:13 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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htrain wrote: |
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing. |
Three days a week is a nice feature but 30 classes for only 2.3 for an experienced teacher with a graduate degree is below average for the Korean hagwon industry.
A bad hagwon is hell. But a good hagwon position is golden.
Small class sizes (8-10), no office hours or extra responsibilities, no split shifts, no gaps between classes, no required text or prep time or coteacher expectations, just you and about a hundred students a week you actually get to know. That's standard. Getting a supportive nonintrusive mom-and-pop operated stable paying decent accommodation situation and only having to teach 18-26 classes a week for 2.5 mill. That is what I have and is the least you should be able to get if you hunt around, do your research, visit the locales and talk to the ex-foreign teacher(s). |
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htrain
Joined: 24 May 2007
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:15 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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VanIslander wrote: |
htrain wrote: |
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing. |
Three days a week is a nice feature but 30 classes for only 2.3 for an experienced teacher with a graduate degree is below average for the Korean hagwon industry.
A bad hagwon is hell. But a good hagwon position is golden.
Small class sizes (8-10), no office hours or extra responsibilities, no split shifts, no gaps between classes, no required text or prep time or coteacher expectations, just you and about a hundred students a week you actually get to know. That's standard. Getting a supportive nonintrusive mom-and-pop operated stable paying decent accommodation situation and only having to teach 18-26 classes a week for 2.5 mill. That is what I have and is the least you should be able to get if you hunt around, do your research, visit the locales and talk to the ex-foreign teacher(s). |
This is some of the best advice I've gotten on this site. Much thanks. |
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esetters21
Joined: 30 Apr 2006 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:53 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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VanIslander wrote: |
htrain wrote: |
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing. |
Three days a week is a nice feature but 30 classes for only 2.3 for an experienced teacher with a graduate degree is below average for the Korean hagwon industry.
A bad hagwon is hell. But a good hagwon position is golden.
Small class sizes (8-10), no office hours or extra responsibilities, no split shifts, no gaps between classes, no required text or prep time or coteacher expectations, just you and about a hundred students a week you actually get to know. That's standard. Getting a supportive nonintrusive mom-and-pop operated stable paying decent accommodation situation and only having to teach 18-26 classes a week for 2.5 mill. That is what I have and is the least you should be able to get if you hunt around, do your research, visit the locales and talk to the ex-foreign teacher(s). |
Straight on information. I actually teach only 6 hours a day MWF and 3 hours a day TTh in my hagwon for what Vanislander said he is compensated. Yes, I do have some outside work when it's necessary, but that is expected in a teaching profession. My class size: 12 kindys M-F, 5 eight year old elems MWF, and 4 nine year old elems MWF.
I have never been shafted or not paid, and my housing is taken care of. It's not such a bad deal. If only I didn't have to listen to the 22-23 year old Canadians complaining everyday about having to do their job . |
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Kimchi Cowboy
Joined: 17 Sep 2006
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:54 pm Post subject: |
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You left out international school.
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Roch
Joined: 24 Apr 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 10:57 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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htrain wrote: |
Let me open by saying I'm not trying to create another thread where people end up dissing each other and resort to name calling. This is a genuine question I have been thinking about for over a month.
First off:
I have worked in all three. I find a very interesting dichotomy here between lowly-hagwon workers (hogwon hogs) and public school teachers. PS teachers tend to assert that their job is better and more important. Then we have university jobs. The people in uni positions claim they are in the best situation because they get the most vacation time and teach the least amount of classes.
When I worked at a uni in China I found the students to be lazy and my job to be boring. When I taught public school I found my co-teachers to be OK at times, but I had plenty of lazy ones and plenty of out of control 40+student classes. Hagwons I have found to be fun and entertaining, offering a greater monthly wage, and more straight-forward.
I have a masters degree. I don't know which is the better option:
A.) Uni. 4-5 months off, 15 classes a week. More prep time, more meetings, higher standard, 2.0-2.2 mil won with no housing. Ie; 1.6-1.8 after housing.
B.) Public school. Similar vacation to a hagwon, 8:30-4:30 M-F and 2.3mil won with housing. Plenty of time to surf Dave's and plan classes.
C.) Hagwon. 30 classes a week, no prep time, free-talking classes that are fun to teach, M/W/F 11-10pm, plenty of time for outside work, 2.3 mil + possible raise upon contract renewal and housing.
I understand that uni offers tons of paid vacation, but I'm here to work and I don't like lots of time off. My uni friends find it hard to get extra jobs for 1 or 2 month periods unless the camps fit in perfectly. Some find they have little time to work extra classes because of their choppy schedules schedules and office time. Some work 9am-11am M-F and have heaps of time to work other jobs. I'm sure every uni is different, but this makes me wonder if the hagwon is the best place to be overall, depending of course upon your personal goals.
What's your opinion? |
Which is truly the best? I'd say that one-on-one tutoring sessions are the best for the teacher and pupil because of a lack of distractions and maximization of the student's attention-span.
Oh, by the way: WORD! |
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htrain
Joined: 24 May 2007
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 11:00 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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Quote: |
Which is truly the best? I'd say that one-on-one tutoring sessions are the best for the teacher and pupil because of a lack of distractions and maximization of the student's attention-span.
Oh, by the way: WORD! |
Do you truly enjoy them? I'd rather teaach traditional class for 4 hours than a 2 hour tutoring dealie. It is so boring to me. |
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htrain
Joined: 24 May 2007
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 11:01 pm Post subject: Re: Hagwon, Public School, or Uni, which is TRULY better? |
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Quote: |
Straight on information. I actually teach only 6 hours a day MWF and 3 hours a day TTh in my hagwon for what Vanislander said he is compensated. Yes, I do have some outside work when it's necessary, but that is expected in a teaching profession. My class size: 12 kindys M-F, 5 eight year old elems MWF, and 4 nine year old elems MWF.
I have never been shafted or not paid, and my housing is taken care of. It's not such a bad deal. If only I didn't have to listen to the 22-23 year old Canadians complaining everyday about having to do their job . |
Are you wh0red out to other schools or have a split schedule by chance? |
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Roch
Joined: 24 Apr 2003 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Fri Nov 02, 2007 11:02 pm Post subject: |
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esetters21 wrote: |
Ummm..well. I've only been here a couple of years and still work in a Hagwon :shock: .
Could I work in a public school or university job? Sure, I could. I was a graduate assistant teacher in graduate school in the geography, communications, economics, english, and planning departments in my time there. I taught public middle school at home as well after attaining my teaching certificate.
Although those uni and public school positions intrigue me a little here, I am basically happy enough where I am at this point in my life to keep teaching those little buggers in my hagwon. It comes down to your priorities and goals at this stage in your life. I'm not here to make as much money as I can; I guess is what I am trying to say. I am enjoying myself, and like to see the academic development of my students in my hagwon. |
You were doing a Multi-Subject Master of Arts, eh?
Good on you, Harried One.
R |
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