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Comunicorp-any info?

 
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shell_b



Joined: 14 Sep 2011
Posts: 5

PostPosted: Fri Jan 04, 2013 2:03 pm    Post subject: Comunicorp-any info? Reply with quote

Does anyone have any info regarding working for Comunicorp? All the discusions I have found seem a bit out of date.

Thanks,
Shell
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mattgpdavis



Joined: 07 Mar 2013
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Wed Mar 13, 2013 1:51 am    Post subject: Experience at Comunicorp Reply with quote

Hello Shell, I was looking through here and saw that nobody had answered your message yet. Although I have not worked at Comunicorp for a year now, I was there for three years (Feb �09 to Jan �12) and so thought I would sign up and share my experience.

I was very happy working there and felt that I gained a lot of very good experience. I had plenty of classes with great students, had access to many good books and intranet resources, felt I could go to administrative staff or the academic director for help if needed, got lots of new teaching ideas at monthly staff meetings and was always paid the correct amount and on time.

Typically English teachers do not make as much in Santiago as in many other capital cities and there is a lot bus/metro travelling between classes, but this is not specific to any one school, rather the city itself. I believe Comunicorp�s pay was fairly in line with other institutes, but do not know exactly how much that is for a first contract teacher nowadays. Another thing I should mention is that even though being British meant my visa was the most expensive, the school paid for it each year.

I think an important part of my experience was that as I worked hard, was reliable and made sure my students were happy, Comunicorp reciprocated the behaviour and let me get on with my work. After three years I left because it was simply time for a change and so the next year I did mostly private classes and some part time teaching at a university. I have just been offered an in-house teaching position at a large Chilean company, and one of the things they said they were most impressed with was the number and calibre of businesses I had taught at here, which is largely thanks to Comunicorp.

If you would like to talk more, feel free to contact me.

Good luck in your job hunt!

Matthew Davis
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channelchanty



Joined: 17 Mar 2013
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Thu Mar 28, 2013 11:48 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I also got a job offer, from what I am reading there are mixed reviews, but to be honest I really like what I've read about the company. It's always hard to know how to judge, because people can be bias
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Sublime



Joined: 23 Apr 2011
Posts: 90

PostPosted: Thu May 23, 2013 11:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Was on here looking for information too, as comminicorp is the only 'agency' I've found with jobs in Chile.

As the above poster says, unless everything you find on the net is negative, it can be a matter of opinion (including bias) depending on the person etc. etc. Also as a general rule people are far more likely to go on the net to complain about something rather than to praise something (hell, check out some of the Korea postings).

Maybe just time to take a chance??? Arrow
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roadwalker



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Posts: 1750
Location: Ch

PostPosted: Sat May 25, 2013 5:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sublime wrote:
Was on here looking for information too, as comminicorp is the only 'agency' I've found with jobs in Chile.

As the above poster says, unless everything you find on the net is negative, it can be a matter of opinion (including bias) depending on the person etc. etc. Also as a general rule people are far more likely to go on the net to complain about something rather than to praise something (hell, check out some of the Korea postings).

Maybe just time to take a chance??? Arrow


It's been a couple of years so I'm assuming everything about Comunicorp is roughly the same as when I left it:

1) If you aren't a total d-bag, the staff will (help you) take care of your necessary paperwork to get your proper working/residing papers, tax number, etc. They were very nice to me and sometimes seemed surprised that someone appreciated them and their work. Be nice to the administrators, even if you have to fake it.

2) Diane is the one in charge of hiring, and running the place from the teaching/curriculum/level evaluation standpoint. She can be very intense. If you have internalized much of the communicative approach from your CELTA/TESOL/TEFL course, can run an organized whiteboard, show enthusiasm and creativity when lesson planning and when teaching, you will get along very well. If you have a more laid back approach, it may be rough. Teachers are expected to have fresh lessons planned within a set curriculum framework. Resources and lesson ideas are shared and cataloged so it is not completely re-inventing the wheel. Bonus: be/get good at intake evaluations.

3) Diane's business partner (forgot his name) mainly handles getting and maintaining client companies for business and basic English classes. (Chile has tax incentives for business skills training, which includes English classes.) As you can expect, business can be cyclical. Especially a business like an English academia. Ccorp tries to have enough teachers for expected business, but sometimes things get cancelled or delayed. If you are hired on salary, no sweat. But if you are hired on an hourly basis, you could run into a rough patch of low hours. And Chile is relatively expensive, so don't come without savings. Be prepared.

I was only in Santiago for a short while and didn't work for other language schools. But there are many, including mom and pop shops and big chains. Search on this forum for lists of them. Comunicorp certainly has it's detractors, and my style didn't blend well but I mainly enjoyed my time with them.
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