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RURAL CHINA
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unclealex



Joined: 22 Apr 2003
Posts: 38

PostPosted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 4:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Rural locations are dreary and too undeveloped. Nobody speaks any English, and there is nowhere to go or anything to do. My advice to you is to ignore them and focus on the large developed cities along the east coast or in southern China. There you'll be able to have a normal and pleasant life.
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mw182006



Joined: 10 Dec 2012
Posts: 310

PostPosted: Thu Feb 20, 2014 6:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

unclealex wrote:
Rural locations are dreary and too undeveloped. Nobody speaks any English, and there is nowhere to go or anything to do. My advice to you is to ignore them and focus on the large developed cities along the east coast or in southern China. There you'll be able to have a normal and pleasant life.


I'd have to agree. On the plus side since there's nothing to do, I managed to save almost $3K USD in 3 months.
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MisterButtkins



Joined: 03 Oct 2009
Posts: 1221

PostPosted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 2:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I live in a town with 300k people and it's pretty rural. I realize this is not an American's idea of rural, but it's actually fairly remote and the economy is based on farming. No pollution, fairly clean, lots of fresh produce in the summer and fall, everyone is friendly. Internet is fine and things are generally cleaner than larger cities. Can still see horse carts go through town every once in a awhile.

Unfortunately, like, someone else said, there's nothing to do. Literally 2 bars in the entire town. No museum, no good parks, no foreign movies, nothing. Also, it's hard to meet women because most of them move to bigger cities after they finish high school, and the ones that stay want to get married as soon as possible. Oh, and most of the locals aren't actually that interesting after you talk to them for more than 5 minutes. Definitely a brain-drain going on here, the same as you would find in a small town anywhere.

Oh, and I've been to actual 'rural' China, small mountain towns with only a few thousand people. You don't want to work in those places. They are desperately poor and there's nothing at all to do. The restaurants all sell the exact same dishes, but you might have one Korean or Muslim restaurant if you're lucky. There are open sewers, the buildings are poorly constructed and cold, and in really far-out places, there's no running water. You have to use a hand-pump to get it out of the ground. The locals are friendly, but realistically, they are all farmers who work long days scraping a living out of the dirt and live hand-to-mouth, and they will never be able to relate to someone who moved from a western country to live in such a place. Not to mention that, in most parts of the China, the local farmers will not be intelligible to you even if you speak fluent Standard Mandarin. The scenery can be pretty, but after awhile, you will feel strange walking around gawking at a place where people do manual labor every day of their life and only have enough money to eat meat once a month.

Yeah -- so don't go to those places.
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Omniscientfool



Joined: 30 Aug 2005
Posts: 27
Location: Zhangye, Gansu

PostPosted: Wed Feb 26, 2014 10:41 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

With some exceptions, it sounds like most experience is with smaller cities rather than rural areas. If the OP is someone w/ a romantic idea of walking onto and working in a period piece film set or Maoist village, certain to be disappointed. As someone who grew up rural, "nothing to do" means friendly people and unadulterated Chinese culture. Living longterm in a couple of sub-third-tier cities gives you an appreciation for the simpler things and includes a far greater celebrity factor (which can be a + or -). With so many college campuses being built or moved to the outskirts, the "rural" experience can really be had within easy striking distance of most cities. Absolutely try traveling in the countryside before deciding to live in it. And for all the city slickers in the forum, take a bus or a local train out for a day trip some time!
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fat_chris



Joined: 10 Sep 2003
Posts: 3198
Location: Beijing

PostPosted: Thu Feb 27, 2014 4:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Omniscientfool wrote:
walking onto and working in a period piece film set or Maoist village


+1

I love this quote.

Yeah, I personally would pass on a stint in real rural China, just passing through is good enough for me.

I am thinking that I am a Second Tier cities kinda guy at best.

Warm regards,
fat_chris
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SH_Panda



Joined: 31 May 2011
Posts: 455

PostPosted: Thu Feb 27, 2014 8:36 am    Post subject: Re: RURAL CHINA Reply with quote

woodylm wrote:
Hi

I'm looking for as much advice as possible on finding a placement in rural China. I have a degree, am native white English speaker (male) but no teaching experience or tefl/esl qualifications, except for an uncredited term or so on a tefl module at university.

I've read that rural areas are looking for teachers, but I can't seem to find any placements. I'm not interested in living in a Chinese city at all, and would much prefer somewhere rural.

Any advice on salary, hours and the procedure or best agencies for securing a rural placement, as well as what it's like generally to work in a rural chinese school would be much appreciated!

Thanks in advance


If you are interested in working at an elementary school in a small town, send me a PM. I know of a position that may be opening up starting in September this year in a small town in Shandong province.
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Stephe



Joined: 28 Jan 2014
Posts: 1
Location: China

PostPosted: Sun Mar 09, 2014 11:46 am    Post subject: Re: RURAL CHINA Reply with quote

Think your money requirement kind of kills it. If you are willing to volunteer than their are positions available. I currently work for an NGO that places volunteers into rural schools, many of which probably fit the picture you have in your mind (many don't, like the industrial wasteland I live in). But as others have said those villages/schools are really rough for many reasons, pollution (in small manufacturing towns), hygiene, lack of things to do, no heat, regional dialects, constant attention, no privacy, etc. Great example is I am currently scanning the forums while waiting for my stomach to decide which way it wants to violently expel my lunch Sad
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