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Nowlinsanity
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 4
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Posted: Thu Nov 18, 2004 6:23 pm Post subject: Studying while Teaching??? |
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I'm thinking about doing graduate studies in China while teaching English on the side to help absorb costs. Does anyone have any experience or knowledge about this? Would it be easier to get a working visa then look for study opportunities when I'm there or vise-versa? Is it even possible to get both a working visa and a student visa? Thanks in advance for any info... |
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quanxie

Joined: 11 Feb 2004 Posts: 91 Location: The Sticks
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Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2004 1:33 am Post subject: |
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I think it is quite feasible to be a graduate student and to work on the side. But most Universities programs are in Chinese, so you must have mastered at least intermediate level language skills (HSK band 6) to be accepted as a post graduate student. What schools are you thinking about? What major?
Good luck,
Phil |
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joe greene
Joined: 21 Mar 2004 Posts: 200
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Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2004 10:37 am Post subject: |
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It seems that more and more people are doing this, which is fine, as long as you can handle the workload. But the Chinese have caught on. They're beginning to use it as yet another means of discrediting us as teachers en masse. At English Corner, at least one student each week asks me, "Why did you come to China? To study Chinese?"
For the sake of all FTs here, please answer, "No, I came to China to teach English." |
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Nowlinsanity
Joined: 17 Nov 2004 Posts: 4
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Posted: Fri Nov 19, 2004 2:13 pm Post subject: programs of study... |
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I'm considering either an international MBA or an MA in international development or population studies. I have no knowledge of mandarin but plan on taking courses in Canada come the new year. From the university websites that I have visited, several programs seem to be offered in english. I also may do only part time studies so I can dedicate more time to teaching. |
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burnsie
Joined: 18 Aug 2004 Posts: 489 Location: Beijing
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Posted: Sat Nov 20, 2004 7:58 am Post subject: |
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joe greene wrote: |
It seems that more and more people are doing this, which is fine, as long as you can handle the workload. But the Chinese have caught on. They're beginning to use it as yet another means of discrediting us as teachers en masse. At English Corner, at least one student each week asks me, "Why did you come to China? To study Chinese?"
For the sake of all FTs here, please answer, "No, I came to China to teach English." |
I am currently finding alot of my students are off studying for their useless CET exams so they don't come to class for a week or two. If they can skip classes and do other things why can't teachers do the same? Well I don't mean skip classes but at least study inbetween your course. A workload of 13-15 hours english is a piece of cake (well it's not really teaching is it in most cases!).
The other option is do private classes or VIP. If you have 5 students a week you can pull in at least 4000-5000RMB.
I would be upfront with your school so they know what is going on. |
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