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token
Joined: 13 Sep 2006 Posts: 1 Location: New Zealand
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Posted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 9:16 pm Post subject: School dates 2007-2008 |
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Hi,
I'm taking off on a round the world trip early next year and am looking at teaching English in China for 6 months as part of that. The trouble I'm having is that I need to book flights for my round the world ticket and I can't seem to find anywhere that tells me when the school year is likely to start and when a 6 month contract would finish. Have had rough estimates of it starting in September and finishing in January but I'm just hoping to find something more precise so I don't get stuck with my tickets.
Maybe it's just looking too far ahead to find this out but I'd appreciate any help on this as I'm pretty new to all this  |
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tw
Joined: 04 Jun 2005 Posts: 3898
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Posted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 10:06 pm Post subject: |
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Should start somewhere around late August to early September and ends about 20-22 weeks later. Schools will not be thinking about that until the end of next school term and it can vary from province to province, from school to school.
Last edited by tw on Wed Sep 13, 2006 11:21 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Songbird
Joined: 09 Jan 2005 Posts: 630 Location: State of Chaos, Panic & Disorder...
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Posted: Wed Sep 13, 2006 11:15 pm Post subject: |
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My school has given me a 3 year calendar , and on this for January 2008 it appears the end date, as in all results, test papers etc, are to be in by the 18th- it could be earlier than this but definately no later. Hope this helps
Ooops, that's the 16th January I mean, I was looking at 2007, sorry! |
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Neilhrd
Joined: 10 Jul 2005 Posts: 233 Location: Nanning, China
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Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 1:18 am Post subject: Dream on |
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In China there is no such thing as a fixed school year. Your semester starts ten minutes after it actually did which is when they get around to telling you about it. The universities are the worst for this but it applies to many schools as well.
The Chinese have no concept of advance planning, consultation or logistics. Crazy things are accepted as normal. For example last night 5 of us were expected to placement test 150 primary school children in one hour for a class which will probably, but not definitely, start on Friday.
When we got to the school there wasn't even a classroom open to work in and we had to do the job in the corridor surrounded by other screaming kids. Needless to say the results are meaningless but that doesn't matter in China.
As for the end of a semester that depends if the Chinese teachers are satisfied that the students have been brainwashed to the point that they can't possibly fail their tests. If not the semester will be extended at a moments notice. I've had this happen to me twice in Guangxi. Parents complain about it as well but it makes no difference.
Conversely if the Chinese teachers decide that English is reducing their students time for cramming Chinese or Maths then your class will suddenly evaporate two weeks before testing time at the end of the semester and you will have bonus free time.
Unless of course you are required to waste that time writing reports in English for a school principal who can't read English and wouldn't act on your recommendations if she could.
In China you either teach or you travel. Teaching is regarded as a 24/7 commitment here. If you are not prepared to accept that then don't teach in China.
Those who try to do both end up doing neither well and just get frustrated hence the trail of broken contracts and mutual mistrust between schools and FTs which makes working as an FT here so much more difficult than it needs to be. |
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tw
Joined: 04 Jun 2005 Posts: 3898
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Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 2:11 am Post subject: Re: Dream on |
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Neilhrd wrote: |
As for the end of a semester that depends if the Chinese teachers are satisfied that the students have been brainwashed to the point that they can't possibly fail their tests. If not the semester will be extended at a moments notice. I've had this happen to me twice in Guangxi. Parents complain about it as well but it makes no difference. |
I don't know what kind of school you teach at but I have yet to experience semesters being extended. The semesters have always been around 16 - 18 weeks long including national holidays.
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Conversely if the Chinese teachers decide that English is reducing their students time for cramming Chinese or Maths then your class will suddenly evaporate two weeks before testing time at the end of the semester and you will have bonus free time. |
That's not entirely true. The school might inform you that you are to give the students their final exam during the final week of classes with you.
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In China you either teach or you travel. Teaching is regarded as a 24/7 commitment here. If you are not prepared to accept that then don't teach in China. |
Er...again, please don't sound so generalized. For those of us teaching at colleges and universities, teaching is definitely NOT a 24/7 job -- not for us FT's that's for sure. |
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Bayden

Joined: 29 Mar 2006 Posts: 988
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Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 3:52 am Post subject: |
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If not the semester will be extended at a moments notice. I've had this happen to me twice in Guangxi. |
But you've only been here a month?
And for a newbie you certainly make a lot of generalizations.
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Teaching is regarded as a 24/7 commitment here. |
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no_exit
Joined: 12 Oct 2004 Posts: 565 Location: Kunming
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Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 9:52 am Post subject: Re: School dates 2007-2008 |
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token wrote: |
Hi,
I'm taking off on a round the world trip early next year and am looking at teaching English in China for 6 months as part of that. The trouble I'm having is that I need to book flights for my round the world ticket and I can't seem to find anywhere that tells me when the school year is likely to start and when a 6 month contract would finish. Have had rough estimates of it starting in September and finishing in January but I'm just hoping to find something more precise so I don't get stuck with my tickets.
Maybe it's just looking too far ahead to find this out but I'd appreciate any help on this as I'm pretty new to all this  |
Being a traveller doesn't neccessarily make you a bad teacher, but if I were you I'd keep my round the world plans to myself when applying for jobs. Look only at jobs which will offer you a six month (or less) contract and don't elaborate. A lot of schools out there have been burned by backpacker teachers and are looking for someone who is serious about his job and has a bit of experience teaching. There is some stigma here about backpackers and teach while you travel types -- in fact, the Chinese language information my school provides to prospective parents specifically states "our teachers are not backpackers, they're qualified and experienced teachers." You won't do yourself any favors in landing a decent job if you go around saying that you want to teach in China as part of your round the world trip.
And in any case, to answer your question, generally Chinese schools open in late August or Early september, and break in mid-late January for roughly six weeks. They'll start again late February or early March (although these dates can vary because Chinese New Year falls each year according to the lunar calendar, which is not fixed). They'll break for summer in late June/early July. You'll have week long vacations scheduled around October 1st and May 1st, Chinese independence day and International Workers Day respectively. Of course, if you get a job at a language center you might not follow the public school calendar at all. In that case, you'll simply finish six months after you were hired, regardless of when during the year that may be. |
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Outsida

Joined: 01 Aug 2006 Posts: 368 Location: Down here on the farm
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Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 2:51 pm Post subject: |
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The schools can just cut your classes off with little notice. At my last school, the final week was the third week of January - about the 21st or 22nd. Then it was the 14th. Then the 5th. Finally, one Monday morning, they told us to start the final exams that day and finish through to the end of the week. This was the last week of 2005. Fortunately, we'd written the exams already. Unfortunately, the week of revision we'd planned became the actual testing week. The students were less than happy. And I left the school about three hours after finishing the last of my exams. It was a school which had seemed to know what it was doing and held quite a bit of promise, but which ended up focking up just like any other Chinese school. Not to mention some less than desirable co-workers. I was so happy to get out of there. |
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Neilhrd
Joined: 10 Jul 2005 Posts: 233 Location: Nanning, China
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 2:17 am Post subject: Reply to Bayden |
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Bayden for your information I have been here for more than two years and I am speaking from experience.
I have read many other posts on here over the years from people working in schools at all levels who think they own the teacher and that they can change your schedule at a moments notice and you will just drop everything in your private life and come running.
Unfortunately this can be a part of the China experience and in fairness I should say that it is usually much worse for Chinese teachers who don't have the option of skipping to another school and who earn far less than FTs do.
The Chinese attitude which sees teaching as a duty and a commitment may be why there is growing resistance among schools and parents to back packer teachers. I agree with the comments of other posters about this. |
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Bayden

Joined: 29 Mar 2006 Posts: 988
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 2:44 am Post subject: |
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Bayden for your information I have been here for more than two years and I am speaking from experience.
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Nathanrahl said
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A month, not a week, please, do not be so negative in your responses. |
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How much does a play station 2 cost over here. I had one at home, thought about bringing it, but declined since I had enough heavy baggage already, is it all that much, and if so, would it be worth shipping over here and selling |
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Public Security Bureau, hmm, doe's every city have one? Is that the locals name for the police department. Forgive me, but I am quite naieve to local names for this and that. |
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I am new to teaching outside the US. How would one go about becoming internationally certified anyhow? Also, could someone answer my questions asked, though I would like to know more about international certification, thanks. |
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I am in China right now working for a company that calls itself Joint Venture schools? It is run by a fellow named Mister River, who doe's speak English, and is a doctor I believe, his older brother, who doe's not, and a woman named Helen. My online contact was named Kelly, who is in Beijing. I had first got lured to china by an unscrupulous agency, and found this place in my search to escape it, .............Had I come to china to work for them directly I would be fine, but since I got scammed by someone else, and that ate up weeks, I think I am in trouble. |
You, my friend, are a liar or a troll.
If you're going to lie or troll, try to remember your previous lies/trolls and keep it consistant.
So which is it
Liar?
or
Troll? |
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tw
Joined: 04 Jun 2005 Posts: 3898
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 3:09 am Post subject: |
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Bayden wrote: |
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Bayden for your information I have been here for more than two years and I am speaking from experience.
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Bayden, that was actually from Neilhrd, NOT Nathanrahl.
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I have read many other posts on here over the years from people working in schools at all levels who think they own the teacher and that they can change your schedule at a moments notice and you will just drop everything in your private life and come running. |
Well in all fairness, just because some people had written that they had a horrible experience doesn't really mean you should go on and generalize about many of the things you'd said.
Last edited by tw on Fri Sep 15, 2006 3:41 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Bayden

Joined: 29 Mar 2006 Posts: 988
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Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2006 3:16 am Post subject: |
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Bayden, that was actually from Neilhrd, NOT Nathanrahl. |
Ah, yeah, applogies to Neilhrd and Nathanrahl.
Looks like the dyslexia is kicking in.
Well it's off to the old folks home for me then. |
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