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jeffinflorida

Joined: 22 Dec 2004 Posts: 2024 Location: "I'm too proud to beg and too lazy to work" Uncle Fester, The Addams Family season two
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 10:33 am Post subject: Your take on this? Legal? Ethical? My stand...? |
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I work for a school teaching business. So far the school is just rating so-so in their promises.
The first month was spent in a school hostel that could be summed up as totally disgusting.
We were promised on campus accommodations with the usual perks but upon arrival told that the new teacher housing would not be available for 2 more weeks. Of course that 2 weeks spread to 5 weeks�and now we moved to the promised on campus accommodations.
So here�s my issue. The school I work for is affiliated with a Canadian college. To this schools students they promote this as honor and an achievement. The reality is that the Canadian school � as told to me by a Canadian teacher here � is at the lowest end of the Canadian college system spectrum and has zero credibility in Canada.
So the school I work for charges students 25,000 rmb a year for the privilege of attending their school and its Canadian affiliation. The students think they are attending a high quality Western affiliated college and receiving a quality education. This is far from the truth of course.
So here�s my issue�
The next part of the semester I need to teach an accounting course to non-accounting majors. No problem for me really but here�s the problem: The school is not providing textbooks to these students and wants me to photo copy the book and give this to the students. After I stopped laughing I said no, ain�t gonna do this. The school can do it if they want but I will not. I said it�s work to me and well; it�s illegal isn�t it�
Here was the schools response: The Canadian college told them it was ok if they photo copied only 20% of the book and distributed it to the students� I replied no, still not acceptable to me and they need to buy the books and give one to each student. Now they say the books were too expensive!
So, what�s your take on this? By the way I am no moral scholar or even a good person, but I believe that the students need a book not some photocopies� |
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arioch36
Joined: 21 Jan 2003 Posts: 3589
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 11:02 am Post subject: |
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We were promised on campus accommodations with the usual perks but upon arrival told that the new teacher housing would not be available for 2 more weeks. Of course that 2 weeks spread to 5 weeks |
Terrible, illegal, and common practice
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The reality is that the Canadian school � � is at the lowest end of the Canadian college system spectrum and has zero credibility in Canada |
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Well, at least it is an actual school. One CBCIT (Canadian Business College Institute) was sending it students who "passed" to a college program for learning english at a real college, but that was not the same as being accepted to that college. A Chinese recruiter in Canada (who passed himself as being a legit representative to recruit for a school ... no college does such things in US Canada, would set up the english learning classes at this college, and then if the student did well, the student would have a good chance at being accepted at said college..in theory. The relationship between the Canadian college and the school was fictional. Parents need to wisen up. Don't they ask about percentage of students to what college?
25,000, about the same where I taught part time once, and they can't afford the book? Right
It would be interesting to know the truth. Have you looked at the book? If you have, do you really think a modern college is using this book, or is it just a book a Chinese guy brought back with him several years ago, and the real truth is that your school wouldn't even know how to buy this book because it is no longer in use? Cynical minds want to know.
25,000 can buy one or two books, even at western prices
PS, the school got very upset when I had a computer class to show them how to use the internet to find their own college to go to, how to apply directly to the college themself, and how to find out on their own how to apply for a visa based on the embassy websites
Why would the school posibly be upset at the student going to a college other then their "partner college"? Wasn't invited back the next semester despite nice student comments. True story  |
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AussieGuyInChina
Joined: 23 Nov 2006 Posts: 403
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 11:42 am Post subject: |
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It depends entirely upon what outcome you want to achieve, Jeff:-
a) doing things the right way regardless of any personal consequence
b) doing your job to the best of your ability while working within a system dictated and controlled by your employer
Are you a person who actually does something about wrongdoings (even if the 'doing something' is refusing participate), or a person who complains about wrong-doings but goes along with them? |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 11:49 am Post subject: |
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or a person who complains about wrong-doings but goes along with them? |
I can't believe there are FT's out there who sink to such a level  |
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johnchina
Joined: 24 Apr 2006 Posts: 816
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 12:31 pm Post subject: question |
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Jeff, what does the school do with other courses that require the students to have textbooks? If they don't photocopy them, you've got a strong point right there. |
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jeffinflorida

Joined: 22 Dec 2004 Posts: 2024 Location: "I'm too proud to beg and too lazy to work" Uncle Fester, The Addams Family season two
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 12:39 pm Post subject: Re: question |
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johnchina wrote: |
Jeff, what does the school do with other courses that require the students to have textbooks? If they don't photocopy them, you've got a strong point right there. |
John so far every other class and every other subject has a textbook.
The text book given to me for this class is:
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"Finance for non-financial managers" Forth edition, by Pierre G. Bergeron. Thomson / Nelson copyright 2004 Canada |
It's a new book. |
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The Voice Of Reason
Joined: 29 Jun 2004 Posts: 492
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:13 pm Post subject: |
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...
Last edited by The Voice Of Reason on Sun Sep 29, 2013 7:32 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Worldly

Joined: 04 Dec 2006 Posts: 74 Location: The Cosmos
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 1:40 pm Post subject: Re: Your take on this? Legal? Ethical? My stand...? |
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jeffinflorida wrote: |
So here�s my issue�
The next part of the semester I need to teach an accounting course to non-accounting majors. No problem for me really but here�s the problem: The school is not providing textbooks to these students and wants me to photo copy the book and give this to the students. ...........; it�s illegal isn�t it�
Here was the schools response: The Canadian college told them it was ok if they photo copied only 20% of the book and distributed it to the students� I replied no, still not acceptable to me and they need to buy the books and give one to each student. Now they say the books were too expensive!
So, what�s your take on this? By the way I am no moral scholar or even a good person, but I believe that the students need a book not some photocopies� |
Do not copy the book without formal "written" permission from the publisher. I sincerely doubt the Canadian institution approved it.....it's a criminal act. With the current international emphasis on protection of intellectual property, and the spotlight, unfortunately, is on China, DO NOT jeopardize your future by complying with illegal activity.
There's enough material online to prepare a basic course, but it will take considerable work on your behalf.
In addition to legal aspects, there are obvious ethical issues involved with your institution. Yes......I know.....it's China. However, working for a Chinese institution does not require a mandatory suspension of your values and/or respect for the rule of law.
I hope you are looking elsewhere for employment.
Good luck. |
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SnoopBot
Joined: 21 Jun 2007 Posts: 740 Location: USA
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 2:39 pm Post subject: |
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Between a rock and a hard place..
It looks like you are going to develop your own materials for the course. I would do Internet searches and try to pull as much info as possible and create your own Power Point lesson.
I taught a Petroleum Engineering English flavored class for offshore engineers and did this method because I couldn't get a good book.
This initially will create more work for you, but the more experience you have on course development the better.
Placing it on Power Point allows you to easily modify and doesn't involve as much paper. You leave the information on the board screen and let students copy the important details needed.
The course you will develop can be used as a sample of your ability when looking for a better position in the future. Just give a CD sample to the prospective employers. (Often real schools ask for these things)
The information you find on the Internet is often Public Domain, and you are creating most of it, so in a moral sense , no copyright violations.
Not using a book or materials will make your class difficult to teach (hurting yourself and your students)
Use this chance as a professional project, run with it, and do not think about the shoddy school conditions.
Concentrate on creating the best project you can make that is ALL YOURS.
You're the artist here and allow that imagination to go wild. |
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upchuckles
Joined: 11 Jan 2007 Posts: 111
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Posted: Wed Oct 10, 2007 5:02 pm Post subject: |
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For the price of that tuition.. The school aint providing the books? The school should make the burden of book buying on the shoulders of the students.. let them obtain the books in whatever way the moral and financial character of the student allows for.. This shouldn't be your cunundrum.. Tell the school to act like a school.. |
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jeffinflorida

Joined: 22 Dec 2004 Posts: 2024 Location: "I'm too proud to beg and too lazy to work" Uncle Fester, The Addams Family season two
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Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 12:13 am Post subject: |
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upchuckles wrote: |
For the price of that tuition.. The school aint providing the books? The school should make the burden of book buying on the shoulders of the students.. let them obtain the books in whatever way the moral and financial character of the student allows for.. This shouldn't be your cunundrum.. Tell the school to act like a school.. |
Rumor has it that those who administer / oversee this Canadian college part of the university are lining thier pockets with extra large wads of chairman mao bills... Both in china and canada...
The more they save the more then steal...Is that not atypical of this type of organization? |
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Yu
Joined: 06 Mar 2003 Posts: 1219 Location: Shanghai
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Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 10:14 pm Post subject: |
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I dont think American copyright laws apply in China. It is generally accepted here to make copies of textbooks and use them. It is expensive to get western textbooks. If a western textbook is regularly $30 in the US and is about 200 pages long it would cost 250RMB (there abouts) to purchase. If your student is working at KFC and making 6 RMB per hour, then they are going to have to work more than 40 hours to pay for the book. Does that sound reasonable? Keep in mind a photocopy would cost them about 10 RMB. My students were not happy when the textbook I photocopied for them came to 45 RMB. My department picked up 25 of that cost, so my students just paid 20.
I bought a book in America as a student for around $29, in China that same book in the book store costs 29.90. I believe it is a legal copy only avaliable for sale in mainland China.
Yes, there are copyright laws, but if the material is for the best interest of the students and they really dont have the money to buy the real copy, at least lend the books to the students and let them make copies. You have to remember you are in a different country and the same rules would not apply back in the States or Canada. But that is not where you are. So accept it. Make copies, your students will not feel this is bad. Also it is possible to get bound copies that resemble books. |
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jeffinflorida

Joined: 22 Dec 2004 Posts: 2024 Location: "I'm too proud to beg and too lazy to work" Uncle Fester, The Addams Family season two
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Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2007 10:32 pm Post subject: |
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Yu wrote: |
I dont think American copyright laws apply in China. It is generally accepted here to make copies of textbooks and use them. It is expensive to get western textbooks. If a western textbook is regularly $30 in the US and is about 200 pages long it would cost 250RMB (there abouts) to purchase. If your student is working at KFC and making 6 RMB per hour, then they are going to have to work more than 40 hours to pay for the book. Does that sound reasonable? |
None of my students every had a job before and are the offspring of the upper middle class if not higher. They will never work in a KFC, only eat there...
They and the school can well afford the cost of a book - even at $30 usd... |
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arioch36
Joined: 21 Jan 2003 Posts: 3589
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Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 8:49 am Post subject: |
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I dont think American copyright laws apply in China |
Very not true. There is a reason that you will only find Penguin Classics in the bookstore, international copyright laws. But as it is much harder to print a book then it is to make a CD, you don't find many fake books.
There is a rule about how much of a textbook you can copy for your own use ... can't remember what it is anymore |
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ispeakgoodenglish
Joined: 07 May 2007 Posts: 177 Location: Guangzhou, North of the Zhujiang
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Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 11:03 am Post subject: |
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I bought some Mcgraw-Hill (think thats it) textbooks in Shenzhen in 2001. They were about 1 edition behind what I had been using in NZ.
There are proper English books here if you look hard enough but not many textbooks. Guangzhou has a special English section in the Tianhe bookstore with all imported books. Shanghai I remember had an English bookshop in the times square building (maybe, it was a year ago i was there). |
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