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What's It Like To Teach English In A Chinese University?
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arioch36



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 3589

PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 11:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Vikuk
No 2 source of info must be taxi drivers


Actually, the drives of the leaders. Take one out for some cheap local dishes, buy him some beers, play "shwang sheng" (cards, don't know how to spell the game's name) and you'll hear every story, like the 50,000 bonus the leader of the local bankrupt public uni got (and yes, the same things happen in america)

What I find distasteful is not the private colleges, but the international colleges that many public unis now have. Not sure if everyone knows how it works?
Many public colleges are now doing this. Students who have failed, or not scored high enough on the yearly national exam can enter the international college thru the smoke and mirrors idea that after two years these students will go to a foreign school to study, thus are not under the national quota. Students at my college in the regular college, say Computers, pay 4,500? per year. The parents of the students that enter the international college pay 16,000. Of course these students get some extra priveliges. After two years they are suppose to decide whether they want to go abroad, or stay here. As most of them are poorer students, they all stay here.

Under the true Communists regime school was almost free, and all students were treated the same
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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

PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 1:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

arioch36 wrote:

What I find distasteful is not the private colleges, but the international colleges that many public unis now have. Not sure if everyone knows how it works?
Many public colleges are now doing this. Students who have failed, or not scored high enough on the yearly national exam can enter the international college thru the smoke and mirrors idea that after two years these students will go to a foreign school to study, thus are not under the national quota. Students at my college in the regular college, say Computers, pay 4,500? per year. The parents of the students that enter the international college pay 16,000. Of course these students get some extra priveliges. After two years they are suppose to decide whether they want to go abroad, or stay here. As most of them are poorer students, they all stay here.

Under the true Communists regime school was almost free, and all students were treated the same


We must be working for the same "quality" institution... Oh no my mistake it can't be the same because mine charges 25,000 a year..
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beck's



Joined: 06 Apr 2003
Posts: 426

PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 11:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just about anyone who has made friends with a Chinese person can relate wild tales of courruption.

A friend of mine told me that Chinese university teachers often pay five years salary in bribes to obtain a teaching position. Other teachers get their jobs by knowing people in high positions. My friend openly admits that he got his position because he knows important people. He didn't have to pay a bribe.

His story is very interesting. He was a "minor" public official who ate in fancy restaurants three times a day, took bribes and lived the high life. Then, he went to America. This changed his life. He realized that the western system of financial accountability and transperancy in government was a superior system (I know it's not perfect, so let's not get into that red herring, but wrong doers are exposed by a free press etc).

He came back to China, gave up his position and used his powerful friends to secure a uni job with a microscopic sized work-load at lower pay. Now he teaches his students about democracy and the importance of freedom. He volunteers in poor primary schools. Many of his students call him unpatriotic. His powerful friends protect him.

His case reminds me of the French Revolution. Many of the French revolutionaries were people who had experienced the American Revolution and then returned home to France to lead the struggle for democracy there. China will change and it is people like my friend who will lead these changes.
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TingBuDong



Joined: 02 Jun 2006
Posts: 27
Location: Zhangye, Gansu, China

PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 11:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I understand your criticisms better now. It is interesting to get the perspective of those with Chinese wives who have more experience, as for someone like me it would be difficult to get a deep inside view of the system. I don't see too much extravagance here overall, but it is true that some leaders took a trip to Australia this year. I don't expect the Chinese teachers have it all that great though; they are not buying cars or going abroad and unlike us I believe they might be paying rent. If there is unfairness or corruption going on I still don't feel any need to be paid more, even if this were my career; rather, the money should be going towards the school and students' education. There are hardly any resources here and I must pay for my own copies, for one thing.
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vikuk



Joined: 23 May 2007
Posts: 1842

PostPosted: Sat Nov 17, 2007 11:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
If there is unfairness or corruption going on I still don't feel any need to be paid more, even if this were my career; rather, the money should be going towards the school and students' education. There are hardly any resources here and I must pay for my own copies, for one thing

So, if you feel bad about earing too much, why not use those extra bucks in helping those poorer students, by buying them more learning resources (anything that can be used in your classroom that promotes learning - and costs money) - rather than letting that money just circle around in system waiting to be scooped up by the next money hungry shark. After all, unlike you, the alternative owners of those funds may have no interest in education or how the students are thriving!!!!

Saying no to money, seems to me, to be hardly the act of a teacher who wants to improve conditions - whether his own, his students or that of other FT's. Also remember in this scenario - the FT in the poorer provinces may demand a good wage also to support a lifestyle (much in the same way as FT's who teach in more affluent areas demand the best wage to support thier chosen ways of living) - and if its one where they don't feel comfortarble with enjoying luxuries then they can more efficiently make it a lifestyle of helping Idea
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Lorean



Joined: 21 Dec 2006
Posts: 476
Location: Beijing

PostPosted: Sun Nov 18, 2007 12:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
If there is unfairness or corruption going on I still don't feel any need to be paid more, even if this were my career; rather, the money should be going towards the school and students' education.


Higher wages attract quality workers. So yeah, the money would be going somewhere good. Not that I'm biased or anything, honest. Smile



God, my school is run so inefficiently I would feel bad if they got money! I'll give you an example, they recently finished construction of a new five story teaching building. Already, it has problems with rain water leaking down to the first floor! They've also got several dozen impressive multimedia rooms each equipped with projectors. The classrooms are not even used 30-40% of the time. I once tried to book a multimedia room it took three weeks because room booking is "a complicated process". A few weeks ago I was told that I couldn't book any more rooms because "it's too late in the term".
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arioch36



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 3589

PostPosted: Sun Nov 18, 2007 4:46 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Beck
God, my school is run so inefficiently I would feel bad if they got money! I'll give you an example, they recently finished construction of a new five story teaching building

Okay, I'll trade war stories. Former "guanxi" school of mine. Opened their new campus outside the main city, just like many schools have done (won't bore you with the wild corruption stories about that...suffice to say they were forced by the government to hire a new president from outside the province)
This school installed air-conditioning in every classroom. Good idea you say? Think, as energy prices never stop rising, how much this would cost the school. No matter, because the contractor "found" by the school installed a system that was totally worthless, and costs too much to fix. Bu because they installed air-conditioning in the new campus clasrooms, there were no fans installed. So short story ... new classrooms, air conditioning that doesn't work, come late April, May teaching becomes impossible, students are focusing all there energy surviving the heat. I mean truly sweltering. The school's motto, "we do things the right way"

Quote:
Beck
The (multi-media) classrooms are not even used 30-40% of the time.
Same problem here. The Chinese teachers all get their teaching schedules well in advance of the laowai. I go to book a multimedia rooom (that I would actually use) and they all have been claimed for weeks by the Chinese teachers. But many are not actually being used.

So last semester I told my students to meet on the 3rd floor of the multimedia building five minutes early. Then we would find an empty room and I would go a student and get the keys. Always was able to find an empty room. Never bothered trying to go through "proper channels"


Last edited by arioch36 on Mon Nov 19, 2007 3:04 am; edited 1 time in total
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MGreen



Joined: 22 May 2007
Posts: 81

PostPosted: Mon Nov 19, 2007 12:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Are there any differences between a first and second tier university in terms of salary, hours, working conditions, etc?

I'm not interested in the students themselves but the package a university provides.
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arioch36



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 3589

PostPosted: Mon Nov 19, 2007 3:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

As I have seen so far, the 1st tier unis actually ofer less. "we are the best, so we don't have to pay as much" Some kind of face thing. Second Tier schools, I have found, in terms of pay, pay better.

Things such as housing vary greatly depending on the college. Now, if you are living at the school's original location (In the city, convenient) you are often offered a poorer, sub-standard apartment. Or you may get a better apartment located in the "suburbs", ie., nothing out there.
Hours vary according to the school more then the tier. All the tiers are trying to persuade the laowai to accept mor and more hours, such as 16 or 20. Chinese teachers who have been teaching for a while rarely get more then 12, I have several Chinese teaching friend who are only doing 6 this semester

This is China, though. BARGAIN BARGAIN BARGAIN!
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