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Is this a decent offer?
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MDDude



Joined: 15 Apr 2008
Posts: 43
Location: Maryland, United States

PostPosted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 5:20 pm    Post subject: Is this a decent offer? Reply with quote

Hello,

I have been offered a position with a university in the suburbs of Shanghai. It is actually a joint venture between a language school and the university. The salary is 10,500 RMB gross. They have housing to choose from, but they don't pay for it. The hours and classes seem quite good. M-F, normal hours, maximum 15 90-minute classes. Lesson planning is done in a group of teachers. Health insurance with copay.

My qualifications are a CELTA and a degree. I haven't taught abroad before, except for my CELTA.

Thanks.
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LanGuTou



Joined: 23 Mar 2009
Posts: 621
Location: Shandong

PostPosted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 10:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

To be frank, it does not look the best of offers.

15 x 90 minute classes equates to 22.5 x 60 minutes. Normally teaching hours are around 45 - 50 minutes so the actually teaching load could be very high although there may be a break mid way through those 90 minute sessions.

Lesson planning with a group of teachers? On the face of it, this sounds like additional office hours that you will not get paid for. You should clarify this with the school.

Suburbs of Shanghai can mean anything in China. You should check the exact location. It could mean two hours by fast train from the nearest civilization.

Out of the gross salary, you will have to pay rental fees for the accommodation along with electricity, water, maybe internet and telephone. You would need to find out how much you actually need to pay on that one.

Shanghai is not the cheapest area to live. Taking everything into consideration, this does not sound like a fantastic deal but may not be bad either. I suggest that you prepare some carefully worded questions to get more information from the school and then try to negotiate for less actual teaching time or more pay.
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MDDude



Joined: 15 Apr 2008
Posts: 43
Location: Maryland, United States

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 12:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

LanGuTou, thanks for your advice. The area is Songjiang, which I'm told is about 45 minutes out via train from the main city.

I did speak with a person who is working with the university. The days are weekdays, 9-5ish. The lesson planning would occur in those hours.

The job itself seems to exactly what I'm looking for: university level, good hours, a support system of existing teachers and new teachers collaborating with lesson plans, and a focus on speaking. Right now, my hesitations are due to location and compensation.
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LanGuTou



Joined: 23 Mar 2009
Posts: 621
Location: Shandong

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 12:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The thing that strikes me most about this offer is the workload. If those sessions are actually 90 minutes of teaching without a break, then it would equate to 30 x 45 minute classes per week. That, by university standards in China, is a collosal workload (I teach 12 x 50 minute classes per week for example).

It appears to me that you are also expected to devote more of your time to lesson planning with other teachers. It is irrelevant that such planning sessions are M - F 9 - 5. It is still extra hours on top of all those face to face teaching hours.

I don't think that 10,500 rmb is a fair deal for such a workload and, without paid accommodation, it looks woefully inadequate especially around Shanghai. However, you could try negotiating.
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tomstone



Joined: 09 Dec 2009
Posts: 293

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 12:48 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lesson planning with a group of teachers? Yuk.
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The Ever-changing Cleric



Joined: 19 Feb 2009
Posts: 1523

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 2:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

lesson planning with a bunch of other teachers is fine if you have no idea what you're doing and need a lot of guidance/brainstorming. but it doesnt take long to get the knack of things (and i'd rather just do this type of work on my own anyway). its easy enough to trade lesson plans/ideas with others to get something new for your classes.

fifteen 90 minute lessons is a lot of work (in addition to other duties). i had one job in esl where i worked 30 hours per week and after six months i didnt want to do it any longer. so i quit.

for a first timer, i think its best to break yourself in slowly so you can get the hang of things. look for a job that has a lower number of hours but still a decent salary. its easy enough to work more if you find you really enjoy it and want to earn more money.
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gregmcd101



Joined: 06 Jun 2006
Posts: 144
Location: Ireland (for now)

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 3:19 am    Post subject: Re: Is this a decent offer? Reply with quote

MDDude wrote:
Hello,

It is actually a joint venture between a language school and the university.
Thanks.


working 9-5 and 30 x 45 minute classes without housing? Thats a language school not a university. It maybe affiliated to a university but i'm guessing you'll be working in a mill situation. At high water your looking at 8,000 after rent bills, more likely 7,000 or less. Lets say 7,500 for 120 classes a month = 62.5 RMB or about 9-10 dollars per class hour. A good uni job should average out 120-150. Added to which uni jobs generally include 2 or 4 months paid holidays. Are you being offered the long Winter / Summer holidays?

Shanghai is expensive, your 7,500 net won't go as far as elsewhere, even in the suburbs. I used to visit Shanghai occasionally before i switched jobs basically to drink beer and shop and these weekends always ended up costing me a fortune. Now I have moved and just stay home a lot (saving to buy a house).

Bottom line you can survive perfectly well on that money, go out occasionally, travel around a little, but there are a few questions you should ask.

a) am i working for a mill or a uni
b) do i get the long holidays
c) How much is the rent in this area
d) working 9-5, what's that all about?
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Kram



Joined: 20 Sep 2005
Posts: 152
Location: In a chair

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 5:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

10,500 gross for almost 30 academic teaching hours + 9-5 + group prep Shocked and no housing in the suburbs of an expensive city is a joke.
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nickpellatt



Joined: 08 Dec 2006
Posts: 1522

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 5:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I dont think it sounds so great...but that could just be me.

15x90 minute lessons is a lot! I take 10x90 minutes and that is more than enough for me, more than enough for China really. One of the advantges of coming here, is you dont HAVE to take long working hours that you would find in some other countries. The long hours put me off the EU for example.

I also am less keen on jobs that dont offer accomodation. I dont want the extra expense or hassle...especially when it might mean paying a deposit etc. I guess I dont want responsibility or any unexpected bills.

Do you have a pressing desire to work in that location? If so, then that could swing it. If you arent drawn to the location, then the hours and lack of accomodation would put me off.

My priorities are as follows -

1 - Location
2 - Teaching hours
3 - Accom included
4 - Students ages and class size

If I dont get what I want there, salary isnt important. I realise everyone is different though, as are our needs. I live on a far lower salary than the one mentioned here, and live in accomodation that would only cost 250 rmb a month here ... again, not everyone wants the same. It might work out for you....
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kukiv



Joined: 13 Dec 2009
Posts: 328

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 5:25 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
salary isnt important.

Salary is pretty important with regard to general FT conditions - if FT's accept sub-standard - then these levels become the new standard - and general rates of pay and accommodation suffer.

Just ask Nick - in the location he works, a place filled with 'in and out' backpacker teachers - people who are willing to accept a pittance have pushed wages to an absolute minimum. As a result I'm sure education levels also suffer - as employers who are fighting the competition - start to recruit primarily for the cheapness of worker rather than focus on the recruit's teaching ability/quality or ambition.

If schools offer sub-standard salaries - then sometimes this could be taken as a sign of sub-standard quality.
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nickpellatt



Joined: 08 Dec 2006
Posts: 1522

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 6:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

kukiv may be correct on some points, I am quite probably not the norm when it comes to such discussions. I guess it really depends on what the individual is seeking from his/her employment experience. For me, as already mentioned, salary tends to come far below any other factors I have to consider when I choose my job and destination.

This is something I have always done, not just in teaching. I have personally found I can get a lot more from my job if I look at things other than just the bottom line salary. Hence the comment about how important this location is to you, the OP.

I havent had a bad China experience in any of the three jobs I have had here, but I can imagine for some people, some parts of China may be unpleasant for a multitude of reasons. Bitter weather, noisy cities, bad students, pollution etc etc can really alter your experience here ... for this reason, I feel salary may be a less important consideration for some people.

The job mentioned, would be a non starter for me for these reasons. L
Ditto large classes of students in a big cold city wouldnt tempt me, regardless of salary, and I feel its quite a good idea to really think hard about what you are looking for from your job/city/experience first, and worry about the salary later. I do accept this may not be how everyone looks at their position though!
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malu



Joined: 22 Apr 2007
Posts: 1344
Location: Sunny Java

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 8:35 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

In any country the mill-attached-to-a-uni situation tends to bring out the worst of both worlds. Expect the high workload and minimal holidays of a mill combined with typical uni problems of unrealistic expectations (dozy students with no English placed in intermediate level classes), Alice in Wonderland decision making (holiday dates changing last minute on a whim), and afternoon classes resembling morgues with sleeping bodies stretched out over desks.
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MDDude



Joined: 15 Apr 2008
Posts: 43
Location: Maryland, United States

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 2:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi guys, thanks for the advice. A few additional details:

- The 15 lessons per week is the maximum, and they say it is usually less

- They give you apartments to choose from. My understanding is that they can do the arrangements. I just have to pay out of my salary. Apartments are about 1700RMB per month for a single.

- Chinese public holidays plus 10 paid holidays

- Work hours are M-F, 8:15 to 16:10
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LarssonCrew



Joined: 06 Jun 2009
Posts: 1308

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 3:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've only been in China 4 months now, but when they say 'You probably won't be teaching that much anyway' take it with a pinch of salt.

You WILL.

They will say whatever they feel they need to to get you to accept the job. 'Oh, those 15 lessons probably won't occur', but somehow they will.
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gregmcd101



Joined: 06 Jun 2006
Posts: 144
Location: Ireland (for now)

PostPosted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 4:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

MDDude wrote:
Hi guys, thanks for the advice. A few additional details:

- The 15 lessons per week is the maximum, and they say it is usually less

- They give you apartments to choose from. My understanding is that they can do the arrangements. I just have to pay out of my salary. Apartments are about 1700RMB per month for a single.

-- Work hours are M-F, 8:15 to 16:10


1700 wont get you much in shanghai. one of the plusses of working for a uni is the free housing. my current apartment is sweet as were my previous two. most fts spend a LOT of hours at home so comfort is a priority.

'' Chinese public holidays plus 10 paid holidays'' means no long summer / winter holiday. Uni jobs have public holidays PLUS 2 MONTHS WINTER AND SUMMER. Dude, it's up to you, but this really is a bad deal IMO. 11 months of teaching as opposed to 8, 30 hours a week instead of - much less in a regular uni gig for the same money after you've paid your bills.

Your offer: breaks down as 90000 (net) for 1320 classes

as opposed to what i consider a reasonable uni job

96000 for around 550 classes (14 to 20 classes over 8 months)

also I gotta tell you - one semester in my second year due to a lack of teachers i agreed to do 28 classes with ten a week being paid at overtime rates. I made decent money but 28 was HARSH going, i used to dread Tuesdays!! Now I do 14 which is too easy, but I have plenty of free time and often pick up extra's, something you can do if you have a light schedule (some employers frown on this, mine are cool with it).

Last summer i was offered 21000 for a 3 week camp for example (didn't do it as I went home but it was mine for the taking) - so - in that month I was getting my regular salary and could of picked up a large bonus. 2 years ago I made 1200 extra a week for overtime. These are the freedoms allowed by proper uni jobs, what you are being offered is a mill job.

I realize i am going on a bit so i will finish by saying this - When i first came here i got good advice and have never looked back but it could easily have gone bad without said advice. From what i read of your offer it seems to suck, hence I am trying to pass on this advice. There are many good and decent uni jobs out there - I do not like your offer.

If you want an intro to a decent uni job, pm me.
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