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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Sun May 24, 2009 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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Thank you, PattyFlipper.. it's nice to know that one isn't alone in the 'buggermeIcantbelieveit' stakes.
I recall I've asked before: "who takes these jobs?". Have they no shame, are they that desperate, are they that badly qualified??? "There goes the blackleg teacher.."
I think I'm increasing my hours in the local state schools next academic year, so I might just try for a very cheap summer with the odd private lesson to help on the fun front..
It's a bugger, I used to do me own basic plumbing and electrics, but now you need various certificates to sign things off. I've known the odd plumber/leccy do a little half hour cash job for a tenner, or so me ageing Mum tells me, but those rates, for a few intermittent hours, with hours of prep..?? Minchia!! |
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PattyFlipper
Joined: 14 Nov 2007 Posts: 572
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Posted: Mon May 25, 2009 8:29 am Post subject: |
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Kipling wrote: |
Well you can't become a tradesman in a month unless you are a cowboy. |
Perhaps all the TEFL course providers should be appraised of this fact.
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I wish I had taken a trade 40 years ago when I had a chance, as sometimes I think that mending someone's plumbing would be more socially and financially rewarding. |
Indeed. And at least you would have an end-product.
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University presessionals usually offer between 550-700 pounds a week often with accommodation thrown in |
The problem is, what does one do after the pre-sessional? Back to the Sand Dunes or down to Ye Olde Jobbe Centre? The London Skills Institute for 7.50 an hour?
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University jobs are 25-35K a year but then you need to do your apprenticeship, acquiring experience and better qualifications to get better pay. |
Have you ever tried to get one of these jobs? If you are not physically present in the UK at the time of application, you can more or less forget it. The same generally goes for pre-sessional programmes too.
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Being a tradesman usually takes longer and usually pays more, nothing wrong in that. |
In this you will get no argument from me. It is however unfortunate that the same dynamic does not apply in TEFL, where advanced qualifications and years of experience will actually disqualify you from about 96% of available positions, even if you would wish to apply for them in the first place.
What it basically boils down to is that a �career �in TEFL (i.e. jobs which will allow you to do a little more than slowly starve to death) will entail almost permanent exile from the land of your birth, often in some of the World�s less-appealing locations. Do not misunderstand me. I am not some embittered old fart griping about his lot in life. I saw the writing on the wall a few years ago and decided to get out of the ghastly business. It is however important for any starry-eyed youngster to realize that the propaganda put out by the TEFL industry is mostly hype. TEFL is not really much of a career any more, if it ever was.
(Sits back and waits for the deluge.) |
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Kipling

Joined: 13 Mar 2009 Posts: 371 Location: ...Ah Mrs K peel me a grape!!!....and have one yourself!!!!
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Posted: Mon May 25, 2009 3:44 pm Post subject: Hope I die before I get Old ....bass riff... DUM dum de dum |
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Well the CELTA does give you an introduction into teaching, but the real introduction is actually teaching for many people, and I know some very good teachers whose experience has been of greater value than their qualifications and I know some well qualified teachers who...are... well just not so good in the classroom, but who do you think will be preferred in many jobs in the long run? Experience plus quals seems essential to get any job with half way decent remuneration and anyway who becomes a TEFL teacher for the pay???? Many initially see the CELTA as a way of paying their way while travelling around the world, again nothing wrong in that, shows good initiative. You are right that a lot of TEFLERS spend their lives abroad, the longer away the longer you stay away, many cannot return to decent jobs or salaries,point taken about the summer pressessionals and University work. as rare as rocking horse droppings for some.
There is a discussion on another board and a little bit of argy bargy between language schools and FE's and IMHO some sort of very English subtle take on the class system...us them...different....better.All rather depressing.
Those that make a career in TEFL often do it for the love of teaching and want get or be better at what they do and if that means the DELTA or MA then it is worth their while both financially and professionaly.
I am doing a distance MA TESOL with Oxford Brookes, self paid, self development. I will finish oh......just about when I retire. Is it worth it?
Of course, because it puts all the years of experience into perspective and I have learned a lot and think I have developed as a teacher.
By the way in TEFL
"Disappointment is all the rage./ For Teachers of a certain age."
Cheers Mr K
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Phil_b
Joined: 14 Oct 2003 Posts: 239 Location: Back in London
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Posted: Tue May 26, 2009 7:49 am Post subject: |
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The discussion about FE and language schools is here:
http://forums.eslcafe.com/job/viewtopic.php?t=68287&start=15
The relevant point that comes from that discussion is that due to either the better language schools, or colleges, or universities, there is no need to accept rates like those offered by the schools highlighted in this thread... University jobs might be rare, but there's plenty of work around in colleges - as a guide, check the TES http://www.tes.co.uk/jobsSearchResults.aspx?keywords=ESOL and there's plenty of hourly-paid, agency work that doesn't show up there.
I think there is a need for some kind of association/union... if just to remind people what they don't need to accept and to give them the confidence to turn it down. |
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Kipling

Joined: 13 Mar 2009 Posts: 371 Location: ...Ah Mrs K peel me a grape!!!....and have one yourself!!!!
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Posted: Tue May 26, 2009 8:39 am Post subject: You don't me I'm part of the......... |
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Couldn't agree more, Phil_b, but that would involve standards across the board for both TEFL teachers and education establishments.
Mr K  |
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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Tue May 26, 2009 10:10 am Post subject: |
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Just a comment on Phil's job link: the part time jobs, of which there can be quite a few at FE colleges, are often only advertised in local newspapers, as nobody is going to move nationally for 6 hours a week or so.
That was my experience in the UK a few years ago and I doubt it's changed much. |
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Phil_b
Joined: 14 Oct 2003 Posts: 239 Location: Back in London
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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Wed May 27, 2009 7:40 am Post subject: |
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... or possibly advertised on the colleges' own web-sites... so target colleges in the areas in which you are interested. |
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coledavis
Joined: 21 Jun 2003 Posts: 1838
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:14 pm Post subject: |
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Experienced teachers can get 11 pounds an hour (teaching contact time) at the Edwards (Ealing, west London) and probably other suburban schools. Some central London schools pay more. If you are a newbie, you may have to settle for the 9 pounds an hour for a few months and then apply to somewhere better. |
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BrownSauce
Joined: 31 Dec 2008 Posts: 87 Location: Fantasy Island
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:42 pm Post subject: Peanuts for Monkeys |
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Eleven quid an hour is still peanuts, though - I was earning more in London TEN YEARS AGO! Even the worst-paying college (I was working at three) were paying me 12.50!
So, if you get paid 11 quid for five or six contact hours per day, that makes around ... 300 quid a week?! Which is about the same as you can get working on the checkout at your local supermarket.
I rest my case... |
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coledavis
Joined: 21 Jun 2003 Posts: 1838
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Posted: Wed Jun 03, 2009 4:50 pm Post subject: |
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ho-hum - yes I know TEFL pay is rubbish. It's just that I read the stuff about 9 quid an hour and just decided to let you know what is going. Yes, it isn't getting any better, what with the recession 'n all. Merely complaining about peanuts isn't going to help, is it? |
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smallish
Joined: 25 May 2009 Posts: 1 Location: casablanca, morocco
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 9:41 am Post subject: peanuts and unions |
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Yes maybe its true that it only requires sentience to get an EFL job in some places. And maybe that psychologically pushes all of us who're qualified into accepting low-paid work. But it shouldn't.
In markets where they're demanding real qualifications, real experience and real teachers, we shouldn't accept the rotten pay. London is a great example: most schools seem to be advertising an hourly salary that doesn't even attain London-weighted poverty levels. OUCH. But they want so much. And the jobs doing EAP w/unis? DELTA-qualified for 13/hour?
So yes, in general the pay certainly IS peanuts. 'Cos we have to have jobs and we don't seem to be left with too much leverage. As a new-ish EFL teacher with an I.T. career previously, I've spent a few raging moments this first teaching abroad year, coming to grips with being part of the financial trash heap for the rest of my life. I realised quite soon that this malarkey is never going to be even a break-even game. In fact, I've "donated" rather than profited at the end of the year. At least, I'm benefitting the local economy!
Going abroad, setting up house, in some places paying the premium "foreigner rates" -- even without debts back home, I've watched my very small savings dwindling to even smaller.
Alternatives? Well, if you are keen to help raise the next generations, I've realised that nannies/childminders are rewarded very well indeed. Private child-minding, with a bit of teaching thrown in, looks a very interesting alternative that seems to actually pay a rate where a person can save a little bit. You might get food and shelter thrown in on top of pay AND some foreign travel. Check it out.
As a member of a trade union and a believer in the animal: I can't believe its true that there isn't an EFL trade union? Not even one that an E.U. citizen can join? Hmm wonder what the logistics of this might be to set up?? |
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SueH
Joined: 01 Feb 2003 Posts: 1022 Location: Northern Italy
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Posted: Thu Jun 04, 2009 10:44 am Post subject: |
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Smallish - ex-commerce and IT here too, which I left due to terminal boredom. Fortunately a (small) pension kicked in which probably allows me my sod �10 (or �) an hour attitude. But you are right about spending money to set up abroad...
Newly qualified on the South Coast I was getting �12 an hour in 2002/3 and �20+ at an FE college, so the London rates have no excuse. |
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TheLongWayHome

Joined: 07 Jun 2006 Posts: 1016 Location: San Luis Piojosi
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Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2009 4:24 am Post subject: Re: Taking the P i s s |
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PattyFlipper wrote: |
In Dec 2003 SueH wrote: |
I've just seen an advertisement for a post in London offering �9 an hour.
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Fast forward five and a half years to 2009, and the 'TEFL Tradesman' (ahem!) site has the following little gems for your edification, delight, and abject impoverishment:
Manchester School of English - �8 an hour
The London Skills Institute - �7.50 per hour
NEC School, London - �8 an hour
London Institute of Technology and English - �8 an hour
Oxford Academy College, London - �8 an hour
East London School of English - �8 an hour
West London Business College - �8 .50 an hour
Malvern House, London - �9.50 per hour (for exam classes!!)
United International College, London - �10.75 an hour
Callan School of English, London - �7.58 per hour ...
Leeds Language College - �8.25 per hour
'Career' in TEFL, anyone? Now plumbers are also tradesmen, and I bet they wouldn't get out of bed for those rates - not even the ones from Eastern Europe. I'll wager they have a lot less stress and hassle too. Trade your CELTA for an HNC in pipefitting and exchange your board markers for a monkey wrench! |
Eeeeek! So glad I got out in 2005. I'd be living on the streets by now or have retrained as a plumber. |
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TheLongWayHome

Joined: 07 Jun 2006 Posts: 1016 Location: San Luis Piojosi
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Posted: Sun Jun 07, 2009 4:26 am Post subject: Re: Taking the P i s s |
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PattyFlipper wrote: |
In Dec 2003 SueH wrote: |
I've just seen an advertisement for a post in London offering �9 an hour.
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Fast forward five and a half years to 2009, and the 'TEFL Tradesman' (ahem!) site has the following little gems for your edification, delight, and abject impoverishment:
Manchester School of English - �8 an hour
The London Skills Institute - �7.50 per hour
NEC School, London - �8 an hour
London Institute of Technology and English - �8 an hour
Oxford Academy College, London - �8 an hour
East London School of English - �8 an hour
West London Business College - �8 .50 an hour
Malvern House, London - �9.50 per hour (for exam classes!!)
United International College, London - �10.75 an hour
Callan School of English, London - �7.58 per hour ...
Leeds Language College - �8.25 per hour
'Career' in TEFL, anyone? Now plumbers are also tradesmen, and I bet they wouldn't get out of bed for those rates - not even the ones from Eastern Europe. I'll wager they have a lot less stress and hassle too. Trade your CELTA for an HNC in pipefitting and exchange your board markers for a monkey wrench! |
Eeeeek! So glad I got out in 2005. I'd be living on the streets by now or have retrained as a plumber. |
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