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Andrew Button
Joined: 07 Nov 2014 Posts: 5
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Posted: Fri Sep 04, 2015 1:33 am Post subject: English First China: Legit? |
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I have an interview coming up with English First in China.
I've done some research online... The gist I'm getting is that they work you pretty hard for not that much money, but offer pretty reasonable benefits and such.
Has anyone here worked there before?
What was it like?
Background: I've been working as a freelance writer for the past 4 years. Extremely unstable income, high-intensity field. I'm not a "precious" type. |
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Dan123
Joined: 08 Jan 2014 Posts: 112
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Posted: Fri Sep 04, 2015 2:57 am Post subject: |
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I've already posted about EF too many times on this board and I can't be bothered writing up a huge post again, but to very quickly summarise what I've posted in the past.
Hours are pretty long and the hourly pay is pretty bad compared to non training schools
It's a safe job. Everything is done by the books (pay/visa etc) and you won't get ripped off other than possible getting a crappy apartment (mine was pretty nice)
They provide a decent bit of training, which you won't get in public schools
They vary a lot from school to school in terms of management. My DoS was good, but others can be crap
Very little holiday time. Like 10 days a year that you can book, but you may need to be lucky to get the dates that you want. I didn't even get to use my holidays and I just got paid off at the end of my contract instead
They'll make you act like monkeys a few times a year and make you do things like group dances/sing etc, which I hated
You'll spend a LOT of time planning lessons if you want to make decent lessons, especially if you have no teaching experience. For the first few months, I was working like crazy. It gets better once you get used to things/start repeating lessons. The older guys hardly planned at all since they already had practically everything planned.
That's all I can think of right now. Overall, I liked it and think it was good for a first job, but I wouldn't recommend staying there longer than a year. |
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thechangling
Joined: 11 Apr 2013 Posts: 276
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Posted: Fri Sep 04, 2015 5:56 am Post subject: |
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Run far and run fast and don't look back! Try Public Primary, Middle, High schools and Uni's instead! You have a much better chance of not regretting it especially if you do due dilligence. |
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CNexpatesl
Joined: 27 May 2015 Posts: 194
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Posted: Fri Sep 04, 2015 8:33 am Post subject: |
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thechangling wrote: |
Run far and run fast and don't look back! Try Public Primary, Middle, High schools and Uni's instead! You have a much better chance of not regretting it especially if you do due dilligence. |
Are "Public Primary, Middle, High schools and Uni's" even still hiring? I think it's past the Fall season deadline. |
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SH_Panda

Joined: 31 May 2011 Posts: 455
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Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2015 6:26 am Post subject: |
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Hi Andrew, I have just sent you a PM  |
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Markness
Joined: 30 Dec 2009 Posts: 738 Location: Chengdu
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Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2015 9:02 am Post subject: |
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thechangling wrote: |
Run far and run fast and don't look back! Try Public Primary, Middle, High schools and Uni's instead! You have a much better chance of not regretting it especially if you do due dilligence. |
Seconded. Hours are better, pay is better, you get proper holidays and everything is also done by the book. Only coin-flip is whether or not the students will be good. Usually, from my experiences the crap was teaching primary. Middle school+ and you can do so many activities and/or actual teaching! Not just clap/fart in front of the students for 40 minutes once a week. My training school experience was fine at first, but terrible after a while.
Training schools are easy to get into because the hours are terrible, no 8-4 with a 2 hour lunch, but a 9-9 saturday/sunday, and odd hours during the week with 1 or 2 days off if you're lucky. Working regular hours at a school made my sleep much better and I've been shedding a bit of meat off the bones since I eat regularly, not at whenever you get the free chance to. Some training schools pay on time and stuff (mine wasn't bad), but the end of the year bonus is a pain to get, as they magically "forget" to pay it.. ALL THE TIME! You also deal with un-educated Chinese co-workers which is atrocious. The big boss pressures them to pressure you because you "make so much more money than them!", so they expect you to bend-over backwards for them and do every stupid little thing they ask. It is a business after all, so you can expect there to be some bull-crap you have to deal with on a regular basis. I could go on all day about what is wrong with training schools, but I'll give it a rest.
Good luck with whatever you choose, but I highly do not recommend a training school. The only good thing about them is that you can think to yourself "I can't do much worse than this!". |
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Aristede
Joined: 06 Aug 2009 Posts: 180
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Posted: Sat Sep 05, 2015 6:48 pm Post subject: |
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Markness wrote: |
Good luck with whatever you choose, but I highly do not recommend a training school. The only good thing about them is that you can think to yourself "I can't do much worse than this!". |
It depends on preference and priority. There are a few things that would make me choose a training school over public school (not necessarily a uni).
1. Non-standard hours. Not everyone likes the 8-4 shift. Evenings and weekends are fine for me as long as I get two weekdays off.
2. Small classes. Some teachers find it invigorating to start the day facing a rabble. I don't.
3. Adult students. Not everyone loves teaching kids. EF does have kids, but there are training schools that have few or none.
4. No building lesson plans from scratch. Not to say that this can't be enjoyable and challenging in a good way, but there's something to be said for not needing to generate them daily.
Many of the other negatives I agree with...little time off, shifty tactics from the bosses on pay & visas, etc. |
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katia04
Joined: 09 Dec 2011 Posts: 18
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Posted: Tue Sep 08, 2015 9:25 am Post subject: |
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I second what another said on this thread: it's good for the first year, but not much more than that. I worked there my first year and I won't lie, most of it sucked. Of course, I had a bad DoS and worse CM, which made it all the more difficult, but in the end, surprisingly, I'm glad I did it. "Extras" classes, activities classes, and party performances definitely were the worst parts (yes, you are performing, white-faced monkeys), but there is a lot of support for new teachers, so you learn what works and what doesn't. After the first year I went on to teach at uni and it's been wonderful BECAUSE I already knew how to manage a classroom and how to structure lessons. If I didn't already have that knowledge it would have been a nightmare! |
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buravirgil
Joined: 23 Jan 2014 Posts: 967 Location: Jiangxi Province, China
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Posted: Tue Sep 08, 2015 10:02 am Post subject: |
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katia04 wrote: |
(yes, you are performing, white-faced monkeys), but there is a lot of support for new teachers, so you learn what works and what doesn't. After the first year I went on to teach at uni and it's been wonderful BECAUSE I already knew how to manage a classroom and how to structure lessons. |
How did you learn to structure lessons and manage a classroom being a white-faced monkey for a year?
Your broader point is that EF is a stepping-stone...for people with little to no knowledge, or even training...fair enough.
However it's not teaching and it has no place at a university...but demand is demand. |
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Dan123
Joined: 08 Jan 2014 Posts: 112
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Posted: Wed Sep 09, 2015 1:06 am Post subject: |
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buravirgil wrote: |
However it's not teaching and it has no place at a university...but demand is demand. |
Like I said in an earlier post, EF franchises vary a lot from city to city, but in my school we did actually have to teach. If students weren't learning, we would get investigated. If it turned out that it was the teacher's fault, they'd get into trouble. If things didn't improve, they would get fired (one horrible teacher did actually get fired at my school because she was so terrible).
There was a bunch of god awful white monkey stuff, but it was far from the majority of what I was doing.
Although it seems like I had a better experience than Katia, I agree with pretty much everything he/she says. |
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buravirgil
Joined: 23 Jan 2014 Posts: 967 Location: Jiangxi Province, China
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Posted: Wed Sep 09, 2015 1:41 am Post subject: |
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Fair enough, Dan123. An individual's commitment is paramount. |
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Spyro
Joined: 09 Dec 2011 Posts: 36
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Posted: Wed Sep 09, 2015 12:00 pm Post subject: Re: English First China: Legit? |
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Andrew Button wrote: |
I have an interview coming up with English First in China.
I've done some research online... The gist I'm getting is that they work you pretty hard for not that much money, but offer pretty reasonable benefits and such.
Has anyone here worked there before?
What was it like?
Background: I've been working as a freelance writer for the past 4 years. Extremely unstable income, high-intensity field. I'm not a "precious" type. |
I am going to echo what others have said before. It's fine for your first year in China. You need to get your feet wet somehow.
I had a few friends who worked there and they were happy. After a year, they moved onto public schools/other things. |
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Double_Dragon
Joined: 12 Mar 2015 Posts: 70
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Posted: Thu Sep 10, 2015 3:45 am Post subject: |
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Last edited by Double_Dragon on Tue Oct 27, 2015 6:13 am; edited 1 time in total |
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weigookin74
Joined: 30 Mar 2010 Posts: 265
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Posted: Thu Sep 17, 2015 6:10 am Post subject: |
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http://www.eslcafe.com/jobs/china/index.cgi?read=37940
This ad seems like BS to me. 13,000 for Beijing and you have to pay your own apartment? You'll be awfully poor. The other cities, only 10,000 and only shared accomodation?
If your taking this job especially in Beijing, at the very least if you're new to teaching, I'd demand a free single non shared apartment in addition to the 13,000. If they say no, then walk. There's plenty of other better jobs than this. Other cities should be single apartment if anything nicer and larger than Beijing and maybe 12,000 minimum. Even with apartment, Beijing should be more than 13,000.
Unless you're only working 10 hours a week and it's really slack and you have lots of time to get privates, I'd tell EF to fly in the wind. |
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weigookin74
Joined: 30 Mar 2010 Posts: 265
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Posted: Thu Sep 17, 2015 6:14 am Post subject: |
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Aaprtment, 12 or 13 minimum. No apartment 18 to 21 minimum in the big cities. Maybe something less in smaller cities. If EF makes you work your butt off for that low of pay, you're an absolute dolt if you accept that kind of a low offer. You will not make any money epecially if you're paying off the debts back home. |
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