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SF21
Joined: 05 Jun 2007 Posts: 72 Location: California
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:22 am Post subject: English First folks, can I ask you something? |
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How do you like working for English First in China?
Are they reputable and hire qualified candidates...or do they let the run-of-the-mill backpacker in the door?
Can teachers use any creativity or is solely using the EF coursebook mandatory?
Add on..
Thx. |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:41 am Post subject: |
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For whatever reason, teachers in EF have a confidentiality agreement written into their contracts - they are not supposed to discuss in public anything to do with the EF curricula.
Of course on Dave's one comes into the forums with a level of anonymity - but never the less it's quite surprising - regardless the fact that EF is China's biggest FT employer - that very few current EF FT's ever come forward to discuss the operation of this franchise.
Those that often come forward are DOS's who may have a hand in recruiting!!!! |
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Super Frank
Joined: 03 Feb 2006 Posts: 365
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 9:18 am Post subject: |
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Probably due to the amount of slagging EF gets on this website.
They do hire quite indiscriminately, franchises can get round local rules so if they are desperate some centres may take anyone on regardless of proper paperwork. Unless you are in country and able to be interviewed in person it is a lottery for both teachers and centre alike.
They do have a flexible curricula though and creativity in class is encouraged |
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malu
Joined: 22 Apr 2007 Posts: 1344 Location: Sunny Java
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 9:33 am Post subject: |
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I worked in Indonesia for a few years. Over there EF is very much the entry level bit of the market and the Indo forum here on Dave's is littered with EF threads, none of which are complimentary. As far as I know, there is no specific confidentiality clause in EF Indo contracts.
I must admit that I assumed the relatively small amount of EF bashing on the China forums meant that EF China was a better organisation than EF Indo. Has anyone worked in both? |
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englishgibson
Joined: 09 Mar 2005 Posts: 4345
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:27 am Post subject: |
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i've worked with a few of such FTs in this lovely organization designed after macdonalds...by the way, they were backpackers although a couple of those FTs came in a middle age crisis looking for a place to live
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How do you like working for English First in China? |
i kind of liked it, when i joined them...more than 5 years ago now...first six months were just fine, but things started to change when new business approach was brought in and foreigners' influence on the EF operation began fading quickly ... working for'em, sticking to the standards or voicing your opinion might cost you ... then, some are disgruntled as a result, and those are even threatened later
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Can teachers use any creativity or is solely using the EF coursebook mandatory? |
creativity's been encouraged in this mac chain, however popularity's more important...if you can't entertain your students, you'll have a negative feedback and your employer dealing with you...DOSs are at times useless with respect to that and more often than before there are more senior teachers in charge than DOSs that had rather broader authorities/responsibilities or at least according to the head less office
peace to the olympic mac EF as well as their franchisees that might've laundered most of it by now
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cheers and beers to the so called "confidentiality agreements" |
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senorfay

Joined: 08 Mar 2007 Posts: 214
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:14 pm Post subject: |
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I work as a lowly teacher at EF. I've been with them for only a few months, but I negotiated a special contract with them that allows me to have normal (public school/university) holidays and make a living wage (6400 RMB). The hours are a bit much (31 40 minute classes/ week) but it could be worse.
If you don't negotiate every little point on your contract and ask for clarification when the EF jargon gets to be a bit much, you can be screwed. If you are on the ball, show up to class on time, don't get sick, etc, you'll be alright.
There are horror stories to be heard. A month ago a colleague of mine fell off a chair while hanging Christmas decorations in his classroom. He hurt his back while doing that. The next day or two days later in a company van, a fat, rather dull-witted teacher assistant used the same back to brace himself when the van lurched after being cut off in traffic.
The TA dislocated the FT's spine. The FT went to the hospital. The doctor told him he'd have to lay in bed for a month. He told EF that he would need 2.5 weeks. EF gave him one week and absolutely no compensation, no help getting to/from the hospital, not even an apology.
It turns out the big bossman was going to fire the FT for getting hurt on the job, but several influencial employees told the bossman that it would be a very bad idea if he canned the FT because a lot of people would quit.
This particular FT had been with this same EF franchise for three years.
EF is a factory for better or for worse. I set myself up with a pretty kooshy job there that doesn't require much of my time or brainpower. I recieve an average wage. I work five days a week from about 8 am to 3 or 4 in the afternoon.
If you have a DOS who is willing to negotiate, you shouldn't worry about EF. Just don't let them trick you into doing the 'intensives'. You don't have to do that cr*p.
I get to use my own ideas and materials in my classrooms. The EF materials are there if I want them, but I teach all off-site classesin primary schools and high schools.
-TOM
Last edited by senorfay on Fri Jan 04, 2008 10:46 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:31 pm Post subject: |
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The EF materials are there if I want them, but I teach all off-site classesin primary schools and high schools. |
Farming.
Newbies beware of farming (the act of sending teachers out to schools rather than working in EF classrooms) - since it can involve a lot of unpaid transport time. Strictly speaking it may also be illegal - since those schools you work at may have no official license to employ FT's during school hours (in fact many schools try to circumnavigate rules and regulation by hiring the traveling FT). If your employer doesn't have good gaunxi (official connection) then there is a possibility you can get into trouble through farming, since those schools you're teaching at are not included in any official documentation relating to your permission to work!!!!
It's also interesting to note - that in the past posters have sworn blind that EF never farm!!!!!!!! |
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senorfay

Joined: 08 Mar 2007 Posts: 214
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:48 pm Post subject: |
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I asked to be farmed out because the classroom teachers often have days that start at 8am and end at 8pm. I didn't want that. I also didn't want to work weekends. Being farmed out guaranteed I wouldn't have to deal with that.
I negotiated to be compensated for travel time, etc...
My particular EF does have good guanxi in this city so I'm not worried.
Different strokes for different folks. I ended up at an EF because my visa was going to expire within two weeks and I wanted it extended without having to deal with the PSB, pay fines, or get deported. It all worked out for me just fine. |
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vikuk

Joined: 23 May 2007 Posts: 1842
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:54 pm Post subject: |
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Different strokes for different folks. I ended up at an EF because my visa was going to expire within two weeks and I wanted it extended without having to deal with the PSB, pay fines, or get deported. It all worked out for me just fine. |
Which maybe means - given different circumstances - a different more "certain" type of employment could have been chosen.
Remember if you are participating in "dodgy" employment - if your employment mess does hit the fan - then you are very much at the whim of your employer's mood
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I asked to be farmed out because the classroom teachers often have days that start at 8am and end at 8pm. |
That don't sound much fun!!!!!! |
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Shan-Shan

Joined: 28 Aug 2003 Posts: 1074 Location: electric pastures
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 4:02 pm Post subject: |
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The TA dislocated the FT's spine. The FT went to the hospital. The doctor told him he'd have to lay in bed for a month. He told EF that he would need 2.5 weeks. EF gave him one week and absolutely no compensation, no help getting to/from the hospital, not even an apology.
It turns out the big bossman was going to fire the FT for getting hurt on the job, but several influencial employees told the bossman that it would be a very bad idea if he canned the FT because a lot of people would quit.
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Despicable. And people -- no reference to the poster; his honesty is of great value -- still have the gall to defend this exploitative organization! |
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englishgibson
Joined: 09 Mar 2005 Posts: 4345
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Posted: Fri Jan 04, 2008 9:19 am Post subject: |
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interestingly, some threads are difficult to access here in china (off topic), but this one will always be on
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If you have a DOS who is willing to negotiate, you shouldn't worry about EF. Just don't let them trick you into doing the 'intensives'. |
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I get to use my own ideas and materials in my classrooms. The EF materials are there if I want them, but I teach all off-site classesin primary schools and high schools. |
so, your materials, your ideas...what's EF's you
peace to TOM's confidenciality report as well as peace to machines that take your clothes as well as your material and teaching techinques
and
cheers and beers to the new year |
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drakis
Joined: 15 May 2004 Posts: 19
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Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2008 4:41 am Post subject: |
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EF is a factory for better or for worse. I set myself up with a pretty kooshy job there that doesn't require much of my time or brainpower. I recieve an average wage. I work five days a week from about 8 am to 3 or 4 in the afternoon.
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I'd thought I was working hard with 24 40-minute classes. Sounds like they turned you into a slave. BTW, I do hope that you use a dictionary before teaching your students words at your 'cushy' job for which you recEIve your wage.
What's the point of coming to China if you have to work so much. After summer holidays my school was trying to hand me a schedule for 26 classes a week and I said that's fine, but I'd be taking some days of at the end of the month in some months when my work time would be more than 80 hours, but they said "We'll pay you for the overtime." "That's nice, but I don't want overtime and don't need it." "Oh, O.K." I work an average of 64 hours a month in the full teaching months, because I sometimes miss some of my early 9 o'clock classes of which I have only two a week. They are very understanding. If I am sick I'm sick. There is never a reduction in my wages. I get my full-time salary every month regardless for my Monday to Friday work and get paid overtime for an lessons taught outside of my regular school. Somehow I can't see an EF school being quite so obliging.
Schools trying to trick you is nothing new, but a wary teacher simply keeps track of hours worked and makes sure he gets paid for them. If not, you say to the school, "fix this or I'm gone." This might not necessarily work if you're a bad teacher, but if they value you as teacher, use the value in your bargaining. My school thinks I'm the best teacher they have, because I always tell them that I'm a very good teacher. Tell a Chinese something often enough, they eventually repeat it. |
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