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Why Go to China Without the Proper Work Permit?
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Would you encourage someone to come to China in search of a job with an L or an F visa with the intention of changing it to a Z visa, regardless of the province ?
Yes
25%
 25%  [ 8 ]
No
74%
 74%  [ 23 ]
Total Votes : 31

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Leon Purvis



Joined: 27 Feb 2006
Posts: 420
Location: Nowhere Near Beijing

PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 1:13 pm    Post subject: Why Go to China Without the Proper Work Permit? Reply with quote

I don't want to hijack any threads about changing visas, so I decided to start a separate thread to ask a few questions.

Why would ANYONE leave his home country in search of work without securing the proper visa first?

If one lives in the U.S. and is heck-bent on teaching in China, all he must do is go online, find, apply to- and be accepted by- a government-run school, obtain the proper paperwork from the provincial government and the school, send the required paperwork to the Chinese consulate in the U.S and bingo! All done!

It mystifies me that at least once per month, someone asks the same theoretical question about changing visas AFTER arriving in China when he intends to here specifically for the purpose of obtaining work.

I NEVER see anyone asking these people why they don't just start out on the right foot and do the preliminary work stateside.

I suppose that the argument could be said that the advantage to arriving with an L or an F visa is that one can SEE the school before committing.

Big Whooppee. Looks are deceiving. Nobody knows the workplace until he has signed a contract and has actually worked for the school for awhile.

Every time I see these questions about how to change an L or F visa to a Z visa after one's arrival in China, I ask myself:

1. Is this person crazy?

2. Why does he want to come in under the radar? Is it his intention to shop for a school which can/will lie about his credentials in order for him to secure a Z visa ? MOST of the people whom I have met who arrived on other than a Z visa in their passports had no education or credentials or had bogus degrees from places like Belford University.

3. Is the person asking the question a mole for the Powerz That Bee, or is he just another troll?

I don't intend for this post to denigrate those who arrived with only a TESL/TEFL certificate and who managed to get a Z visa and are doing a wonderful job of teaching. I've met some excellent teachers who never set foot in a college at home. These people, are, however (in my experience) few and far-between.

I just wonder WHY so many people prefer not to take care of business at home and why they are willing to to arrive here completely clueless?

Is it arrogance or sheer naivete on the part of the job seeker?

Or am I missing something here? Please don't flame me. I am merely asking for enlightenment, not trouble.

Thanks in advance.
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latefordinner



Joined: 19 Aug 2003
Posts: 973

PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 1:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Over the past 50 years, I can think of 3 enemies, errr, ummm, people I would recommend this to. None is capable of planning a 45 minute lesson in how to breathe, and each is quite capable of messing up his own life without coming to China
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Teatime of Soul



Joined: 12 Apr 2007
Posts: 905

PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 1:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

In part, I think is the conflicting advice offered until fairly recently.

I can recall on forums where inquiries were met with a "Go ahead, I did" and similar encouragement.

Of late, I see less of these type responses.

For the sake of those newbies asking, I hope a more unified and emphatic, "Don't try it" will be given in response.

It is safer, and more prudent to get the right documents.
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kungfucowboy83



Joined: 25 Jan 2006
Posts: 479

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 1:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

well i'm a case of do as i say not as i do. i worked on an f visa for almost 1 year and then went to a different school who switched it to a rp so i know it can be done but i also know that some schools think they can when they can't. You are risking a lot of trouble if you end up with a place that thinks they can.

it's kind of like speeding in the usa some people do it for years and never get caught and others do it 1 time and get nailed.
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roadwalker



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Posts: 1750
Location: Ch

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 2:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've come to China twice with a tourist visa, found a job that was satisfactory and worked on a z-visa. The first time, a few years back, the uni was able to change the visa in province. The last time (last September) I had to fly to Hong Kong with the docs. Both times my international travel was reimbursed, but I paid for the Hong Kong trip, although that was probably negotiable too. Crying or Very sad

I agree that you can't really tell how the job will end up, but if you show up first with a tourist visa you have a little more flexibility. If you see giant red flags all over the school, your tourist visa isn't tied to that school, so there is less pressure to make a go of it.

I don't recommend working on a tourist or business visa. The school won't protect you.
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Moon Over Parma



Joined: 20 May 2007
Posts: 819

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 7:57 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

roadwalker wrote:


I don't recommend working on a tourist or business visa. The school won't protect you.


Especially right now, with visas being tightened and security being heightened because the olympics leaves the party frightened.
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killian



Joined: 10 Jan 2003
Posts: 937
Location: fairmont city, illinois, USA

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 8:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

i was hired from korea to work in china. they wanted me ASAP and are paying all the bills. they said "come now, we'll sort it out". that's why i did such.

looks like i am flying back to chicago. ugh.
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arioch36



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 3589

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 11:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Certainly my pet peeve. Alawy as the person saying in the past, "Oh I did it and it worked out fine."
For a very few who know the language and or culture, or just are naturals at "playing the game" it wouldn't have been a problem in the past. But as I repeatedly say, alomost every horror story I have heard over the past seven years, even back in the "good old" wild days, almost every horror story was based on coming and working under an L or F visa.

You know how somw laowai in CHina actually get upset if they see other laowai where they happen to be, the, "This part of CHina in unique to me, it's mine, I am an explorer of new culture" ( didn't say that well)
I think the same mentality is at work for some who try to operate under the radar, flaunt the rules, pyscho speak for proving their individualism, making working in China some kind of bold frontier, living on the edge, etcx., this mentality gets off in proving they how how towork the system, play the gameproving how they really know China. I have met this type often enough.


Others are just foolish enough to trust what the FAO office tells them
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Moon Over Parma



Joined: 20 May 2007
Posts: 819

PostPosted: Wed Apr 30, 2008 5:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

killian wrote:
i was hired from korea to work in china. they wanted me ASAP and are paying all the bills. they said "come now, we'll sort it out". that's why i did such.

looks like i am flying back to chicago. ugh.



Five minutes of research could have saved you the headache. danwei.org is a nice start. The touchy visa issue has been going on for a while and only gets worse. In the end, you could have been atop of things and spared yourself the headache.
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killian



Joined: 10 Jan 2003
Posts: 937
Location: fairmont city, illinois, USA

PostPosted: Thu May 01, 2008 12:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

came from a third country. don't have much internet access to speak of here (my school doesn't even have toilets). thanks for the website info. reads like this latest round of tightening is recent enough to have been enacted since i disembarked.

matters not, extended paid vacation is fine.
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The Great Wall of Whiner



Joined: 29 Jan 2003
Posts: 4946
Location: Blabbing

PostPosted: Thu May 01, 2008 1:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

killian wrote:
i was hired from korea to work in china. they wanted me ASAP and are paying all the bills. they said "come now, we'll sort it out". that's why i did such.

looks like i am flying back to chicago. ugh.


That's pretty much what I did 4+ years ago, too.

But this time, I believe the local police's relationship with my boss's envelope of red bills have become strained under Beijing's watchful eye.
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samhouston



Joined: 17 Jan 2007
Posts: 418
Location: LA

PostPosted: Fri May 02, 2008 4:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Why go to China without the proper work permit?


I originally went to China as a guest on a business trip. My intent was to find a teaching job once I got there. I didn't know what to expect, especially from all the downers on this site concerning working in Shanghai. But I ended up getting a well paying job in Shanghai within five days, with no experience and no credentials.

The school is not some fly-by-night, take the money and run outfit. It's a good place to work, happy happy kids, with a lot of freedom for the foreign teachers, a friendly staff (mostly), and basically no problems at all.

Why oh why the company, which runs ten schools, never bothered getting any of the sixteen foreign teachers the proper paperwork for working legally, who the hell knows. (Actually, there are multiple theories, rumors, and excuses from the school, one being that pre-schools aren't allowed to hire foreign teachers.) But it worked great for everyone on F-visas, right up until this dragnet hit with the visa renewal vice. So now, one by one, depending on their individual visa expiration dates, all the whiteys who work for that company will eventually have to leave.

Mine was one of the first ones to expire. I'm back in the US for a short while, trying to weigh my options...calculate the risks. I want to go back to the same school. They aren't going to get me a Z-visa. I could go to some other school in the provinces that would send me the proper paperwork, and everything would be legit. But, it wouldn't be in Shanghai, and it would be about a third of the salary.

Apparently I can still get a 6 or 12 month tourist visa. Unfortunately, with 30 day stays, possibly extendable to 60. I could get a friend to write me an F-visa invitation, but what's the point? Working, or more specifically, teaching is illegal on either type of visa. (Of course, I might be able to get longer stays on the F visa...)

Anyway, the point is, the only way I can get my old job back is to do it the same way I did it before: Illegally. Would I recommend it to others? Probably not. (In fact, I just now voted no in the poll.) But I don't recommend speeding to others either, and I've really been testing John Q. Pig since I've been back.

Rationalization: I never had a problem within the last six months. I don't anticipate any in the future.

From the other shoulder: You never know. Especially with all the pathological paranoia surrounding the upcoming Olympics, which is only going to get weirder.

This could really come back to bite me in the buttock, but it's a risk I'm almost willing to take...still deciding.
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samhouston



Joined: 17 Jan 2007
Posts: 418
Location: LA

PostPosted: Fri May 02, 2008 5:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
You know how somw laowai in CHina actually get upset if they see other laowai where they happen to be, the, "This part of CHina in unique to me, it's mine, I am an explorer of new culture"


Ha ha ha! It's funny, this territorial mentality mildly afflicted me, and when I realized it, I laughed out loud at myself. But when I analyzed myself a little further, I recognized that the real reason was because of the shady way I was hired to replace a teacher that was getting fired. I knew he was getting the ax, but he didn't. Long story. Anyway, not that I ever saw any other White folk in my hood, but if I did, psychologically, I would subliminally view the impostor as a potential threat to my job, not my "territory." Heh, my colleague and I even joked about throwing a couple hundred RMB at some idle locals to go make the new devils feel especially unwelcome.

Quote:
I think the same mentality is at work for some who try to operate under the radar, flaunt the rules, pyscho speak for proving their individualism, making working in China some kind of bold frontier, living on the edge, etcx., this mentality gets off in proving they how how towork the system, play the gameproving how they really know China. I have met this type often enough.


And for all my talk about working illegally, the above does not describe me. I like a very low-key life, which is exactly what I had in China. I have no interest in "proving" anything to anyone. I merely enjoyed my job and living in Shanghai. Unfortunately, the setup I had was not legal. And to get it back, I'll have to sidestep the law again.
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North China Laowei



Joined: 08 Apr 2008
Posts: 419

PostPosted: Fri May 02, 2008 11:11 pm    Post subject: Danwei Reply with quote

Moon Over Parma wrote:
killian wrote:
i was hired from korea to work in china. they wanted me ASAP and are paying all the bills. they said "come now, we'll sort it out". that's why i did such.

looks like i am flying back to chicago. ugh.



Five minutes of research could have saved you the headache. danwei.org is a nice start. The touchy visa issue has been going on for a while and only gets worse. In the end, you could have been atop of things and spared yourself the headache.


Dear Moon Over Parma,

Forgive me but I checked out www.danwei.org and found it particularly worthless. Lots and lots of very, very stale job postings and lots of information that seemed as if it had been lifted from the China Daily. I found absolutely nothing about the visa issue that you mentioned above.

NCL
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arioch36



Joined: 21 Jan 2003
Posts: 3589

PostPosted: Sat May 03, 2008 5:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Houston

Quote:
Rationalization: I never had a problem within the last six months. I don't anticipate any in the future.

From the other shoulder: You never know. Especially with all the pathological paranoia surrounding the upcoming Olympics, which is only going to get weirder.

This could really come back to bite me in the buttock, but it's a risk I'm almost willing to take...still deciding.


2 or 3 years ago, if the school gave you an "f" visa, and you enjoyed the school, I would have said go for it (as opposed to coming in blind on a "L" visa, which I have never recommended)
F visa used to be okay, even if technically illegal (for paid teaching)


They say that after the olympics things will "go back to normal" hmm! how often does a bureaucracy ever willing give up power?

As always I would never advise working on a "L" visa. If the school has you come on an L visa, and contractually promises to give you a z visa, RP before the first day of teaching (which won't happen) then that's a different story.
I personally envision the crack down on "F" visa continuing into the far future. And this will take the fun out of it for some, and also is making it difficult on legit businessman.

On the other hand, finding a school you really like (and pays well, I assume) that's a jewel not to be thrown away lightly. And Shanghai can be really nice, the only big city in China that tempts me. So you know what they say in China, where there's a will there's a way.
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