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Fair Overtime Pay
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marlow



Joined: 06 Feb 2005

PostPosted: Sun Jun 17, 2007 8:39 pm    Post subject: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.
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willneverteachagain



Joined: 17 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Sun Jun 17, 2007 9:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

they'll never get teachers at those rates. OT shouldnt be below 20,000 per hour. 20,000 per class? what did they drink?
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willneverteachagain



Joined: 17 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Sun Jun 17, 2007 9:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

salaries are supposed to go up not down
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marlow



Joined: 06 Feb 2005

PostPosted: Sun Jun 17, 2007 11:04 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah. I was thinking 20,000 is a normal hourly wage for doing paperwork or something (and for overtime 1.5X is 30,000). And for teaching an overtime class, taking into account prep., marking, etc., they should pay about 50,000 to 60,000 - they would shit their pants at those numbers - because thems the facts of English in Korea as far as I see them. I get offered privates at that price about twice per month.

I'm not just being greedy either. I value my free time, and also I work better when I'm not feeling cheated.

They should consider a decreasing overtime scale. Rolling Eyes The first ten hours are 6,000 per hour, and the next ten are 5,000, and anything over twenty is paid at a rate of 3,000. That would really attract teachers. Especially the shitheads who can't even get a job at McDonald's back home.
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mindmetoo



Joined: 02 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Sun Jun 17, 2007 11:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

A friend has seen some jobs that pay 3/4 time for OT. Less. Not more. Geez.
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mehamrick



Joined: 28 Aug 2006
Location: South Korea

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 1:29 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..

Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.
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lowpo



Joined: 01 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 2:09 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

mehamrick wrote:
marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..

Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.

Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.
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mehamrick



Joined: 28 Aug 2006
Location: South Korea

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 4:20 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..


Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.

Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.


I would hope not.. especially since we are not required to work on saturdays.
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lowpo



Joined: 01 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 4:38 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

mehamrick wrote:
lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..


Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.

Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.


I would hope not.. especially since we are not required to work on saturdays.


I teach two Saturday classes twice a month and I know some public school teachers that do the same. But we don't make 6,000 won an hour either.
But I also think that next year or the year after, all public schools will be closed on Saturday.
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mehamrick



Joined: 28 Aug 2006
Location: South Korea

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 4:45 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..


Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.

Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.


I would hope not.. especially since we are not required to work on saturdays.


I teach two Saturday classes twice a month and I know some public school teachers that do the same. But we don't make 6,000 won an hour either.
But I also think that next year or the year after, all public schools will be closed on Saturday.


Is it stated in your contract that you will do that? Or did you agree to it?
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yingwenlaoshi



Joined: 12 Feb 2007
Location: ... location, location!

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 4:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

6000 Won/hr? I keep seeing this figure for these public school or EPIK jobs. What's up with that? Someone's got a screw loose.

What it really should be is paid by the teaching hour. Everyone should be paid hourly. Screw this monthly crap. Then if you work OT, multiply it by 1.5. End of story. But nooooo! Any salary job I've ever had ended up being hourly in the end. It's the only way to do it.

Let's say you make 2.2 at a public school. Well you take that and mulitply it by 12. That's 26.4 million/year. Well divide that by 52. That's 507,692.../wk. Divide that by 22 (your weekly hours). That gives you 23,077/hr rounded off. That's your hourly wage. Overtime should then be 34,615.5/hr. Yes, they're fractioned figures, but that's why accountants exist. Rolling Eyes

Under contract for 22 teaching hours should be under contract for 22 teaching hours. You shouldn't have to spend anymore time at work than those hours. That's why PS holidays should be longer and more defined. Plan your damn year out in advanced and don't pop undetermined summer/winter camps on the teachers at the last minute. Have vacations that can be taken during school sessions and have summer and winter breaks that don't count as vacation taken. Period.

The system abuses teachers.

Same goes for hagwons. "Yes, sir. I'll take the vacation when the hagwon closes." That's BS.

The systems are totally abusive. I don't like it. That's one reason I'll never work for CDI. They just sound like total arse clowns.


Last edited by yingwenlaoshi on Mon Jun 18, 2007 5:11 am; edited 1 time in total
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lowpo



Joined: 01 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 5:01 am    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

mehamrick wrote:
lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
lowpo wrote:
mehamrick wrote:
marlow wrote:
I heard new EPIK contracts are going to pay overtime at 6,000 won per hour, and extra classes at 20,000 won per class. I think this is absurd. Hopefully they will wise up before putting ink to paper.

What is a fair overtime rate? It's kind of hard to come up with a number when pay is based on a salary rather than an hourly wage. I just know that the above numbers are insulting.


I am waiting until July for this same reason. The contract also goes down to 22 hours and I am at 25 currently..

so I am wondering what the difference is between overtime and class. an extra class is technically teaching overtime as far as my teaching hours go..


Should be interesting.. to see what the new contracts will be or if they will stay the same.. Currently there is no specific overtime rate in the contracts.

Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.


I would hope not.. especially since we are not required to work on saturdays.


I teach two Saturday classes twice a month and I know some public school teachers that do the same. But we don't make 6,000 won an hour either.
But I also think that next year or the year after, all public schools will be closed on Saturday.


Is it stated in your contract that you will do that? Or did you agree to it?

They asked me if I wanted too and I agreed. I send my Saturdays and Sundays flying in the town that I live in anyway. They are paying 20,000 won an hour.
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marlow



Joined: 06 Feb 2005

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 5:06 pm    Post subject: Re: Fair Overtime Pay Reply with quote

lowpo wrote:
Is the 6,000 won rate for working Saturdays.


It possibly will be. It has popped up in a couple of contracts, I've heard. Pure insult. OT is supposed to be higher than normal pay. The "why don't you work more for less?" attitude is very weak and dumb.

Even though public schools are supposed to be closed on all Saturdays in the indefinite future, I've 100% convinced myself they will still have special programs.

For an extra class, 20,000 is too low. I've done different math than yingwenlaoshi but I got the same numbers more or less. The approximate hourly rate for a 40 hour week works out to about 20,000 won. If there is overtime done, not teaching, just overtime, it should be 30,000 per hour. Overtime teaching should be double (60,000), taking into consideration preparation time. But, since I'm quite adept at doing prep. without using much extra time, I think 40,000 to 50,000 is not bad for overtime teaching (outside 9-5). For extra classes within the 9-5 day, if students are giving the school money the teacher should be getting over 30,000. If the students aren't paying money.... well, 20,000 is kind of low. Just let me have some free time.
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m8888888



Joined: 10 Sep 2006

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 6:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think the 6000 won would be if you're just sitting there, waiting for a class to start, or doing extra prep work or something. I thought all that time would get the overtime rate of 20,000 or 25,000, whatever it says in my contract, but I get paid 8,600 won for that time. It's a percentage of your total pay, and so how long you've been working, and it's the same as the Korean teachers get, including the 20,000 won for extra classes. Korean teachers get paid overtime after 6pm, and not on Saturdays, according to my co-teacher who I just asked. So it's not the EPIK is trying to "screw foreign teachers" or something. It's that the Korean educational system and work ethic is very different (and I would say they both royally suck, but don't want to be judgmental! Haha!).
For example, I had to stay after to film these short videos about English phrases. We couldn't start until 4:40, so I sat around for 40 minutes surfing. The taping took like half an hour, so I left at like 5:10. I got a bit more than 9,000 won for that. I've never taught an extra class, and I don't think it's worth it.
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spliff



Joined: 19 Jan 2004
Location: Khon Kaen, Thailand

PostPosted: Mon Jun 18, 2007 6:24 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I get paid for extra class 20,000 for 1 40min class.
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