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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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byrddogs

Joined: 19 Jun 2009 Location: Shanghai
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 8:06 pm Post subject: Korea or China? |
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Any thoughts on which is preferable for living and teaching ESL? |
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Porksta
Joined: 05 May 2011
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 8:17 pm Post subject: |
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I don't think you can teach in China until you have two years of ESL experience, so that might make up your mind real quick. |
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comm
Joined: 22 Jun 2010
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 8:30 pm Post subject: |
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Porksta wrote: |
I don't think you can teach in China until you have two years of ESL experience, so that might make up your mind real quick. |
Actually, there are plenty of jobs on the China job board that don't require any experience. Also, I've heard of jobs that can be had with only a high school diploma...
I haven't been to China, but I did the math and working in Korea seems to be a much better deal for me personally. I know that Korea has:
Good wages
A low cost of living
Great living conditions (internet freedom in particular)
Excellent benefits (insurance, flight, etc)
An accessible labor relations board to help resolve conflicts with an employer
A reasonable demand for teachers
On the other hand, I would expect China to offer better job growth and likely better career opportunities in the long-term (especially if you're willing to learn the native language). I'm sure someone who's actually taught in China could give you a better perspective on it though... |
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northway
Joined: 05 Jul 2010
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 8:37 pm Post subject: |
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Porksta wrote: |
I don't think you can teach in China until you have two years of ESL experience, so that might make up your mind real quick. |
BS technicality that isn't enforced at all in reality. I know a whole bunch of people who have taught in China with zero teaching experience, no problem. |
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ttompatz

Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Location: Kwangju, South Korea
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 9:22 pm Post subject: Re: Korea or China? |
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byrddogs wrote: |
Any thoughts on which is preferable for living and teaching ESL? |
How high is up?
What is "preferable"?
If you are a newbie, fresh off the plane with a brand new, shiny BA then Korea is still king for money.
If you have some experience under your belt (as an expat) and at least the brains and werewithal that Ghod gave green apples then you can do VERY WELL in China.
China is what Korea was 10 years ago for ESL/EFL complete with all the benefits and problems that Korea had 10 years ago.
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byrddogs

Joined: 19 Jun 2009 Location: Shanghai
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Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2012 9:38 pm Post subject: Re: Korea or China? |
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ttompatz wrote: |
How high is up?
What is "preferable"?
If you are a newbie, fresh off the plane with a brand new, shiny BA then Korea is still king for money.
If you have some experience under your belt (as an expat) and at least the brains and werewithal that Ghod gave green apples then you can do VERY WELL in China.
China is what Korea was 10 years ago for ESL/EFL complete with all the benefits and problems that Korea had 10 years ago.
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LOL, you got me ttompatz. Yes, my post was vague purposely.
As usual, you are correct in your response. I do better here (in China) than I did in Korea even though I was moving to level A in the public school payscale.
Just wanted others opinions that had lived both there and here on what was "preferable" in each place in case I had the notion to come back there. I'll be more specific next time.  |
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Malislamusrex
Joined: 01 Feb 2010
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Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2012 12:17 am Post subject: Re: Korea or China? |
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Lets say if a guy worked at a uni, did a few extra corporate in the evening and made lets say around 6 million won and 9million in summer / winter camp time.
For the same 30-40 hours work what advantages does China have? What does VERY WELL in China mean?
ttompatz wrote: |
byrddogs wrote: |
Any thoughts on which is preferable for living and teaching ESL? |
How high is up?
What is "preferable"?
If you are a newbie, fresh off the plane with a brand new, shiny BA then Korea is still king for money.
If you have some experience under your belt (as an expat) and at least the brains and werewithal that Ghod gave green apples then you can do VERY WELL in China.
China is what Korea was 10 years ago for ESL/EFL complete with all the benefits and problems that Korea had 10 years ago.
. |
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morrisonhotel
Joined: 18 Jul 2009 Location: Gyeonggi-do
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Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2012 12:20 am Post subject: |
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northway wrote: |
Porksta wrote: |
I don't think you can teach in China until you have two years of ESL experience, so that might make up your mind real quick. |
BS technicality that isn't enforced at all in reality. I know a whole bunch of people who have taught in China with zero teaching experience, no problem. |
I'm looking in to going to China to work for 6 months. It seems that the two year teaching thing only applies to certain, more popular regions. It is possible to get around it depending on where you are in China is my understanding of the situation. |
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sirius black
Joined: 04 Jun 2010
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Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2012 5:35 pm Post subject: |
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China is desperate for teachers. We're talking a billion + people and not nearly enough people to teach them. Many schools are using non native english speaking people just to meet the demand. The advertised salaries you see on this site is NOT what you can get once there. Its much closer to Korea than many think. Cost of living lower in many places. Its a big country. Privates are attainable there as well with no where close to the fear the some have of authorities finding out as you hear on this forum (although in practice I've never seen a problem).
There also seems to be a lot more non teaching business opportunities in China. People who have learned mandarin often find side work or jobs with either chinese companies doing business with the west or visa versa.
Not saying China is better. Better is a subjective term based on your own personal standards. China can be far more frustrating than Korea in terms of getting things done until you find your way around and even after that. The analogy to Korea years ago may be closer to the mark. I wasn't in Korea then but from what old timers tell me, it has some similarities. Food, cost of living and dating (for guys...hehe) seem better/easier. Walmart is prevalent. You can live a warm region all year round (like Shenzhen). |
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ayahyaha
Joined: 04 Apr 2011 Location: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 6:53 am Post subject: |
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I have lived and taught English in both Korea and China for about the same amount of time. In Korea, I taught in a small town and also in Seoul. In China, I taught in a small town and I taught in Shanghai.
Some thoughts:
Korean is much easier to learn than Mandarin, especially with all the dialects. However, I learned enough Mandarin to get around via trains and buses just fine.
Most jobs come with the same deal (free flight and housing, even severance) if you are on a teaching visa.
Most expats I encountered in China were really into Chinese culture.
The expats in China are much more diverse than in Korea. Most of my friends were *not* English teachers. (This is good and bad.)
Pay in China is lower BUT:
~No one cared if I worked outside my visa, even though it was in my contract.
~You can get a Business Visa (rather than a teaching visa) and work freelance, which allowed me to save $10,000 in about 5 months. I worked six days a week/6~8 hours a day, but I did it.
I got food poisoning three times in China, but never once in Korea.
China has a ton of people. A TON. If lack of personal space bothers you, do not go there. Even in completely open spaces someone WILL bump into you. Or stand next to you, touching your shoulder, for no apparent reason. Korea has nothing on China for invasion of my zone.
There are a lot of things that are normal in China that disgust a lot of Westerners. Kids wear split pants and pee where they feel like it. Spitting on the street is HUGE compared to Korea. In my neighborhood in Shanghai small animals were routinely slaughtered and gutted into the street. If this bothers you, don't go there. I didn't really mind once I learned to watch my step.
My apartment in awesome downtown Shanghai (when I rented my own) was only $485/month, in a highrise with an awesome view.
I like the going-out scene in Shanghai a lot better than in Korea. The people, music, and atmosphere are different.
Immigration control in China is much stricter. I left the country once while working there and had to register with the local police before leaving and after returning. If I had not, I would not have been able to get a new visa there.
As mentioned above, getting sh*t done in China can be much more difficult--until you know someone. Case in point: I asked the desk manager in my fully-serviced English-speaking apartment building how to get wireless internet. His response: "I do not think this building has internet service." (He had been on the internet at his desk moments before.) An hour later I returned with my rental agent, who knew the desk manager and asked for internet on my behalf. He called right then and there and set up service. It's called guanxi, and it's a pain in the as*, but once you have it you're in.
I'm sure there is more. In short:
Korea is neater/cleaner (by some Western standards), easier to get around with the language, and generally more lucrative -- but China was way more interesting. |
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The Floating World
Joined: 01 Oct 2011 Location: Here
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 6:34 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: |
I like the going-out scene in Shanghai a lot better than in Korea. The people, music, and atmosphere are different. |
This. Plus the fact that when I was there (only a week) most of the people I met were not all in the esl industry, which was very refreshing to me. Plus Shanghai just feels like more of a worldly place to me.
Plus with ot and / or privates my friend there is making more than me in Korea for the same ammount of teachign hours as the average contract there is for around 20 hrs ime. So if they do ten hrs of ot - they are teachign the same ammount as the average hakwan worker, at least and making a lot more after clearance. |
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myenglishisno
Joined: 08 Mar 2011 Location: Geumchon
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 8:59 pm Post subject: |
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I'd imagine the actual teaching aspect would be a bit easier in China in some ways. This isn't talked about much when comparing the two countries but I've heard that Chinese kids pick up English a lot faster than Korean/Japanese kids do thanks to Chinese and English being more similar.
Many Koreans study English for more than ten years and can't make basic sentences. I've met a lot of Chinese adults who spoke English better than Korean English teachers and English was in no way their focus. |
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YTMND
Joined: 16 Jan 2012 Location: You're the man now dog!!
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Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 9:36 pm Post subject: |
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First, I would like to comment on what "ayahyaha" mentioned. Their post is too long to quote. I agree with what they said, and I left a few places in China because of the issues raised. However, you need to realize China is a huge country. It's almost like Europe with each province being its own country. I didn't experience this in Korea. So, if you can find a province you like, the issues ayahyaha raised don't seem as bad.
Quote: |
I'd imagine the actual teaching aspect would be a bit easier in China in some ways. This isn't talked about much when comparing the two countries but I've heard that Chinese kids pick up English a lot faster than Korean/Japanese kids do thanks to Chinese and English being more similar.
Many Koreans study English for more than ten years and can't make basic sentences. I've met a lot of Chinese adults who spoke English better than Korean English teachers and English was in no way their focus. |
The difference I see is vocabulary accuracy and conversation ability. When I worked way out in the countryside, Korean kids could make conversation but they didn't know words. They would say "Give me ___(that, whatever that was)." The same Chinese student in a big city will say "book". They might point, they might not. The Chinese spend more time studying concrete words. Of course at beginner level, both students are not going to construct sentences well. However, I have even talked with Chinese adults who have a grasp of much higher vocabulary than Korean adults, and they very often go into one word response mode to make conversation.
If you ask a Chinese student a question, they are more likely to answer back faster with an appropriate answer while the Korean student is going to be fumbling with grammar issues even though they know the answer just as well. It's not so much that the Korean language is different, it's that the Korean is trying to use grammar whereas the Chinese simply skip it.
Korean sentence: Yesterday, I, the store, went to.
Chinese sentence: Yesterday, I, go, store.
They both still get "I play computer" wrong and "I games" wrong. |
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ayahyaha
Joined: 04 Apr 2011 Location: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 3:04 am Post subject: |
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YTMND wrote: |
However, you need to realize China is a huge country. It's almost like Europe with each province being its own country. I didn't experience this in Korea. So, if you can find a province you like, the issues ayahyaha raised don't seem as bad. |
Good point that China varies vastly from one province and even one city/town to another (especially food! and dialect!). A few things that I mentioned, though, I have heard from many teachers teaching all over China. Such as: guanxi, no personal space, nobody caring about working under the table, kids peeing everywhere...
Quote: |
I'd imagine the actual teaching aspect would be a bit easier in China in some ways. This isn't talked about much when comparing the two countries but I've heard that Chinese kids pick up English a lot faster than Korean/Japanese kids do thanks to Chinese and English being more similar. |
Interesting. Both the best students I have ever had and the worst students I have ever had (in many years of teaching) were in China. The main difference in my experience there was that my Chinese students were not afraid to *try* to talk. Many of my Korean students think a lot longer before speaking, and are worried about grammar. Most of my Chinese students would just wing it, adults and kids alike.
I'm talking about a huge difference in affective filters, for anyone who cares about the theory.
All that said, I really liked living and traveling in China, and I learned an incredible amount about life/culture there, but I wouldn't want to live there long-term. |
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seoultee
Joined: 11 Mar 2011
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Posted: Tue Jan 31, 2012 3:21 am Post subject: |
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I would say overall the opportunities are better in Korea. However, if you are a certified teacher back home, you can teach in Taiwan and Hong Kong public schools and make a very good salary. Same in UAE. Korea you don't need to be certified. That being said there are also teaching jobs in China that you don't need any experience or certifications and the pay is commensurate. |
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