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numb
Joined: 05 Jul 2013
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 5:22 am Post subject: |
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| Hagwon owners just got more racist , and act like true assholes, because they think they have power over e2 teachers. |
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Dalton

Joined: 26 Mar 2003
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 5:51 am Post subject: |
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IMHO recruiters happened.
It used to be that you put up a resume on Dave's and got 20-40 responses the next day. A handful of recruiters that were to be avoided. Now you put up a resume and get a handful of recruiters responding over the week all singing the same song. Too many teachers not enough jobs! This will never be the reality. There simply aren't enough English bachelor degree holders on Earth to supply this market. Let alone ones who would even consider doing this job.
The only reason people come to Korea is the flight and free accommodation. It used to be for the pay and the job conditions as well. Give it maybe two years tops and nobody comes here. Experiences like yours (compared to the 2010 people) will see to that. I mean are you going home with the same happy stories as the class of 2010?
Recruiters have killed this job market. Koreans will be the last to figure it out. Crisis management mentality. |
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Ginormousaurus

Joined: 27 Jul 2006 Location: 700 Ft. Pulpit
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 6:10 am Post subject: |
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| Dalton wrote: |
IMHO recruiters happened.
It used to be that you put up a resume on Dave's and got 20-40 responses the next day. A handful of recruiters that were to be avoided. Now you put up a resume and get a handful of recruiters responding over the week all singing the same song. Too many teachers not enough jobs! This will never be the reality. There simply aren't enough English bachelor degree holders on Earth to supply this market. Let alone ones who would even consider doing this job.
The only reason people come to Korea is the flight and free accommodation. It used to be for the pay and the job conditions as well. Give it maybe two years tops and nobody comes here. Experiences like yours (compared to the 2010 people) will see to that. I mean are you going home with the same happy stories as the class of 2010?
Recruiters have killed this job market. Koreans will be the last to figure it out. Crisis management mentality. |
[See bold] Is this really true? I get the impression from a few threads here that there are too many teachers and not enough jobs, at least compared to situation in the mid 2000s. This is often cited as the reason for the stagnant wages. |
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Dalton

Joined: 26 Mar 2003
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 6:24 am Post subject: |
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| Ginormousaurus wrote: |
| Dalton wrote: |
IMHO recruiters happened.
It used to be that you put up a resume on Dave's and got 20-40 responses the next day. A handful of recruiters that were to be avoided. Now you put up a resume and get a handful of recruiters responding over the week all singing the same song. Too many teachers not enough jobs! This will never be the reality. There simply aren't enough English bachelor degree holders on Earth to supply this market. Let alone ones who would even consider doing this job.
The only reason people come to Korea is the flight and free accommodation. It used to be for the pay and the job conditions as well. Give it maybe two years tops and nobody comes here. Experiences like yours (compared to the 2010 people) will see to that. I mean are you going home with the same happy stories as the class of 2010?
Recruiters have killed this job market. Koreans will be the last to figure it out. Crisis management mentality. |
[See bold] Is this really true? I get the impression from a few threads here that there are too many teachers and not enough jobs, at least compared to situation in the mid 2000s. This is often cited as the reason for the stagnant wages. |
But have you seen any actual numbers with links to back that up?
Maybe 1/6 of the world is English speaking. Maybe 10% have bachelor degrees. How many stop there and then decide to teach EFL? How many EFL positions are there in the world? |
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Ginormousaurus

Joined: 27 Jul 2006 Location: 700 Ft. Pulpit
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 6:54 am Post subject: |
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| Dalton wrote: |
| Ginormousaurus wrote: |
| Dalton wrote: |
IMHO recruiters happened.
It used to be that you put up a resume on Dave's and got 20-40 responses the next day. A handful of recruiters that were to be avoided. Now you put up a resume and get a handful of recruiters responding over the week all singing the same song. Too many teachers not enough jobs! This will never be the reality. There simply aren't enough English bachelor degree holders on Earth to supply this market. Let alone ones who would even consider doing this job.
The only reason people come to Korea is the flight and free accommodation. It used to be for the pay and the job conditions as well. Give it maybe two years tops and nobody comes here. Experiences like yours (compared to the 2010 people) will see to that. I mean are you going home with the same happy stories as the class of 2010?
Recruiters have killed this job market. Koreans will be the last to figure it out. Crisis management mentality. |
[See bold] Is this really true? I get the impression from a few threads here that there are too many teachers and not enough jobs, at least compared to situation in the mid 2000s. This is often cited as the reason for the stagnant wages. |
But have you seen any actual numbers with links to back that up?
Maybe 1/6 of the world is English speaking. Maybe 10% have bachelor degrees. How many stop there and then decide to teach EFL? How many EFL positions are there in the world? |
No, I don't have any numbers to back it up and it's not really my claim. Just an observation based on comments made by posters regarding the current situation in Korea.
BTW, I wasn't trying to argue with you. But you really shouldn't ask for official numbers with linked sources if you are going to follow it up with your own unsourced estimations to prove your point. And considering your point was that "recruiters have killed the job market", I don't see how claiming there aren't enough qualified teachers really supports your opinion on recruiters. |
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Dalton

Joined: 26 Mar 2003
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 10:36 pm Post subject: |
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I think recruiters have become bottlenecks in the free flow of teachers to Korea.
20-40 schools contacting me for a position within 24 hours is not the same as 7-10 recruiters within a few days.
I could/can find a job within a week when schools contacted me directly. I can't expect all 7 recruiters to send a single job offer in that time.
That is how I think recruiters create the impression of a flooded market. With no numbers to make the argument either way, they or others are free to argue that it's the market rather then the dominance of an expensive bottleneck of middlemen.
If the market were flooded then why are there so many job offers popping up on Dave's everyday? There are other busy sites as well.
If the market were flooded there would be no new job postings just recruiter ads. Recruiters would be giving you a number not shouting about how many jobs they have. If the market were flooded, if they are shouting when in fact they should be giving a number then they have to take some responsibility for flooding the market. |
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hiamnotcool
Joined: 06 Feb 2012
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 10:49 pm Post subject: |
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| Dalton wrote: |
I think recruiters have become bottlenecks in the free flow of teachers to Korea.
20-40 schools contacting me for a position within 24 hours is not the same as 7-10 recruiters within a few days.
I could/can find a job within a week when schools contacted me directly. I can't expect all 7 recruiters to send a single job offer in that time.
That is how I think recruiters create the impression of a flooded market. With no numbers to make the argument either way, they or others are free to argue that it's the market rather then the dominance of an expensive bottleneck of middlemen.
If the market were flooded then why are there so many job offers popping up on Dave's everyday? There are other busy sites as well.
If the market were flooded there would be no new job postings just recruiter ads. Recruiters would be giving you a number not shouting about how many jobs they have. If the market were flooded, if they are shouting when in fact they should be giving a number then they have to take some responsibility for flooding the market. |
Yes, and recruiters lying to the schools about the recruit that they hire for them, then lying to the recruit about the school they are recruiting for. The two parties end up putting too much trust in the middle man, and neither gets what they bargained for. As a result both are upset and often end up hating each other. |
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Dalton

Joined: 26 Mar 2003
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 11:26 pm Post subject: |
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Which is not an improvement at all over trying to come to terms with a hogwon owner or rep that didn't speak English well. But experience helped and knowing what was communicated back and forth also helped to smooth things over if the will was there. We have no idea what the discussions/promises/requests are between recruiters and schools.
Recruiters can be good, I used one for awhile but I had a choice. Now it's a machine with no innate responsibility. |
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tophatcat
Joined: 09 Aug 2006 Location: under the hat
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Posted: Wed Jul 10, 2013 11:32 pm Post subject: |
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| Dalton wrote: |
I think recruiters have become bottlenecks in the free flow of teachers to Korea.
20-40 schools contacting me for a position within 24 hours is not the same as 7-10 recruiters within a few days.
I could/can find a job within a week when schools contacted me directly. I can't expect all 7 recruiters to send a single job offer in that time.
That is how I think recruiters create the impression of a flooded market. With no numbers to make the argument either way, they or others are free to argue that it's the market rather then the dominance of an expensive bottleneck of middlemen.
If the market were flooded then why are there so many job offers popping up on Dave's everyday? There are other busy sites as well.
If the market were flooded there would be no new job postings just recruiter ads. Recruiters would be giving you a number not shouting about how many jobs they have. If the market were flooded, if they are shouting when in fact they should be giving a number then they have to take some responsibility for flooding the market. |
I don't think the market is flooded. I'm not even sure why people find it difficult getting a job in Korea. Post a resume. Simply devote all of one's time and effort to applying for and checking the background for the advertised jobs. Maybe this takes a couple of weeks. I haven't tried to find a job here in a long time but I think if I put my mind to it that it wouldn't be that difficult in finding one. |
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Dalton

Joined: 26 Mar 2003
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Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2013 12:22 am Post subject: |
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I think it's impossible for the market demand to be met at all let alone flooded. I've been the first native EFL teacher at almost every school I've worked for. A couple had waited so long for a teacher and they were quite excited. Humbling.
There may have been a surge or two because of the jobs situation, the fairly recent acceptance of non-NA accents and apparently some public school programs are releasing teachers into the wild. But the economy will/is improving, parents prefer NA accents and public school demands for extra certification along with the costs to get those will dampen their supply if it hasn't already.
I find it difficult to get around recruiters. I used to get offers complete with contracts as I said. Now I get recruiters requesting I go apply on web sites for example. Or write letters. Not happening guys. You're a bunch of hacks and opportunists. It's a bottle neck. Like a a couple lane closures on a major route to work. Rush hour. A huge negative impact. You usually don't even know who the school is and that is very important. Some schools are not good to work for. I refuse to work for some of the big chains or their franchisees for example. So I wait two weeks for the recruiter to get back to me and it's a chain that I wouldn't work for on a bet?
I just started looking two weeks ago by the way. I put a resume on Dave's every week and respond to ads on Dave's just as often. Recruiters are like deep mud on the path that I'm trying to run on. The single worst thing that's happened to working in Korea in my time IMHO. Worse than the visa changes. The people arguing China as an alternative may have a good point after all. |
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hacheondo
Joined: 05 Apr 2013
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Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2013 5:46 am Post subject: |
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Getting a job here is not as easy as before. With 7 yrs experience and all the certs, it took me 6 weeks busting my ass here on the ground to get a decent job. True, I am ancient (3 , and I did request housing allowance, but I was surprised how long it took and how few offers I got. I found the recruiters more than useless -- they just got in the way. They'd shoot me a crap offer once every few days. "How about a kiddie hagwon on Jindo -- it's awesome!" Hey dickhead, I said I want Seoul and adults... what makes you think I'm going to move to an island to teach 2nd graders?!
I missed two jobs because I am too old.
Anyways, I don't think anything has changed regarding the workload and pay... and that's the problem, it's the same as it was in 2004 when I was here. It's always been 120 hrs / month and 2.1 - 2.3. |
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hacheondo
Joined: 05 Apr 2013
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Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2013 5:48 am Post subject: |
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| SNOTOSEOUL wrote: |
They continued to pull shit like this. Once they asked me to come in on a Saturday to help with an extra annual teachers party. Even though my contract says no weekends!
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Dang! You had to come in to help out for a couple of hours on one weekend? That's crazy. I hope you were being sarcastic.
I am. |
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PatrickGHBusan
Joined: 24 Jun 2008 Location: Busan (1997-2008) Canada 2008 -
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Posted: Thu Jul 11, 2013 6:44 am Post subject: |
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| Captain Corea wrote: |
| plan b wrote: |
| You had some awful luck with the first hagwon, but it sounds like you landed on your feet. Kudos to you for hanging in there. As for the anti-westerner sentiments, well Koreans love western culture..but seem to despise westerners in general |
Um... no. You're welcome to speak from your own experiences, but "despising westerners in general" would not be how'd I'd describe the majority of my interactions here.
OP, nothing happened. You had a crappy school. There's always been crappy schools here. Nothing new. Nothing changed. |
There you go. OP answered, well done. |
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