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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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| Would you report a teacher with a fake degree? |
| I would report him to immigration |
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19% |
[ 9 ] |
| I would report him to his school |
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8% |
[ 4 ] |
| Don't hire him and just forget about it |
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51% |
[ 24 ] |
| Call the teacher and question him about the degree |
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21% |
[ 10 ] |
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| Total Votes : 47 |
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Intrepid
Joined: 13 May 2004 Location: Yongin
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 6:22 am Post subject: Fake Degrees |
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I took over the academic supervisor spot at a hagwon a few years ago and a few degrees looked suspect--one month TESL-course "diplomas" of US/Canada degree size/shape. The previous supervisor had left incriminating copies of faxes to those then-candidates about how it "doesn't matter if you don't have a degree" etc. He had been under pressure to hire teachers en masse.
So, while I agree with kangnamdragon that it might devalue the occupation, it's a tough one. I wouldn't hire a teacher with a fake degree, but I didn't fire those I had. I presented the fake degrees/correspondence to the wonjang and he said there was no way he would not RENEW those teachers' contracts: they were too popular, and their degrees had already passed muster at Immigration. Which brings us to the question of Is delivering the goods in the classroom enough? At kids' schools I can't even imagine how many fake-degree/good teachers there must be. |
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panthermodern

Joined: 08 Feb 2003 Location: Taxronto
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 6:52 am Post subject: |
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Congratulations ...
Been there, done that ...
I hope you have better luck then I did ...
My opinion:
I would bring him in and tell him no dice and let him walk ...
(no and job look else where)
There is no margin in turning someone into immigration and I would rather have the underqualied working for the enemy ...
Telling immigration hjust makes enemies all around ...
Hell, immigration might get pissed that you made them get off their asses.
Again good luck ... |
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Homer Guest
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 8:26 am Post subject: |
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Kiwiboy,
You quoted the rules, not me.
I just responded to your words. No real ambiguitiy in "always keep your mouth shut and never rat on your friends" is there?
Not much room for interpretation.
What? Not standing by what you said Kiwi?
Backpedaling?
Oh wait, I forgot, you are never wrong...  |
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kiwiboy_nz_99

Joined: 05 Jul 2003 Location: ...Enlightenment...
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 8:28 am Post subject: |
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| Homer wrote: |
| Oh wait, I forgot, you are never wrong... |
From the mouths of babes ... |
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Homer Guest
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 8:36 am Post subject: |
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K-boy,
Your words not mine. |
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humanuspneumos
Joined: 08 Jun 2003
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 11:59 am Post subject: Over-inflated-view of your roll in Korea |
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I think guys (some) especially suffer from this in Korea- an-over-inflated-view-of-their-roll. It seems to me when people fall into this that they lack a sense of significance and are tripping out on making teaching in Korea some GREAT BIG DEAL to compensate for a sense of not being important. Really- it's not. Korea's not a GREAT BIG DEAL to the degree we start phoning immigration on persons just wanting to teach English. Anyway- what did the guy ever do to you that you'd go that far- it kind of says something about your personality that you'd even think about it.
I've been in the position of hiring/advising and I'm sure others have too and have seen first hand- those with "inadequate" paper-work actually became more devoted teachers/more skillful than those with paper coming out of their ....s. I've seen people with BA's pull-off magic in universities up against people with PHD's. The paper doesn't mean anything except that we spent money on a whole bunch of credits we were forced to take and of which- according to stats- we now remember 20% . Awe come one HP- that's going to drive things down. Sick- what's driving things down these days is that things are moving towards the likes of Australia where people need a blooooody certificate just to make a coffee. Our parents got rich in an environment where there was a distinct lack fo people taking "paper" over seriously- not in the anal retention we see these days.
The bottom line- it's up to immigration t say "Yay" or "Nay" - not us. That's just anal. |
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Juggertha

Joined: 27 May 2003 Location: Anyang, Korea
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 4:55 pm Post subject: |
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| If I had my own school, i'd spend more time on my own business and less in others. |
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Mosley
Joined: 15 Jan 2003
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 5:39 pm Post subject: |
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| I certainly wouldn't hire the guy, if only because to do so would be breaking the law of the land. I don't agree w/the law-I think you should be able to hire whoever the hell you want for ESL-but that's the way it is. I wouldn't turn him in either-just say "no" & it's no longer your problem. |
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CanadaCommando

Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Location: People's Republic of C.C.
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 8:40 pm Post subject: |
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While I admit that hiring a guy with a fake degree would be far more trouble than it's worth, I truly do understand anybody who says "rat him to immigration"
Why? Cuz he's not qualified. BS. The only thing that make you more qualified than him is the debt you procoured through taking University, and that little piece of paper that you walk out the door with. Are you trying to tell me that people with Psych degrees are "qualified" to teach English!? Even B.Sc....show me the part of your training that has Adoloscent Psychology, Evaluation, and Lesson Plan development!!
Not trying to troll on ANYBODY here, but the fact is many of the people who teach here are VASTLY underqualified when they get here, and they all have degrees. And so we live, we learn, and we improve, and soon enough, you ARE qualified through your own hard work (at least I hope this is the case). I have an Education degree....should I start saying that everyone who doesnt is unqualified and should be kicked out? No, I don't. Because I believe that here, experience and effort play far more a role than education.
So fine, don't hire him. But why the hell would you cause the man sooo much grief. You wanna "serve the industry" and get rid of him? Simply send him an email, tell him his degree checked out as fake, and that when immigration tries to process it, he'll get in a s-load of trouble. He'll thank you for the warning and be on the next plane out. |
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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 8:57 pm Post subject: |
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| CanadaCommando wrote: |
While I admit that hiring a guy with a fake degree would be far more trouble than it's worth, I truly do understand anybody who says "rat him to immigration"
Why? Cuz he's not qualified. BS. The only thing that make you more qualified than him is the debt you procoured through taking University, and that little piece of paper that you walk out the door with. Are you trying to tell me that people with Psych degrees are "qualified" to teach English!? Even B.Sc....show me the part of your training that has Adoloscent Psychology, Evaluation, and Lesson Plan development!!
Not trying to troll on ANYBODY here, but the fact is many of the people who teach here are VASTLY underqualified when they get here, and they all have degrees. And so we live, we learn, and we improve, and soon enough, you ARE qualified through your own hard work (at least I hope this is the case). I have an Education degree....should I start saying that everyone who doesnt is unqualified and should be kicked out? No, I don't. Because I believe that here, experience and effort play far more a role than education.
So fine, don't hire him. But why the hell would you cause the man sooo much grief. You wanna "serve the industry" and get rid of him? Simply send him an email, tell him his degree checked out as fake, and that when immigration tries to process it, he'll get in a s-load of trouble. He'll thank you for the warning and be on the next plane out. |
We don't make the rules...this is not America or Canada or the People's Republic of Canadacommando....this is Korea. If Korea wants to beef up their standards for ESL, they can. They don't choose to. They set minimum requirements and I think they should be followed. The reason I picked call immigration is simple. I wouldn't like people trying to play me for a fool and plus waste my time. It is insulting and immigration would send a much stronger message then just not hiring him would. Luckily for the ESL world, I'm not a recruiter, I'm just some lowlife qualified enough with that piece of paper that I worked hard to get. A lot harder then buying one off the internet....MENSA...As if ... |
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CanadaCommando

Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Location: People's Republic of C.C.
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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deleted
Last edited by CanadaCommando on Wed May 26, 2004 9:17 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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CanadaCommando

Joined: 13 Feb 2004 Location: People's Republic of C.C.
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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First, thanks for the location. People's Republic of CC...I like it.
Secondly, I didn't say to let him get away with it. I am just saying that there is no point in PUNISHING the guy to the degree that immigration can. We don't know his scenario...he could be a right bright guy that simply never had the coin to go to University, and is still not content to stay at home and work for a liquor store. Considering that 1/2 if not 3/4's of all ESL teachers I know do privates (too tired myself...) the legality of it is really not an issue. If you want to take that moral high ground, I think you should start phoning immigration about all your friends doing privates too. Selective morality anyone?
Not trying to cause trouble with anyone, but in a system as inherintly corrupt and quasi-legal as the ESL industry, why the hell would you choose to go out of the way to screw somebody? There are in fact several companies I know that specialize in finding ways around visa scenarios, and some of their teachers are excellent and dilligent, and they are able to teach here because their Korean bosses know loopholes.
| Alyallen wrote: |
| I'm just some lowlife qualified enough with that piece of paper that I worked hard to get. A lot harder then buying one off the internet....... |
Never made any insinuation about YOUR worth, or how hard you worked getting your degree. Think you'll be applying all your hard work to your job? Do you think that hard work is any more applicable than a few summers working sumer-camp with kids would be?
| Alyallen wrote: |
MENSA...As if ....... |
NEVER forget the distinction that can exist between the educated, and the intelligent. Many are both. Some are only one. Others are neither. Lying about his degree does not make him stupid. Needy, perhaps. Let his intelligence be judged onto itself. |
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Alyallen

Joined: 29 Mar 2004 Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 9:30 pm Post subject: |
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| CanadaCommando wrote: |
First, thanks for the location. People's Republic of CC...I like it.
Secondly, I didn't say to let him get away with it. I am just saying that there is no point in PUNISHING the guy to the degree that immigration can. We don't know his scenario...he could be a right bright guy that simply never had the coin to go to University, and is still not content to stay at home and work for a liquor store. Considering that 1/2 if not 3/4's of all ESL teachers I know do privates (too tired myself...) the legality of it is really not an issue. If you want to take that moral high ground, I think you should start phoning immigration about all your friends doing privates too. Selective morality anyone?
Not trying to cause trouble with anyone, but in a system as inherintly corrupt and quasi-legal as the ESL industry, why the hell would you choose to go out of the way to screw somebody? There are in fact several companies I know that specialize in finding ways around visa scenarios, and some of their teachers are excellent and dilligent, and they are able to teach here because their Korean bosses know loopholes.
| Alyallen wrote: |
| I'm just some lowlife qualified enough with that piece of paper that I worked hard to get. A lot harder then buying one off the internet....... |
Never made any insinuation about YOUR worth, or how hard you worked getting your degree. Think you'll be applying all your hard work to your job? Do you think that hard work is any more applicable than a few summers working sumer-camp with kids would be?
| Alyallen wrote: |
MENSA...As if ....... |
NEVER forget the distinction that can exist between the educated, and the intelligent. Many are both. Some are only one. Others are neither. Lying about his degree does not make him stupid. Needy, perhaps. Let his intelligence be judged onto itself. |
Well...I'm glad you like the People Republic of CC....Copyright it..it's yours
Well. Where to begin. I'm not an ESL teacher. I start that in September, so I don't know anyone who is teaching privates. You are right, privates are illegal and tons of other stuff is illegal but I took the situation of someone wasting my time and lying to my face as a personal offense. That's why I wrote I shouldn't be a recruiter, I was being quite serious.
Hard work is hard work. I worked on-site with autistic children and adults for 3 summers. 8 weeks of heaven and hell. I've been punched and kicked. I've had my hair pulled. I've had my glasses knocked off my face countless times. Despite all that hard work, I wouldn't say that I am totally qualified to teach. It's certainly a start. Experience is oftentimes the best teacher but gaining the technical knowledge behind it doesn't hurt any either. It doesn't hurt your brain and it doesn't hurt the kids you or I or anyone else would teach.
As far as degrees and all that crap. I do think it's B.S. but at the same time, if I had to jump through hoops to get a job, why should someone else get it with little or no effort?
I'm sure this guy is really smart but it is puzzling to me that he got a 1580 on his SATs and couldn't afford to go to college. I know someone who did well on his PSATs (I think the P stands for Preliminary) and schools were crawling over themselves to get him to sign up with them and he wasn't even a Junior in H.S.! Many things can go wrong, but if you are that bright...not going to college seems almost dumb....
AlyAllen |
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kiwiboy_nz_99

Joined: 05 Jul 2003 Location: ...Enlightenment...
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Posted: Wed May 26, 2004 10:54 pm Post subject: |
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| Homer wrote: |
K-boy,
Your words not mine.
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On the contrary, I quoted you. I've never said that, and unless you care to prove me wrong by finding a quote from me I'll accept a formal apology on the board and a white envelope with 100 000 won in it ... |
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Homer Guest
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 1:33 am Post subject: |
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Kiwiboy wrote:
| Quote: |
| The two greatest things in life ... never rat on your friends, and always keep your mouth shut ... |
Well? |
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