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david
Joined: 31 Oct 2003
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Posted: Fri Dec 19, 2008 10:31 pm Post subject: Hogwan Trouble |
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I was asked to meet with my boss last Friday after work. They approached me ten minutes before we were to meet. I agreed and got a quick reminder as to how some businesses in the Cheonan area operate.
A student cried in one of my classes earlier in the week shortly after I asked him to perform the same task ( one he was capable of ) I'd asked everybody else in the class to perform. His mother complained to the boss later that day.
A day later came another incident I thought nothing of until it was brought up in the meeting Friday night. I asked a student to come to the board and complete the second row ( 3 squares ) of a four column chart I created on the board. I'd done the first row as an example and assumed he'd have little difficulty with it. He did have some difficulty, but I clarified things ( a few students assisting ) and he worked out the answer. This boy didn't cry. He was visibly flustered however and I almost asked him to sit down shortly before he worked the answer out.
The school fired me last Friday night. ( No notice or anything. Even after I offered to apologize and/or meet with the parents of both boys. ) The school gave me a letter of release and I've found a new job. Two things:
1) Cancellation of E2 visa: I don't think the school has done it. Must I accompany a representative of the school to a labor board to accomplish this?
2) Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won for a few weeks work. After legitimate deductions I'm down to 900,000 won. The school is telling me I'm not due this amount because the two students left because of me. ( I'm responsible for 900,000 won in fees and am due zero according to my director's son. ) What options do I have? Has anyone else out there gone through something similar? |
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rationality
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Location: Some where in S. Korea
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 12:26 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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Last edited by rationality on Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:46 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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ChinaBoy
Joined: 17 Feb 2007
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 12:56 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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david wrote: |
2) Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won for a few weeks work. After legitimate deductions I'm down to 900,000 won. The school is telling me I'm not due this amount because the two students left because of me. ( I'm responsible for 900,000 won in fees and am due zero according to my director's son. ) What options do I have? Has anyone else out there gone through something similar? |
Post the name of that place to warn everyone else and be done with it. Would be a long drawn out hassle that may never be resolved.
Firing you quickly is probably for the best. Had you stuck around, your life might have become a living hell being there. |
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plynx

Joined: 03 Jun 2008
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 2:12 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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rationality wrote: |
david wrote: |
1) Cancellation of E2 visa: I don't think the school has done it. Must I accompany a representative of the school to a labor board to accomplish this? |
Hello David. It sounds like you have gotten a bum deal. You may want to go easier on the kids, though. My advice to you would be for you to take a little trip to Japan and give the immigration your ARC card so they can cancel out your visa. I did it this way before. Firstly, though, your new school ought to apply for your new visa and get a new visa number issued so you can pick it up in Japan before re-entering the country. Otherwise, you will take a chance playing the guessing game about whether or not your former employer cancelled your visa.
Quote: |
2) Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won for a few weeks work. After legitimate deductions I'm down to 900,000 won. The school is telling me I'm not due this amount because the two students left because of me. ( I'm responsible for 900,000 won in fees and am due zero according to my director's son. ) What options do I have? Has anyone else out there gone through something similar? |
Cut your loses, because it isn't worth the hassle; unless you badly need the money. Then you may have to take a trip to the labor board which maybe quite troublesome. Having a few bottles of Soju may help uplift your spirits for the time being. Good luck. Cheers. |
don't listen to this post!! (except in the case of the ARC/visa) this is terrible advice, especially if i read your OP correctly. if you were fired without proper notice, not only does the school owe you your back-pay, but they are also REQUIRED by LAW to give you an additional 30 days pay. firing you because two students were upset is ridiculous and (unless there was an incredible uproar at your school because of it) not grounds for termination. you are also NOT liable for the students who left (you shouldn't have to pay out of pocket for them!!). do not "cut your losses"! get your money and the additional 30 days pay.
i'm hoping that someone with more sound knowledge will post on here to help you out. if i am incorrect about the 30 days pay, please let me know. good luck! |
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rationality
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Location: Some where in S. Korea
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 3:06 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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Last edited by rationality on Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:45 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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moosehead

Joined: 05 May 2007
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 3:18 am Post subject: |
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yeah, they definitely told you how hakwons in Cheonan operate, huh??
(1) you are due 30 days notice IF and only IF you've been there at least 6 months - which you didn't say; if you have, please call the Labor board and discuss it with them - 1350 anywhere in K, an E speaking person will come on the line if you ask, they will discuss the problem w/you and tell you where the closest location for you to go is
(2) it's good they gave you an LOR - sounds like perhaps they've already got another foreign teacher lined up and ready to go so they wanted you out - or else they are strapped for cash and just wanted an excuse to get rid of you - if they are bleeding students, then that could be it. however, they do owe you the cash if your accounting is correct, unfortunately, if you've been there less than 6 months there's not much you can do except insist and try and stand your ground, hoping they will cave. showing up next week when the mothers are there and making a fuss might help, but then again, it might not.
(3) to get your visa canceled they need to contact immi - they can go w/you which is usually the case - go to immi first thing Monday and tell them your contract has ended and ask for an Exit Order. they'll call the school and verify - you don't want any problems getting a new E2 so go thru channels and do it right.
how are you set for housing? are you ok?
sounds like you got a raw deal - sorry to hear it - hang in there. |
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plynx

Joined: 03 Jun 2008
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 3:31 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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rationality wrote: |
Quote: |
don't listen to this post!! (except in the case of the ARC/visa) this is terrible advice, especially if i read your OP correctly. if you were fired without proper notice, not only does the school owe you your back-pay, but they are also REQUIRED by LAW to give you an additional 30 days pay. firing you because two students were upset is ridiculous and (unless there was an incredible uproar at your school because of it) not grounds for termination. you are also NOT liable for the students who left (you shouldn't have to pay out of pocket for them!!). do not "cut your losses"! get your money and the additional 30 days pay.
i'm hoping that someone with more sound knowledge will post on here to help you out. if i am incorrect about the 30 days pay, please let me know. good luck! |
It is a public forum, and he can take my advice or he can reject it; that is his choice not yours. From my point of view the amount of money for me isn�t worth it, and I think that somewhere up the road, he will come to the same conclusion. This is Korea. Furthermore, did you give the OP advice on where to go and get help since you seem to know so much about the law? I guess that someone isn't going to be you. Please follow through and give specifics as to where he can go for help if it is something he wishes to pursue. |
rationality, i didn't mean to offend with my post. i got cut off in my edit (the forum was grinding to a halt on my server) and wasn't able to write that you had great advice about the ARC and visa. BUT, you basically told the guy (?) to "drink some soju" and "cut his losses" without recognizing that he is possibly in a situation where he can take legal action. for those of us in SK who have been subjected to bosses not following the law, it is important that any and every instance of violation be approached and sorted out - regardless of how much money it is, or what it might be "worth" to you, it might be "worth it" to take the boss to the cleaners for the next employee's sake.
the sentence about "more sound knowledge" was actually referring to anyone with specifics (moosehead had a great reply that touched on all the OP needs to pursue available routes) about the circumstances - it was not in reference to yourself. i didn't give specifics because i knew there would be someone out there who could do a much better job. |
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rationality
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Location: Some where in S. Korea
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 3:54 am Post subject: Re: Hogwan Trouble |
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Last edited by rationality on Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:45 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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shifty
Joined: 21 Jun 2004
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 4:22 am Post subject: |
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David, old chap, couldn't help noticing that you enlisted on Daves way in back in 2003, but perhaps you've been an irregular patron.. Anyway, I think Moosehead has yr number and you should take his advice.
The incident with the sensitive student is quite normal and prevalent with even experienced teachers. You did nothing wrong!! Any decent director would have deflected the parent from yr ass, sounds like he has other agendas and you're missing from them. |
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yingwenlaoshi

Joined: 12 Feb 2007 Location: ... location, location!
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:09 am Post subject: |
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They have to pay you for what you worked. I'd be up and down and on both sides of them screaming if they weren't paying me for that. Screaming like a motherfkr.
They don't have to give you notice, like another poster said, before the six month mark. I'm not totally postive on the six-month thing, though. It's a pretty employer sided law if so. But that's the general idea. My last employer fired me after four months, but they were nice enough to give me a month without having anything in writing, etc.
They can't, and I mean CAN'T, not pay you for what you worked. That's just fkg evil.
By the way, don't put students too much on the spot. I do, but not up on the board in front of everyone. It's good to case it out and figure who to bug and who not to. One of my faults, too. But hey, what can you do?
It's not your fault. |
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maingman
Joined: 26 Jan 2008 Location: left Korea
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 5:52 am Post subject: , |
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david
2) Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won...
its only money  |
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rationality
Joined: 05 Jul 2007 Location: Some where in S. Korea
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Posted: Sat Dec 20, 2008 7:15 pm Post subject: |
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Last edited by rationality on Fri Jul 03, 2009 9:45 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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mountainous

Joined: 04 Sep 2007 Location: Los Angeles
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Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 9:54 am Post subject: Hagwon Trouble and Loss of Korean Face |
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david wrote: |
I was asked to meet with my boss last Friday after work. They approached me ten minutes before we were to meet. I agreed and got a quick reminder as to how some businesses in the Cheonan area operate.
A student cried in one of my classes earlier in the week shortly after I asked him to perform the same task ( one he was capable of ) I'd asked everybody else in the class to perform. His mother complained to the boss later that day.
A day later came another incident I thought nothing of until it was brought up in the meeting Friday night. I asked a student to come to the board and complete the second row ( 3 squares ) of a four column chart I created on the board. I'd done the first row as an example and assumed he'd have little difficulty with it. He did have some difficulty, but I clarified things ( a few students assisting ) and he worked out the answer. This boy didn't cry. He was visibly flustered however and I almost asked him to sit down shortly before he worked the answer out.
The school fired me last Friday night. ( No notice or anything. Even after I offered to apologize and/or meet with the parents of both boys. ) The school gave me a letter of release and I've found a new job. Two things:
1) Cancellation of E2 visa: I don't think the school has done it. Must I accompany a representative of the school to a labor board to accomplish this?
2) Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won for a few weeks work. After legitimate deductions I'm down to 900,000 won. The school is telling me I'm not due this amount because the two students left because of me. ( I'm responsible for 900,000 won in fees and am due zero according to my director's son. ) What options do I have? Has anyone else out there gone through something similar? |
You got punished for challenging the students and having a student-centered classroom, especially in the 2nd instance where you caused the student to come to the board and suffer a loss of Korean Face. This is why you got fired. The only thing worse than losing face in Korea is causing someone to lose face.
Quote: |
Money: The school owes me 1,325,000 won for a few weeks work. After legitimate deductions I'm down to 900,000 won. The school is telling me I'm not due this amount because the two students left because of me. |
In Korea, excuses for refusing to pay salary are commonplace. Any monies that your Korean has failed to pay by the time of firing are generally forfeited. In this instance, you caused a Korean client to lose face which (understandably) caused the company to suffer a financial loss. The Korean Court may easily pass this loss to the FT while maintaining the status quo. You lose when they do nothing.
Saving Korean Face has been discussed here on Dave's:
http://forums.eslcafe.com/korea/viewtopic.php?t=141004 This is a good discussion
Another thread on Saving Korean Face that includes an example of single party face saving on page 2: http://forums.eslcafe.com/korea/viewtopic.php?t=125694&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=15
How long have you been living and/or working in Korea? |
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Easter Clark

Joined: 18 Nov 2007 Location: Hiding from Yie Eun-woong
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Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 2:55 pm Post subject: |
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Your new school can easily transfer your visa (I don't see any reason to cancel it), but if I were you I'd get out of the country for a few days and take a breather. Sorry about the firing, but surely it's a blessing in disguise.  |
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Yu_Bum_suk

Joined: 25 Dec 2004
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Posted: Sun Dec 21, 2008 11:27 pm Post subject: |
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Easter Clark wrote: |
Your new school can easily transfer your visa (I don't see any reason to cancel it), but if I were you I'd get out of the country for a few days and take a breather. Sorry about the firing, but surely it's a blessing in disguise.  |
I'm sure it is. I would *want* to be fired from such a place. Get your visa cancelled by immigration and you're free to get another job. |
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