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Like many others, Sara Moss, who
graduated with an English degree in the United States, came to China to
teach after learning about job opportunities from friends.(Photo: China
Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Many job websites list dozens of positions across the
country. They include pitches such as this from a Nanning school: "You must be
available immediately (yesterday is better!)." The job offered 4,500 to 5,500
yuan (584-714 U.S. dollars) a month and "a generous travel allowance" along with
"balmy tropical setting".
Yang Changju, director of the cultural and
educational experts department at the State Administration of Foreign Experts
Affairs, said that the administration is working with the Ministry of Education
to develop a qualification system for foreign language teachers in China to
better regulate the market. No timetable was available.
Yang also said the qualification standard may vary
from region to region, because China is so large, and demand varies from region
to region.
Sara Moss, 24, who graduated with an English degree
in the United States, came to China to teach after learning about job
opportunities from two friends.
Her current job differs from her experience in Hubei,
where she worked for the Three Gorges University in Yichang for two years. As an
English major, she felt adequately prepared to teach in China, but she realized
soon after she arrived that ESL instructional training would have been useful.
"I kind of regret not doing it, because I think it's
kind of helpful to know how to teach ESL before you come here," she said. "It's
not something where you just walk into a class and start teaching."
She has learned to improvise with her students to
keep things interesting and enjoys her job.
Stories about unqualified teachers who got jobs
solely because they were native English speakers haven't eluded her. At her
first job, a foreign colleague was fired, because he used class time to chat
with students, didn't prepare materials, started class late and dismissed
students an hour early, she said.
"I've met plenty of those people who are terrible
teachers," Moss said. "If you're teaching at a university, you get a free place
to stay and a free air ticket. And now, the universities are realizing that just
because you speak English doesn't mean you can teach."
Angelina's ESL Caf, a large private recruiting
company with offices in several cities including Houston, Texas, has about 500
schools across the country as clients, said founder Isabelle Ji and manager Tom
Tang. The company gets about 100 e-mails a day from foreigners looking for jobs
and offers positions to about 500 a year.
"Many Chinese schools need foreign teachers every
year, and since most foreigners work six months or a year, many schools need new
teachers every year," Tang said. "If I am a headmaster, every year I have to get
foreign teachers."
Wu Qing, the vice-dean at the School of English and
International Studies at Beijing Foreign Studies University, said it's only a
matter of time before the process is standardized.
However, she felt that the main problem today is that
too many Chinese are being pushed to learn English for one kind of qualification
or another, including taxi drivers and very young students. She believes this
trend should be reexamined. She said there's a need to learn English, but it
should be done in the proper setting and context.
"It's a kind of a waste of resources," she said,
adding that her own university goes beyond pushing students just to cram. "It's
not language alone; we also stress culture, and we need to understand the values
of the English-speaking community in order to understand the culture."
The booming market has attracted its share of shady
characters who use the exploding demand to lure foreigners to China only to win
fees from schools.
The U.S. embassy has heard from many teachers who
arrived in China only to encounter problems with employers involving payment and
other benefits.
"Many Americans have enjoyed their teaching
experiences in China; others have encountered significant problems," the embassy
said on its website. "Unfortunately, some American citizens travel to China
under a contract with promises of a good salary, bonuses and other perks only to
find themselves in difficult situations, often lacking funds to return to the
United States."
For Johnson, her first job provided some unexpected
bumps along the way that she wasn't ready to handle in Harbin.
"I was told by the company that they would be
providing materials, but they didn't, and they also said they would be providing
training, but they didn't. So, we were kind of lied to," she said.
But a separate incident provided the last straw.
Her landlord entered her apartment when she was on
vacation and reported to her boss that some things were damaged or broken. Her
boss, without consulting her or hearing her side of the story, deducted about
200 dollars from her salary. That scared her away from the school.
"We left, because he didn't talk to us about it, he
just gave him (the landlord) the money. We felt it was not right," she said.
"When you live here long enough, you learn some bad things can happen. You're
careful to look out for those things. You kind of always have to be on your toes
and pay attention to things."
(Source: China
Daily)