ADVICE TO TEACHERS
10 points to consider. Here goes:
Every Foreign English Teacher (FT), SHOULD
1. Ask for 150/ per hour OR MORE. You might not get it-but ask. Consider not working for less! Many teachers I know don't. The 2001 L.P. guide to China lists the average salary of FTs in Chinese cities as "100-150 rmb per hour or more". That was 10 years ago! (How much more expensive is China now?)
If you want to ask for less-, the best rate would be FREE, VOLUNTEERING, TEACHING low-income PEOPLE.
2. Calculate total working hours (including prep time, time spent at workplace without option/chance to leave, office hours etc) and share these with other teachers. Use them in bargaining with the school. Its up to you whether you want to ask to be paid for them-but they should no longer be treated as if they don't exist-you should know how much you really make per hour and the boss should know you know..
3. Ask for a visa. A lot of jobs can't or won't give this. It's up to teachers as to how to handle visa difficulties, and what to accept or risk.
But you should at least ask for one. If they won't give a teacher a visa, it would be strange to think that the teacher would need to give them a real name, copy of passport, CV, or conform to the companies pay schedule.
4. Ask for benefits-medical, housing, flights, sick days, holiday time, etc
2 days off per week (for full-time teachers).
At this point, the companies still set the standards almost all by themselves.
Favors or concessions that you give the school will not usually be noticed, sacrifices will not typically be remembered or paid back. If the managers don't think you owe them, the owners surely do.
Raise pressure, raise standards.
5. Communicate with other teachers in your city.
Keep them in the loop. Warn others about bad schools. Tell other teachers about schools that cheated or abused you or, more commonly: mislead you, lied to you, broke workload promises or visa promises. This also includes racist discrimination-how are nonwhite teachers still being denied equal treatment? It is unacceptable. Help other teachers.
6. Demand to be rewarded.
For experience, for long term service, for completing contracts, raises and, or similar contracts should be expected. Many places love the idea of a constant turnover of staff. A sucker comes along every minute. They won't start preferring the opposite without pressure.
7. Know the school's business.
Know how much students at a given workplace are paying, find out how much other teachers make, and FIND OUT HOW MANY FTs they have and who they are. Schools often prefer to play teachers against each other, or have a reservoir of very precarious pt time teachers and not have a single full time teach who they are committed to. Schools charge as much as 500/hour for "vip" one on one classes-usually paid several lessons advance. They may mislead students about how much you are getting paid. Share this info. Help other teachers.
8. Ask for consecutive hours.
Time is valuable and your time is being wasted if your are at you work place and not being paid for it-you could be somewhere else.. Mandatory Breaks of less than 1 hour should be paid for. You should also not be bussing around from place to place with sufficient compensation.
9. Ask for a minimum of teaching hours with a reliable teaching schedule.
Pay by the hour is based on the accumulation of lots of hours. Paying someone by the hour for 2 hours/day of work ONLY MAKE SENSE IF the client/company is GOING TO THEM, as they presumably have other clients. But if they are acting as an employee and going to a workplace, they should either be guaranteed more hours, OR THE COMPENSATION SHOULD BE INCREASED IN SOME WAY, or they should not be paid by the hour. And teachers, no one is paying you for your transportation time, so why bus out somewhere just to be headed home 2 hours later? Raise standards and help yourself.
10. Establish your standing. In the absence of full timer benefits (or compensation), consider yourself freelancer or freelance contractor, and explain what this means to the company. Consider this and remind them of this when it comes to favors, special appearances, extra or unpaid work, schedule changes, etc. Don't brown-nose. They need to learn you are a service provider.