Taught simple English to kids 6-8 years old. About 40 kids in a class. They paid 30RMB for a class and I was paid 250RMB. Taught the same material for 8 class a day (sat and Sun). The school got about 19,000 per weekend and I got 8,000. And, yes I did get paid all of it. In Changping near Beijing.
Taught at a private school in Beijing, Students paid 80,000 a year plus living, plus food, plus books, plus, plus. Subject teachers, not English teachers, were paid 10,000 a month, foreign and Chinese both for 12 hours max. Most taught 8 hours for Math, Chemistry, Physics, Accounting, Statistics, etc. all A level courses with UK books. Silly owners fired the headmaster who took 80% of the students to his own new school. This school folded I think.
Private schools usually get the tuition and boarding fees upfront. They tend to run out of money toward the end of the year which makes return air ticket money iffy.
Breakeven depends on rent and the number of non teaching staff, you know the guys that hang around all day reading newspapers and plying cards. One private school I worked at had 65 Chinese and foreign teachers with over 200 total staff most of which did little or nothing.
Rent is a mystery. One school paid annual rent of 25% of tuition collected - this school folded. Other schools had cost reduction programs, firing teachers or abusive fines. Fines for failing to report to a class when the time and day had been changed but kept a secret from the teachers. Class schedules and notices are sometimes posted in Chinese in areas the foreign teachers don't frequent.
I don't usually teach English and usually get to pick the text with the requirement the text be less than 3 years old.
Private schools hire foreign teachers for marketing reasons. My face has appeared all over the place and my resume greatly enhanced (in Chinese).
If foreign teachers get paid more at a private school, tough, the smiling white faces bring in the revenue and job opportunities for Chinese teachers.
I have also worked at two government universities. At both schools, Chinese professors taught less hours and earned more money. I gather the Chinese get a basic salary, around 1200 at my uni, then get paid for hours times a factor (prep or difficulty) and also extra money for extra assignments. One Prof said his 1200 was upped to more than 4500 based on the pay scheme. Me? I get 3700 for 9 class hours contact time but that is 11 paid hours if I was paid according to the Chinese scheme.
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted byJust trying to point out that 'clean' EVs is not a simple comparison. If electrical generation is primarily by coal then the solution is less clear.
My worry is that ignoring market influences, perceived easy solutions reached by diktat result in unintended consequences.
Is the goal clean air or is the goal to dominate automobile production?
Is the goal environmental protection or to exploit lithium battery production capacity?
Is there a beneficial environmental trade off between vehicle oil consumption and EV consumption of coal generated electricity?
Are EVs a one-size-fits-all solution?
Should the efficacy of a environmental protection regime of a country be considered?
The production of lithium batteries is a messy business. In the US, lithium battery production is being developed in desert areas, far from, and out of sight of, those who would bitch, complain, and shout about environmental concerns.
This time, the resource that is up for misallocation is our one and only environment.
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted byBad idea, an environmental catastrophe in the making.
"Electric cars might pollute much more than petrol or diesel-powered cars, according to new research."
www.bbc.com/news/business-19830232
New Yunnan hybrid chili may be world's spiciest
Posted byActually the hottest chili pepper on record, at 2.2M SHU (Scoville heat units) is the The Carolina Reaper bred "Smokin" Ed Currie, proprietor of the PuckerButt Pepper Company in Fort Mill, South Carolina, USA
puckerbuttpeppercompany.com/
I like the little yellow chilis from Hainan and Thailand. But these rate at only 150K SHU.
For my knee pain I use a Capsaicin topical cream that must be applied with protective gloves.
Hopefully the Yunnan Honglü Capsaicin company will get a Scoville heat unit test done for this chili pepper.
Lijiang bug-eating contest draws national attention, and that may be the point
Posted byJust watched Joey 'Jaws' Chestnut win the 2017 Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest. He downed 72 hotdogs and buns in 10 minutes for his 10th All-Time win. My hometown favorite, born in the hospital where my sister is a nurse, Geoffery Esper, came in fourth at 46 devoured dogs and buns.
Held on the 4th of July, and live on ESPN2, this was the "over 100th" contest with Chestnut winning ten of the last eleven.
In the women's competition, 20-year-old Miki Sudo won her fourth-consecutive title by downing 41 hot dogs in 10 minutes.
As this event from Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York is truly one of the greatest American events of the year, I'd like to wish all Americans a happy 4th of July and, to those of the Canadian persuasion, a belated Happy Canada Day!
Study: Re-greening of China possibly not so green
Posted byReforestation in China is a joke. Students go out and plant trees but then the trees are sold to investors for harvest. In 2008, right after the Olympics, trees in the suburbs around Beijing were cut down.
It seems greening projects are pushed until money can be made then trees are turned into cash.