In the event of notorised degrees becoming a requirement in China it will only mean a shortage of native English teachers and China will be flooded with Russians and Africans who will be happy to pay to have their degrees notarised. I don't know it might be better to leave the squalid teaching profession in China to fake English teachers. Native English teachers with degrees should use their degrees for more important careers than long two year or longer holidays in China.
Ideally the standard of English teaching in China would rise if all degree-holders and rag-tag compliments of NENS were disqualified from being FTs and replaced across the board by competant English native speakers.
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Paul Fox -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Paul Fox -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-09
- Re the new French -- Paul Fox -- 2016-08-09
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-09
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Paul Fox -- 2016-08-08
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Odd Bob Job -- 2016-08-07
- Re the new French -- Former FT in China -- 2016-08-07