SCHOOLS AND RECRUITERS REVIEWS
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#1 Parent Pissed - 2011-07-01
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Living in Huijia is a nightmare!!! this building renovation activity, putting elevators, a third floor is all another show to lure teachers! Amanda and her gang have total disregard and disrespect to human dignity! They set calendar and keep on changing it and making notice in one day to move!!!. I wonder why can't they think outside the box, why can't they just find an alternative to find us a "livable condition". I began to realize that anything that they don't know how and what to do is simply impossible for them to do.

#2 Parent Kanadian - 2011-03-05
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

If Beijing Huijia Private School is the school located just outside of Beijing - I also received a contract from them.... There were insistent in my joining the school. However after careful reading of the contract, I rejected it.. In the contract it said " to leave campus at ANYTIME you must ask the schools permission.. :O I'm 42 I left my mama's womb many years ago.. I'm sorry I can't recall the contract but, one of the disturbing things was paying rent at an outrageous amount. This was in mid Aug last year. I contacted an employment agent I know in Beijing, she said, her office just called them in order see if they can help to find new staff.. Her words were " it's not a good school. We won't advertise for them " kinda scary isn't it ? If an employment agent won't put your schools ad on their site, you must ask WHY

#3 Parent Fair Maiden In Distress - 2011-02-26
Failed Schools

Regardless of finger pointing and heckling this school sounds like the pits. The tongue and cheek jibs are unfortunate. In the USA teachers in my state, RI, are being laid off to the tune of almost 2000 and in many other states teachers are being laid off as well. It is a bad situation when good teachers from the USA go to China in search of employment and end up in bad schools where they have few rights without a fight and in the USA they also won't have any rights if some state governments have their way. Getting teaching credentials is a crap shoot now. I was going to pursue a master's in education but those plans changed. I am licensed but so far I am lucky to work at a good school. I would not put up with any of the shenanigans that go on there or at any of those hodge podge places. What is needed is an international teachers union that has enough clout with teachers in numbers to rise up against illegal schools that do illegal things and close them down. Imagine the power a united group of licensed teachers might have if every licensed teacher in the USA paid 100 dollar per year in dues. They could engage pre-paid legal services and bankrupt corrupt schools in places like China. That would teach those abusive school owners how to act. They all seem so smug until money is sucked out of their pockets. Nothing seems to be in order or reasonable about that school or many other schools just like it. A person could grow old reading the many complaints about the bad schools in China and elsewhere. Unless teachers join hands and smash down such organizations using the laws, bad schools will continue to reap rewards from ill-gotten gains and that must stop. Teachers that support those schools are just as bad as the core of the apple which is already bad. Pay your union dues and professional association dues and band together before teachers are all living under bridges.

#4 Parent p_for_pancetta - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

: Anytime people huddle around a bad school and try to protect it from the blatant failure that
: it is should bring pause to anyone considering working here.
:

Huh. Oddly enough, I wasn't trying to defend the school. I was simply stating that attacking your former coworkers isn't the best way to make a point. Leave the teachers out of it. We're in enough crap in the states (WI) and around the world that we really don't need to be turning on each other.

: "I didn't work in his department nor did I really even talk to the guy, so I can't
: comment..." Exactly! So why comment?

I noticed that you left off the end of that quote... 'so I can't comment on why he was let go.' After taking what I wrote completely out of context, you proceeded to reiterate the reasons why he was let go. I also noticed that - considering I didn't mention if this mystery internet attacker was the big boss man or the teacher from the states - you assumed that I agreed with other posters. Suspicious. You also neglected to mention the emails, the fake, racist website, the homophobic insults leveled at the FA office. Those cropped up - why wouldn't he (you?) also post messages on esl websites?

Considering you still work here (or at least recently worked here), you'd know that the vast majority of Huijia teachers are competent, qualified, responsible adults who do our best to deal with the situation we're in. No, Huijia isn't the best international school to work for. The school suggests otherwise, and it isn't true. There are problems, and many teachers do leave the school after a few years to find better international schools in china to work for because of said problems. I will be joining those teachers soon enough. Again, I'm not defending the school. Attacks on the teachers who work here, however, are unnecessary. Perhaps it's too much to ask for a reasonable discussion of the school without dragging teachers through the muck. JAT offered an opinion on the school. You disagree. We couldn't possibly just leave it at that, could we?

#5 Parent Dragonized - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

WOW talk about a head case. As for saluting the bloody flag that just goes to show you the ethics of people at these pretend "schools". He sounds like a failed, unwanted experiment of the government. I don't know whether to pity him or be angry at him.

#6 Parent Unhappy Camper - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Huijia fired a retired cop with a teacher license from Virginia or West Virginia. Everyone liked the guy. They fired him a few days before the end of his probation period and just before vacation started. That saved them money. At the same time they fired the other teacher with a valid teacher license. He was in the military. They will most likely fire a few others soon. I hope to be fired. Hopefully they fire everyone without a teacher license. If they did that, they would only have about three teachers here. Those that don't like it here would be free to go without paying any penalties for ending their contracts. Now two people came down with cancer, one other was gravely ill. Coincidence? This place is a bad omen.

I think that maybe the Chinese parents ought to be made aware that most of Huijia's teaching staff don't have licenses when they sign enrollment contracts with the school for their children. I saw some supposed students posting on here. Why not get out and spread the word and ask questions?

#7 Parent Dragonized - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

If these are really the types of "teachers" who you would meet at Huijia it's better off to just call the people at the mental wards as some of the patients may indeed have escaped into the real world to work at these crappy "schools"!

#8 Parent Brat pack - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

I'm sorry, your guy according to you is sick of cancer...I thought it was Delusion of Grandeur and myopia.

#9 Parent ExCon - 2011-02-26
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Was this the guy who "told" everyone he was an ex-US officer and a CIA? He punished student by making them salute the Chinese flag for hours...we call him a leader? He indeed is not an educator, he should be at gitmo. Funny, he emailed everyone everyday about his life....

#10 Parent Unhappy Camper - 2011-02-25
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

"I didn't work in his department nor did I really even talk to the guy, so I can't comment..." Exactly! So why comment? Obviously you have no idea what you are talking about anyway. This poster never talked to the guy, did not know him and then decided that the guy is attacking teachers while a poster called the king ripped the guy apart and nothing was said about that. Strangely enough the king also said no one knew the guy. I don't know your American President but I am sure he is an horses tail. I have never traveled to the USA but I am most certain that it is a low-level nation. I never ate radishes but I am certain I would never like them. That is truly fascinating. I know a few people that knew the guy and his wife, myself included. I also noticed that the king totally left out any discussion about the other American that was short stacked for no apparent reason whatsoever. When Huijia decides that they want to save money they find ways to terminate people. If they don't want to pay wages, or if they think that some one else will do the job cheaper they'll change horses in the middle of a race. That is why they fired the other American who was also a licensed and degree holding teacher. Their leaked story was that the teacher did not get along with his Chinese co-worker. Whatever. That's just more Huijia lies. Is there anyone here that can refute that? Can anyone here give a reason why they fired the geography teacher a few days before the end of his probation? No of course not.

I work here now and I will work here until my contract ends. The school is a bad place to work. I am all too pleased to report that and to stand by my comment. Anyone that disagrees with me is ignorant or fearful of losing their job here. It is really odd that the guy used a supposedly bad degree as per the king, and yet he was hired by a college in Shanghai in a senior management role in administration by the same school that he supposedly never attended as per the king. Although there is a a delay in the plans as the guy has been in the hospital for the past 12-days. So much for the posting conspiracy of a disgruntled teacher. If you took the time to know the guy you would also know that he was dealing with cancer. To take it a step further the king also said that the guy has a Ph.D. from Harvard. In fact the guy has a Ph.D. but he never said that was issued from Harvard. His Masters in Education is from Harvard. I saw his degree and his teacher license. Unlike you I knew the guy when he worked here so I can comment. I also work here and so I can comment about how bad this school is and how sad it is that people with an obvious plan of protecting their own jobs will stoop so low in order to protect their keepers. Cunning linguist made a good point on here somewhere about how hostages end up liking their captors. That was a crystal clear and spot on statement about the situation here at this school. This place is built like, operates like, and treats people like a prison scene at the cinema. A song comes to mind here. Midnight Special. This school is a place where no one knows anyone but comments anyway if it serves their own best interests while also making completely unsubstantiated comments about things they know nothing about. This school also employs psychics and dime store shrinks to boot.

Anytime people huddle around a bad school and try to protect it from the blatant failure that it is should bring pause to anyone considering working here.

#11 Parent Crappy Huijia - 2011-02-25
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

I believe that regardless of all what you said that Huijia is an evil, garbage and crap pretend "school"!

#12 Parent p_for_pancetta - 2011-02-25
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

The hyperbole used on this site to describe huijia's problems is probably the most ridiculous thing I have ever read in my entire life; possibly the most ridiculous thing ever typed onto the internets.

Huijia does have its problems (JAT described them reasonably well in his post) and I do believe that the school should be held accountable for them. Much of what has been written so far on this site, however, is off the mark and clearly (mostly) the work of a former teacher who was fired at the end of last semester. I didn't work in his department nor did I really even talk to the guy, so I can't comment on the various reasons being bandied about why he was let go.

His attacks on his former colleagues, however, are despicable. A vendetta against the school is fine, and if what he says about the situation is true, even understandable. He emailed teachers about to come to huijia for the second semester and warned a few of them off. Hell, he even somehow replaced the hui jia web page with a racist blog / rant about the school. Calling the FA office a bunch of lesbians? fairly childish and homophobic, but then again, this is the internet.

However, leave us out of your twisted agenda. I get that you want to hurt the school, but there's got to be a better way. Lawsuit? fair enough. Libeling former coworkers on the internet? kind of petty.

Also, if you're the one posing as a high school girl on the internet (hello kitty) .... well, that's kind of disturbing, and you should probably stop.

#13 Parent R D - 2011-02-24
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

'BB' has sooo obviously fallen in love with this school. So, he will surely apply for a job there next time he needs one, or will he? In spite of his assertion that he would be able to 'stick it there no problem if allowed to teach without interference from other teachers while being paid exactly as stipulated in the contract more or less on time', I think he wouldn't be able to do so. I also have the opinion his words are hollow!

#14 Parent Backwater Backpacker - 2011-02-24
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

It is just me or are the defenders of the Beijing Huijia Private School all stupid? I am a newbie here. I taught in Japan for 3-years and in Korea for 1-year.

Funny you should ssy that. I was teaching in a Sichuan backwater about a year ago. A fellow countryman arrived from Japan to fill the remaining vacancy, but after 2 days he begged me to help him pull a runner. It was clear to me what I considered to be fine in terms of location and the job itself was totally unacceptable to him. Reluctantly, I helped him flee from our public middle school by packing his large backpack in a shopping bag so that I could get it past the gate police office. Anyways, he was gone on a Saturday morning without the teachers or FAO realizing it until Monday morning, by which time he was back in Glasgow. From what I've read about your school, I'd stick it no problem if I were allowed to teach without interference from other teachers while being paid exactly as stipulated in the contract more or less on time. People are indeed strange!

#15 Parent Tom - 2011-02-24
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Huijia is nothing compare to my previous school, it's korean owned, and hell is like break lose in there. Huijia is not a perfect school either but we see it that's on the process of improving itself. You can't change it overnight...hello... this is China! things are ran differently in here. PPL should know and understand that. If they can't be flexible then why venture here in the 1st place.
I don't expect a honeymoon in here, but it's a great place to wind up and getting ready for another venture.

Oh Dear, I see another Chinese student has sneaked her way onto this thread, so in deference to you and because most of us FT's who post on this site can speak better Chinese than you do English I will put all of this, word for word (as much as one can do) in Mandarin as well.

You cannot expect to invite foreign experts to China and to have them behave and think like the Chinese, it is up to you Chinese to be flexible and adapt to our needs; otherwise, you should just make do with your Chinese teachers. You invite us to China because we are different. If you write a contract you should adhere to it, otherwise what you are saying is, 'it is not the Chinese way to keep promises'-whenever the Chinese schools break their promises, they just say "this is China and that's the way we do things"

wode tian a, wo you faxian yige zhongguo xuesheng zai zhege bankuaner fayan. He waijiao butong de shi zai zheer fayande waijiao shuode zhongwen bi nimen shuode yingwen yao haoduo le.weile zunzhong ni ,wo hui ba zhexie dou yiziyiju de dou fanyi cheng zhongwen.

ni yaoqing waijiao dao zhongguo lai, ni buneng rang tamen anzhao zhongguo de siwei kaolv he zuoshi. zhongguoren yinggai shiying wo men de siwei he zuoshi fangshi.Fouze jiu meiyou biyao qing wo men waijiao dao zhongguo qu. nimen zhongguo jiaoshi jiu keyi le. Yinwei wo men yuzhong butong. zhongguo de xuexiao,nimen jiran qianle hetong,jiu dei zunshou hetong. Fouze nimen jiu zhihui shuo bu zunshou chengnuo shi zhongguo ren de zuoshi fangshi. Buguan shenme shihou,zhongguo de xuexiao bu zunshou chengnuo, jiiu zhi hui shuo, zhe li shi zhongguo,zhe jiushi wo men de zuoshi fangshi.

#16 Parent Insane Clown Posse - 2011-02-24
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

It is just me or are the defenders of the Beijing Huijia Private School all stupid? I am a newbie here. I taught in Japan for 3-years and in Korea for 1-year. I have been in China for almost 1-year and I am looking for a new job. After reading the posts about this and many other schools I noticed that anytime any of these play around schools if you can even call them that, get into trouble, they always seem to produce some fools to come running to the play around school's defense.

Ice Ice BeBe please tell us that you are not teaching English at Huijia, and I quote; " Huijia is nothing compare to my previous school, it's korean owned, and hell is like break lose in there. Huijia is not a perfect school either..."

Ice Ice BeBe your English is far from perfect. Your defense of the school is a laugh a minute. Missing caps, bad grammar, should I continue? Oh....I get it now. Silly me. You were hired by Amanda and Joy the two women that are so popular in these posts. I am sure that the good students at Huijia are truly getting their monies worth during any of your classes.

Hell is like breaking lose
in my bowels now so I need to go use the facilities and some of the Huijia degree toilet paper to wipe my bum.

#17 Parent Ice Ice Bebe - 2011-02-23
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Huijia is nothing compare to my previous school, it's korean owned, and hell is like break lose in there. Huijia is not a perfect school either but we see it that's on the process of improving itself. You can't change it overnight...hello... this is China! things are ran differently in here. PPL should know and understand that. If they can't be flexible then why venture here in the 1st place.
I don't expect a honeymoon in here, but it's a great place to wind up and getting ready for another venture.

#18 Parent jsky - 2011-02-22
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

I Dont understand half of these posts about Huija! I would like to know which branch people are talking about, as well as how long some of you people have been in Beijing. I worked for Huija a few years ago. Yes, it was not the best school i have worked for but it also wasnt the worst. I re call they used a hiring agency Expertise which was the biggest complaint. Low salary. But i also recall some of the complete waste cases they had working for them. All in All I would say Huija is your run of the mill school in china. Lots of politics, false promises and non straight forward answers. Seems to me though that this how most chinese businesses are run. I cant really pass judgement on this school. If someone isnt happy with a situation they should just take themselves out of it . Beijing is probably the easiest place in the world to work as an esl teacher. As well as pay. As far as not being able to get a job because someone worked for Huija thats nonsense. If someone cant find work its not your past employers problem its something wrong with the worker.

#19 Parent Just a Teacher - 2011-02-22
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Hmmm ... If I were a discerning, open-minded reader and it was revealed that simple straightforward statements like "I know who you are and all about your illegal business" turned out to be completely and comically wrong, I might, just might, view the rest of your rants with a wee bit of skepticism. That's the only point I wanted to make by posting in the first place. Thanks for helping out. I'm done here. Not coming back. Fire away.

#20 Parent Tom - 2011-02-22
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Significant others visitation rights

The trouble is, your first real knowledge of the 10 PM lock-down(locked gated with prison-type guards) and the full severity of the no visitors rule will not appear on your contract (in full glorious technicolour at least) until you've already come all the way from Pennsylvania, having fully committed yourself and all the cash you earned in 'Dirty Doughnut' for a whole year. It's not just your little bit of Chinese fluff who can't get past the search-lights, it's poor old Mum fully laden will home-made apple pies who willl be turned from the gates and really made to feel like an insignificant other

I don't actually think 'Just a Teacher' is actually trying to deceive us at all, he's laid everything on the line as broad as may, he's probably amazingly self-possessed, doesn't need a chat with nimble young Chinese girl in the dead of night- Mum's pies taste like shite.

His claim that the FT's 'learn Chinese shack' was set up on a non profit making basis rings true to me. I believe the enticement of free Chinese lessons for FT's is set out in radiant technicolour in the contract and that the school does not mind renegading on said contract itself. The truth is, I am told, is that the teachers were forced to pay for it themselves.

Going to send my mates to help Turnoi's crocs-might take a blood-sucker to deal with their like.

We don't really have to chuck everything save the kitchen sink at this school since your freedom to come and go in your own flat is of of paramount importance when deciding on a job in China. DO NOT GO THERE FOR THIS REASON AND THIS REASON ALONE.

#21 Parent Unhappy Camper - 2011-02-22
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Blah, blah, blah. More excuses, more feel good propaganda to justify the activities of a crap school. I don't care what the arrangement is here with the little communist hole in the wall next to the stinking communist public toilets. It is more crap. Huijia is crap. Their rules and their games are crap and they treat people like crap. So some teacher wants to help people and make sure that all of the little communist puppets can speak Chinese. Good for him. I have seen this crap hole screw many teachers for no reason. I have seem Huijia management lie, create gossip, and deliberately and maliciously target people. The last card on the table for Huijia is money and it always comes down to money even if it is illegally generated revenue or at minimal was earned based on highly questionable practices. I have personally seen in-take workers lie to Chinese parents. I have personally seen them alter their admission standards for cash. I have been personally told that all students here must pass no matter what. I have seen Huijia try and threaten teachers, harass them, coerce them, control them, or make promises that they cannot keep. Huijia is no different than any ESL mill in China in that regard. The policy here is whatever makes money. The ethical guidelines here are simple and clear. I can sum it up in 3 words. Don't get caught. This time Huijia did get caught and this time someone is taking them to task and this time they are going to be nailed to the wall. If more teachers here were not so fearful of their little comfy teacher jobs and the fake environment that Huijia erected to keep the little communist puppets entertained and held at bay for fear of a canceled Z visa by the likes of Amanda or Joy or anyone in that office of doom and gloom, Huijia would have been dead and buried years ago. If you work here just squint, ignore truth, play dumb, don't ask any questions, accept lies, and don't rock the boat here and you'll enjoy Huijia like the very few ass kissers that have managed to work here for a few years for the supposed sake of their students. The rest of us here are smarter than that and we shall leave. Others were given a gift and they were fired and they were freed from the oppressive regime that this crap business is and will always be as long as people keep bending over to take the Huijia weenie in the mouth or in the behind.

Unhappy Camper soon to be very happy but not here. How do you like your weenies?

#22 Parent Dragonized - 2011-02-21
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Thank you for showing us the truth of Chinese people and their "culture". I especially agreed with the part about the probation of living with your bf or gf as a human rights violation. The fact that you stated Chinese people can be even more sexually open than Americans is also something to applaud, as many of us including myself cannot always be emboldened enough to bring this into light.

TO ALL APOLOGISTS, PRETEND SINOPHILES, AND OTHER PEOPLE WITH SUSPENDED BELIEF SYSTEMS, TAKE YOUR CRAP ELSEWHERE! Unless you're masochists and enjoy getting your pants pulled down on this forums.

#23 Parent digusgted! - 2011-02-21
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

I have just been reading all the garbage you posted. A typical apologist for an awful school. Thank goodness there are people like Turnoi and Silverboy in this so-called ESL "industry".

I don't care if you had a good experience at that place. Many people did not, as they were not compliant little puppy dogs like you. As usual, we hear that TIC ( This is China ) nonsense, I get sick of hearing that BS, and that "developing country" twaddle.

I HAVE ZERO TOLERANCE FOR INDIVIDUALS LIKE YOU WHO MAKE EXCUSES FOR CHINESE MAFIA CRIMINALS WHO OWN "SCHOOLS"

You are also making excuses for the brain dead FAO at that place. YOU HAVE NO CREDIBILITY!

One more thing, what sort of crap school tries to prevent teachers from bringing their GF or BF to stay with them overnight? YES, THAT IS AN INFRINGEMENT AND AN ABUSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS! I DONT CARE IF IT IS IN THE CONTRACT OR NOT!

CHINA IS MORE CONSERVATIVE? SOME MORE RUBBISH FROM YOU!

We are talking about a country with more whorehouses than noodle shops, I don't want to hear that trash about "traditional girls". The Chinese can be as immoral and decadent as any other race, they are even more so than Americans IMHO.

STOP MAKING EXCUSES FOR BAD EMPLOYERS! NO EXCUSES!

Beijing Huijia Private school is terrible, and I advise all FT's to keep well away from that place. No, I have not worked there, but worked at a school nearby, and I know what goes on there.

#24 Parent Just a Teacher - 2011-02-21
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Sheesh. I shouldn't have looked. You don't know who I am. I have nothing to do with that "business" you are referring to off-campus. That "business" is a very, very much appreciated SERVICE; a Chinese language learning "school" for the foreign teachers who sign up. The individual, OUR colleague, who set this all up, put in LOTS of energy, AND a bit of money from his own pocket to rent a little shack-like office and hire a teacher so teachers here can have the opportunity to learn Chinese. The teachers who take lessons pay the teacher directly. Not a single penny goes into our teacher's pocket ... not a penny! It is not a business. There are no contract violations. Nuff said.

#25 Parent Croc Feeder - 2011-02-21
Beijing Huijia Private School Croc Food

Another bad school, one of many in China. Feed the entire establishment to the crocs and let God sort them all out in the sauce. Anytime a school wants to rid themselves of teachers they cook up a lively stew of gossip and then turn people against the ones being targeted. Glad I left China for my job in Japan. Glad I did not take a job at Huijia. More teachers need to take those crap schools to task and run them through the ringer. I love hearing about teachers that fight back in China because most or all Chinese schools do whatever they can to rail road their teachers in one fashion or another. When teachers wake up to the fact that China sucks for teaching there will less to talk about.

#26 Parent Unhappy Camper - 2011-02-21
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

I work here now. You have been here almost 7-years? I know who you are. You teach the 12th grade in the IB school and you also own or co-own the unlicensed school off campus teaching Chinese near the Village Bar. I am certain that must be a material breach of your contract since the Huijia employment contract clearly prohibits you working at any other jobs elsewhere. Your support of Amanda and Joy is extremely questionable as they have lied to me repeatedly on many issues and I know for certain that I am not the only one here. I will not keep working here because this company is a business and not a school. A school can be a business if it is done ethically which Huijia knows nothing about as they are morally bankrupt. You made mention of a former teacher lying on a resume. You need to stand corrected on that. They let go of two teachers, not one, over in the middle school. Both of them were state licensed. One of them was let go only 4-days before his probation period would have concluded. Everyone was shocked. Diane has been there for 11 or 12-years now and for someone that has been a Huijia for nearly 7-years I cannot understand how you can not know her. She is a director over in the middle school, although quite a bad one as talk goes. The teacher that was let go was licensed in Virginia or West Virginia and he had 2 Bachelors and 1 Masters as far as I know. He taught geography and he taught it well by many accounts. By all accounts he was a good teacher and people liked him. Huijia screwed him badly. Diane fired him via Amanda. That was a double team effort to end a good foreign teacher's work because his co-worker, a Chinese teacher, was jealous of him. The other teacher was a vice director with a wife and a baby. He also taught sciences over in the middle school. I talked to his Chinese co-teacher and she was unhappy that they fired him. They fired him for supposedly presenting a fake degree, lying on a resume, and some other nonsense. There is a problem with that story as well. The first of which is I saw the man's teaching license because he was was talking about having one and when I asked to see it he showed it to me one afternon when I was at his dorm room. I myself am not licensed so I was curious to see what teacher licenses from the USA look like. I also saw a letter he showed me that pertained to the renewal of his teaching license with the stamps from the USA, post mark, etc. He had been talking about the need to renew his teaching credential and explained to me how his state handled that process. He also logged onto a government Web site for E government in his own state and showed me his teaching license confirmation and the date of issue, the date of expiration, and the fees for renewal and the amount of continuing education units he had already done for his license. Also on that same site which was a password access system I could see that his degrees were listed there by his state. I would wager to say that state boards of education in the USA verify degrees before issuing teaching credentials.

I also saw his file of certified transcripts and his degrees. His alleged fake degree was notarized several times by many agencies to include the Korean Consulate, the Chinese Consulate, and it had been affixed to an apostle from the US State Department as I recall because the Korean government required that. I saw the certified copies of his degrees personally. I have subsequently seen some photos of him and his wife and family as well as photos of him at his college graduation holding his degree with other people near him holding their degrees from the same college. Amanda's stories carry no truth just like most of Amanda's many other rubbish comments. I know that he has since filed a lawsuit on Huijia and that the matter is going to be in court sometime in March this year in the Changping District Court because not only did they fire the man, but they also refused to pay him any wages at all. I also know that he is bringing in some people from the USA from his college for the court appearance because I have subsequently talked to the man on Skype. He retained a big law firm in Beijing to represent him in the matter.

Unlike the other teacher that was left with no where to go and without any time to find a new job at the time, the other American owned a home near Beijing so he was OK. He packed his apartment up and shrugged it off. I don't know what happened to the guy from one of the Virginia states but the other American was instantly hired at a large college and he is in an upper management role there. Since you support Amanda and Joy and believe they are so wonderful one must wonder what kind of a job they actually do here since the vice director worked at Huijia for about 3-months before he was fired for his alleged fake degree. I have also seen at least 2 emails that Amanda wrote the former vice director threatening to have him arrested for illegally working in China etc., because he forwarded them to me. In one of her insane emails she ranted and raved like a psychotic that she would call the Public Security Bureau in several cities in China. If Amanda were doing her job how come she did not process a proper working permit for the man in some 3-months time? I am no expert but I am betting Huijia pays some stiff penalties for not getting the man's documents in order. He either had or was in process of getting his D visa and his green card but even with that he needed a work permit or an FEC. I don't know what that all entailed exactly. I think that he now has a green card if I understood him correctly. I don't work in the middle school but I know that the man was dealing with many problems there such as many students bringing in dangerous weapons and he made solid progress on several fronts and slowly but surely he appeared to be turning that middle school around and the students were slowly waking up to education and responsibility. That is a far cry from where the middle school was before he arrived there from what I have been told by the Chinese. Even the Chinese staff commented that he was getting real results. The teacher from Virginia or West Virginia was told by Amanda that he would be earning more than 20,000 RMB for teaching at Huijia or so I am told, and after he got to the school they cut his salary down to something above 15,000 after he already quit his other job based on Amanda's promises. Working here at Huijia has not been a pleasant experience for me at all and I know other teachers here, a few that are licensed and many that are not, and very few have anything nice to say about this business.

Call me a coward but I won't post my name or department here due to my concern for being fired or suffering from some trumped up charges like taking group sex photos with crocs. With Amanda around she and her friends can cook up most any story they want to get rid of people that don't cater to their flavor of school politics.

Unhappy Camper

#27 Parent Ela - 2011-02-20
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Those teachers who get to stay at Chinese schools are usually unqualified teachers or teachers with personal issues who have learnt the trade of bullying and double - talk. Real good teachers will work at REAL international schools with Western approvals as they take their professions seriously and take care of themselves.

#28 Parent nomadic warrior - 2011-02-20
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Just a teacher says he can't help laughing at the rot he's read berating the school. He likes teaching there so much that he has done so for some years in a row. Good for him, but what's one man's meat is another man's poison.
He has chosen to enter the private education sector in China despite the fact he could have served the public sector where he needn't strive so hard in class nor run the risk of being duped financially at one time or another.
He is serving the offspring of the rich, and with this goes the additional responsibility of trying to motivate those born with a silver spoon in their mouths. I suspect that the school's detractors have grown tired of being lackeys of the rich, and furthermore are out to discredit it online.
Undoubtedly, some foreigners will be dissuaded from applying for a post there, especially when they note the racist approach to recruitment that has appeared on the school's website. Personally, that is as big a red flag as I need to prevent me from applying, irrespective of the other negatives. Just my two cents' worth, for what it's worth.

#29 Parent Teacher - 2011-02-20
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Any school, regardless if they offer IB programs or not, may not be recommended unless they are recognised by overseas organisations. Find out what kind of approvals they have and what they offer: pay, tax invoice shows exactly how much tax you have paid each months and for the year)/ monthly payslips, insurance cover, medical insurance, holiday and sick leave, personal leave, teacher's training, free workshops for each teacher, conferences for each teacher with paid hotel and food/ IB - training for each individual teacher/ weekly meetings with coordinatorsand Co-principals and other specialist teachers. Schools should have a proper ESL/EAL program with qualified language teachers ( just because you speak English does not qualify you to teach it. It is the hardes subject to teach) housing paid by school-except electricity/water/gas, return flight ticket/ career opportunities, z-visa -work permit. Any serious school will pay a wage of 26.000 yuan upwards after tax. A lot of schools offer the IB program these days, but do hardly know how to implement it.
All the best,
Teacher

#30 Parent Tom - 2011-02-20
Re Beijing Huijia Private School

Washers and dryers yeah, the washers arent great and break down too often. This is annoying, not end-of-the-world annoying. The dryers are close to useless. Most teachers hang clothes on a line in one of the courtyards, or on the roof, or on drying racks theyve purchased and hang them in their room

Thank you for trying to be so honest, certainly enough to make me run a mile. What is the most important part of a job in foreign parts? It has to be the standard of your accommodation, your freedom to come and go whenever you please, and the same for your guests no matter what sex they may be. It beggars belief how any FT working in China can put up with living in a 'teachers' compound' sharing facilities that do not work with other FT's.
Having your very own washing machine, cooker, TV, etceteras is a minimum requirement, a must. The freedom to have visitors at any time of the day or night for whatever reasons essential. You live in a shoddy prison-style teachers' compound with rules and restrictions that any self respecting FT should reject out of hand. If little Lotus Blossom can't call on me in the early hours, why would I want to work there?

You keep on saying "this is China, not London and you should go with the flow"-it sounds nice and enlightened but it is totally untrue, there are many job opportunities in China which come with decent self-contained flats. I don't care what else a school gets right if they offer crap shared facility flats then they have got everything wrong. I only hang clothes on my own enclosed-balcony, not out on the roof collecting the soot and grime that you mention.

Just a Teacher - 2011-02-20
Beijing Huijia Private School

I hate to spoil the lets bash Huijia party, but some of these comments are so over the top, I cant help laughing. Im currently in my 7th year teaching in the IB program. Yep, 7th. Let me give my honest perspective on life at this school. You can make your own judgment. First, as mentioned, I teach in the IB program, so there may be some variation to life in the other programs/schools, such as primary, middle schools, and the GAC programs. But Ill try to address the whines about the overall administration that are on this board.

Ill start by stating that in my 6 years here I have always been paid on time, have never been screwed out of money, and have been treated fairly by the administration from day 1. There has been plenty of funny stuff, mostly little annoying things, but nothing thats driven me to head for the hills or rant on a board like this; not even close.

From the highest level overview, teaching at Huijia, the job itself, really boils down to this: teaching/motivating/controlling our students. Contrary to the complaints posted, most conversation/discussion, among teachers here, center around our students and how to best teach them. Its a private school (and yes, the bottom line takes precedence over learning at times), therefore the tuition is high, therefore the parents are wealthy, and therefore some percentage of our students are spoiled (one child policy ... the little kings and queens), and therefore the attitude and motivation of too many students is indeed lacking. That, in a nutshell, is what MOST teachers here are concerned with, motivating non-motivated students. It can be discouraging for sure. As I say that, let me point out that we have some outstanding students, who, year after year, upon graduating, are accepted to highly ranked universities ... Cornell, Brown, Michigan, Berkeley, U of Washington in St Louis, and several others. The poorer students, and poorer classes, are the challenge. I can't and won't sugarcoat that. It's tough. But I will also say that, for the most part, those students are simply bad students. They're not bad "kids". I like them, especially OUTSIDE the classroom :)

Another critical point to understand is that China is a developing country. Its not the US. Its not Canada. Its not the UK, not Australia. It is a developing country with policies and systems (or more often, a lack thereof), that at times simply do not make sense to foreigners. If you come here expecting the same systems, ideas, organization, policies and comforts as your western country, in essence, a seamless transition, you are living in a parallel la-la universe and will probably wind up writing the kinds of posts that you've read on this board. Having said that, Im sure that Huijia has its own unique brand of China-isms, as I call them.

In my 6+ years at this school I have seen quite a range of teachers come and go those fresh out of college who are simply unprepared for the world-at-large, let alone teaching in China. They fail miserably, and guess what they do? You got it come to this site and blast the school. (Some have been impressively mature/together, and did just fine.) There are those who dont understand they are in a developing country and the moment they dont get what they want they cry bloody murder and guess what they do after that? You got it. Then there are the whiners by nature, who, no matter what environment theyre in, whine incessantly. I have zero patience for these individuals. Guess if they last long here? Guess what they do when they leave? You got it. Then there are teachers who simply dont cut it. Theyre not good teachers and are not offered a contract extension (those who would like one). Guess what they do? You got it. Then there are teachers who are asked to leave for a specific incident, or general behavioral issues, or lied on their resumes and were found out (this happened just recently). Guess what these teachers do? You got it. Then there are those teachers who did indeed have a bad experience, got screwed in one way or another, and have every right to come on this board and voice their dissatisfaction. But in general, those teachers who understand that China is a developing country, are open-minded, flexible, can role with some punches, have a mature/professional attitude towards teaching and life in general, for the most part, have an experience here that ranges from at least pretty decent to very positive. By no means am I saying that teaching here is Disneyland, but from my experience and perspective, so much of the noise posted here is WAY over the top. All the junk about the FAO/Amanda and Joy, curriculum, alcoholic teachers, teachers having sex with students, bldg 10, classrooms falling apart ... here goes (get comfortable, this will take a while :)

Housing Ill preface by saying that the school, recognizing that housing in general, in China, falls below the comfort level in western countries, went ahead and built a new apartment building for foreign teachers only. (This costs money.) I lived in the teachers dorm (bldg eight) for 3 years before the new building (building 10), and believe me, these apts are a very nice improvement from the dorms. The old dorm rooms are about on par with a really cheap motel room. Having said that, construction, in general, throughout China has a way to go EVERYWHERE, not just Huijia. Owners, developers hire cheap and often low-skilled laborers from the countryside to save money and consequently you generally get what you pay for. Still, I think the apartments are pretty comfortable; 1 and 2 br, TV (BBC and a few other English language stations), so-so DVD player, A/C, decent bed, desk, small dining table and a couple of not so comfortable chairs, free internet, stove. Not bad, really. There are also 2 community rooms, one on each floor; 1 has a ping pong table. The other is used for poker night and (board) game night. I think some teachers use it for yoga as well. It has some comfortable sofas, big TV, DVD player, lots of DVDs and a selection of English language books, mostly best-seller/thrillers. All good. Here are the downsides: due to the typical low-quality construction, the paint is peeling/chipping in virtually every apt. Some of the floor tiles separate, and no doubt other cosmetic problems that as owners, most would do something about. There have been major fixes needed here and there as well. One teachers sink literally collapsed. This is China, not Beverly Hills. The heat in winter is too strong on the first floor and not strong enough on the second. I live on the second. I bought a $30 space heater. Problem solved. Move on. There is dirt and soot everywhere in China. Yes, you have to constantly wipe dust from your furniture and floors. Yes, the school allocates hot water only in the morning. Afternoon and evening showers are not what youd call comfortable. I and others have agreed that saving energy is a good thing. Where the school comes up short here is in not notifying the teachers. We have to guess, inquire, and get conflicting information about when its ok to take showers. Communication at this school is not an art form. You just find out somehow and deal with it. I havent heard anything about rodents in a teachers room, so Im not comfortable commenting. Lets just say having lived in the bldg for 3 years now, I was surprised to read it. Washers and dryers yeah, the washers arent great and break down too often. This is annoying, not end-of-the-world annoying. The dryers are close to useless. Most teachers hang clothes on a line in one of the courtyards, or on the roof, or on drying racks theyve purchased and hang them in their room. One note along these lines, there is lots of criticism of Amanda and Joy from the Foreign Affairs Office (FAO). Ill address those a little later, but in relation to the washers after too many had broken down, and repairs lasted about one washing, I communicated this frustration to Amanda, who contacted the company. The school had signed a maintenance contract with the company which stipulated only repairs for the duration of the contract. Amanda not only negotiated brand new replacement washers, but talked them out of raising the price per washing cycle that they were pushing for. This may not be on a level with a cure for cancer, but believe me, in China, its quite an accomplishment. The fact that the school built an improved living facility (building 10) for foreign teachers only, a substantial improvement over the dormitory, bldg 8, would fall on deaf ears of the whiners who post here. Some parts of the building are more noisy and dont get much light. Theres a kind of luck of the draw as far as the apt you get. Some are better than others. There is also a comment about a teacher who almost died and another who developed cancer as a result of living in building 10. Um hundreds of teachers have lived in building 10. To make a claim like that is utter trash, irresponsible and baseless. The teacher who almost died is recovering nicely in her home country, France, and before becoming ill, enjoyed living and teaching at the school. I do not know the exact degree of severity of her condition, but Im quite sure that close to death is pure nonsense. Plus, making a connection to the building, again, is pure garbage. Yes, a teacher recently was diagnosed with cancer. She is currently coming and going same as ever, having further tests to determine if the cancer is benign or serious. She is an older teacher (sorry J!), and correct me if Im wrong, but I believe cancer strikes people of all ages, sexes, colors, and religions throughout the world. She has indicated to me she doesnt think it is serious. We all certainly hope so and are pulling for her.

Foreign Affairs Office (FAO)/Amanda/Joy Both Amanda and Joy (a poster mentioned Diane; that must be Lan, a new employee) The first thing to understand is that they are the liaison between the foreign teachers and the (Chinese) administration. While attempting to work with the foreign teachers they often need to get approval from the administration, which basically means the owner. This puts them right smack in the middle of culture clash, and often a financial clash. Guess who signs their paychecks? This is a VERY tough position. Anyone who cannot see this is not terribly observant nor interested in seeing beyond the nose on his face. When Amana, Joy, or Diane cant get the administration to agree to whatever the foreign teacher is asking for, guess who takes the hit? I know very well how hard Amanda works behind the scenes to represent the teachers who come to her with reasonable requests. (She is doing so right now as a matter of fact to get the admin to make improvements to our contracts; Ill leave it there for now.) Ive been around the block, lots of experience, and I find Amanda to be friendly, intelligent, caring, hard-working, and dedicated. I am not the only teacher here who will back me up on that statement. There is a statement below about Amanda and her lesbian lover, Joy. This is a shameless, disgraceful, out and out lie, inexcusable, and should give open-minded readers here a very clear neon-flashing- warning about what you read on this site. This is a slanderous comment and in the US could go directly to the courts. Amanda has been of great help to me and many other teachers on many occasions. (Joy is newer and still getting her feet wet, but shes also helped me a few times too.) There are many comments that Amanda lied to teachers during the recruiting process. Id have to know exactly what was said in order to comment. Ill just say shes never lied to me. Knowing her, I find this statement very hard to believe. A poster mentions that in her webcam interview, Amanda was not making eye contact and looking off-camera, implying she was either gearing up for a lie, or looking to some sinister off-camera person for help. I wasnt there, so I cant say: Heres what really happened but the implication of Amanda lying in the really amateurish way described sounds more than suspect to me. The offices are chaotic at times with people coming and going. If Amanda lost focus or eye contact, she may have been distracted. If so, she needs improvement in this area. Ill mention it to her, so she can indeed improve. There could certainly be some miscommunication, misunderstandings, or situations changing since previous conversations. But out and out lying? I have trouble believing that. Many teachers here would also.

Canteen Its ok, not awful, not great. I've been eating that food for over 6 years. It suffices. Too oily and salty are the usual complaints. Its usually jammed at every meal. People eat it constantly. Nobodys keeled over. There are plenty of alternatives nearby. In my 6 years, Ive found hair in my food once for sure, maybe twice. (I have also found hair in my food once or twice in very nice restaurants. Anybody else?) A few years ago some teachers were talking about an insect in their food. I never experienced that. With all the whining from the teacher who mentioned about that in his first two weeks, I cant prove anything, but I would take that statement with a huge grain of salt (so to speak). This is a canteen servicing hundreds of workers per meal per day. With a 300 RMB per month allowance, its close to free. Anyone with high expectations, again, is living in la-la land. The canteen, in general, is a non-issue.

Classrooms Again, I can only speak about the IB rooms. Keeping Chinese construction in mind, theyre ok. Theyre not falling apart. My criticism is that the maintenance crew mops the floors outside the classrooms and around the offices, but doesnt seem to do anything inside the classrooms. There are a couple of rubber trash cans in the back of each room that are overflowing with garbage, mostly empty water bottles, but no one attends to them. The rooms in general could use some repair, or a facelift here and there, but there is absolutely nothing preventing a teacher from walking into a classroom and teaching a class. Nothing. Get in there, do your job, and stop crying. I might also add that the IB dept just upgraded from blackboards and chalk to smart whiteboards which interact with laptop computers that the school has provided (on loan, not keeps) to each and every teacher. Pretty high-tech, probably even a little overkill. Any mention of that in these posts? There is also a plan for a completely new, state-of-the-art (Im told) IB building planned for construction soon, supposed to be ready by 2013(?)

Admin changing grades A poster mentioned that grades magically get changed behind closed doors. To my knowledge, there is no smoking gun evidence to prove that this occurs, but the teachers pretty much unanimously agree it does. No one knows to what degree, but even if its an incident here and there, its still too much, it is bad B-A-D bad. If I were a perfect human being Id storm into the directors office, pound my fist on the desk and rail about the injustice of it all . and get fired or more likely given an off-point song and dance that either lightly denied or excused what they were doing. Im not perfect. Assuming this does occur, it certainly doesnt make our jobs easier. We, the teachers here, just shake our heads, and go on with business. If this little piece of information is enough to discourage prospective teachers from coming here, that is completely understandable.

Significant others visitation rights Theres a pretty amusing post about this. The poster claims that he and his guest have to either climb walls or bribe the security guard. Sounds horrible, eh? Well, theres one little, insignificant point that the poster left out, which is, that in both the working contract and the teachers apartment rules, there are clear stipulations: boyfriends/girlfriends are not allowed to stay with their mates overnight. Now, you can argue that this is absurd, an infringement on your rights, etc, but its clearly stated in the contract we sign. China (in general) is much more conservative than western countries, and the school is as well. So in climbing walls and paying off guards to get around this annoying little rule, what is the teacher in essence, saying? You guessed it its ok for the teachers to violate contracts but NO FING WAY is that demonic school going to kick me around. I guess honoring contracts only works one way. Now, we all know guys have been sneaking girls (and vice-versa) into dorm rooms and bedrooms across the globe since the Ice Age, and if it goes on here more power to those involved but its good to know all the facts.

Evil black taxis - A poster criticizes the taxis that service the teachers. This is a real head-scratcher. Ill take you through it. In China, black taxis are a simple fact of life. Theyre everywhere. A group of friendly, black taxi drivers hang out at the east gate of our school, the one closest to the teachers apts. We walk to the gate, get into the taxi, tell our friendly driver where we want to go. The driver takes us to our destination. We pay the fare (20RMB, market price). Sounds awful, eh? Alternative bus transportation is pretty inconvenient. If you need a special trip, airport at off-hours for example, say 6am, you arrange your trip with one of the drivers in advance, and he comes at the scheduled time, helps you with your luggage and off you go. This is a truly a horrible, horrible setup. Agree?

Evil off-campus bar/restaurant This place is also described in bleak terms, a den of iniquity. Another head scratcher. As the poster mentions, the wives of two American teachers (not Australian as the poster states) opened up a funky/cool, cozy bar/restaurant in the little village that runs parallel to the campus; convenient walk, more convenient by bike. It offers western food and beverage that are either difficult or impossible to get here club sandwiches, pancakes, bacon and eggs, coffee Bud, Corona, Guinness (cans), etc. I think burgers are on tap soon as well. You can also order food from any of the local restaurants within short walking distance, head back to the restaurant, enjoy your drink, and wait for your food. Sounds pretty disgusting, eh? Shockingly most teachers here consider this place a very nice option to the canteen, plus, it offers a cool place to hang out. There are virtually no places like this in the village, nor in the downtown area. The poster then goes on to imply that teachers regularly get hammered and show up to class drunk. Sheesh. I know that several of the 20-somethings to early-30s teachers hang out there at night, not sure how often, not every night, and Im willing to bet they enjoy a beer or two, and that some overdo it. Unless you hang out there, you wouldnt know to what extent. But lets ask a tough question: do young (mostly single) guys hang out in bars and drink ONLY if they are teachers at Huijia? Im going to go out on a limb and say that this takes place pretty much in every nook and cranny across the globe. Im also willing to bet that those teachers who overdo it are less than 100% clear-headed the next day in their classrooms. If they can get through their lessons feeling less than perfect, but still pull it off, then they are in the same company as millions of working professionals around the globe; doctors, surgeons, pilots, CEOs, senators, scientists, computer programmers, economists, investment bankers on and on. If their performance isnt up to par for this reason, or any other, believe me, it will become known, and the school will take appropriate action; either warn, relieve him of classes (maybe not all), or show him the door, probably at the end of the semester. Ive seen this on a couple of occasions over the years. Im not blind and I havent seen any stumbling drunks in the office. Contrary to the posts here, the school monitors teacher performance and those who dont cut it are gone.

Teachers here A lot of the posts claim that the teachers here arent qualified. Im wondering if theyve sat in all the classes that these teachers teach. Im wondering if they know all the qualifications, or lack thereof, of the teachers here. Im wondering if those who are critical are in any position to do the criticizing. In getting to know teachers, I can get a sense of where I think they might stand in a classroom, but unless I see a teacher perform in front of students, I withhold judgment. My observation is that as the years pass, the school is (gradually) hiring more mature, experienced, qualified teachers. Peripherally, the turnover rate, which is still high, has slowly been improving. Some teachers have taken to signing 2-year contracts. In addition, there are a handful of teachers that have left the school, taught elsewhere, and have either returned here, or have re-applied and been rejected. Im sure I just gave a few posters a heart attack.

Successful Business Model I started in 2004. At that time, in the IB program there was a total of 8 classes. There are now 30. You can say what you want, but there is no arguing with the business success of this place. Most companies would drool over that growth.

Deviant Sexual Behavior Nothing to see here, folks .. move on.

Curriculum To my knowledge, not a problem in the IB dept, though it used to be for some subject teachers.

A few final comments (finally!!!) So, why do I keep coming back? I get that question a lot. Perhaps most importantly, we get LOTS of freedom here. If we dont have class, we dont have to stay in the office. Our apts are a 3-min walk from the school. We can leave campus. That is a big deal to me. We have an orientation meeting at the beginning of every year, and each subject dept has a meeting at that time too. Thats about it. Maybe another ad hoc one here and there. For me, thats great. I dont like meetings. There are little to no bureaucratic forms to fill out. Basically the school just leaves me alone and lets me teach. I like that. I also think we have a nice little campus, pleasant little environment. It doesnt bother me that theres not much to do on campus nor in downtown. I have plenty to do to occupy my time. But thats why virtually all teachers leave campus on the weekends and head to Beijing. Thats where the action is bars, restaurants, Starbucks :) Many teachers rent apts there, others stay at hotels or youth hostels. A poster indicates that the reason people flee to Beijing is to escape the torture chamber otherwise known as Huijia. I havent taken a survey, but the general feeling I get is just what I mentioned younger teachers want to go where theres more social life. Its in Beijing, not here. No big deal. What is a big deal is that the air is cleaner here, especially on campus. No getting around it, pollution in Beijing, and virtually all big cities in China, is gross.

Im not a rah-rah flag-waving Huijia promoter. I dont stand to gain anything by commenting here. I dont have an administrative or marketing position. Im just a teacher. I just think its good to offer a fresh perspective to prospective teachers, point out that some of these comments are straight from the loony bin, or greatly exaggerated, or downright false. At the same time, yes, there have been, and continue to be issues.

Last but not least I expect to get completely, totally, utterly lambasted for this post. Thats ok. Who knows, maybe someone will even call me a lesbian. Wont that be worth the price of admission? but Im a guy. I doubt Ill come back and look. I never really come to this site anyway, just felt it was time to add my two cents or more. I stand by what Ive written.

Good luck to all you facing the tough decision of moving overseas and choosing the school that suits you.

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