SCHOOLS AND RECRUITERS REVIEWS
Return to Index › Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China
#1 Parent Raymond - 2015-06-17
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

South Africa is a dutch colony, so they speak Afrikaans, a dutch dialect. They speak English, but its not their native language.

#2 Parent EVAVENGER - 2015-06-09
Re Let's stay on the point

Let's also stick to the other point, attempting to scare someone into not discussing your school is not only foolish, it's rather blatantly idiotic to boot.
I'd suggest further, that responding to those that DO post about this school, at least in the fashion that you are doing now, will only lead to even
more talk about your school. IE, stop being an idjut.

#3 Parent Walter - 2015-05-08
Re Let's stay on the point

Once one is in country a few years and picks up some of the language, teaching a class without a TA is preferred. The long term teachers I know all do it solo and can easily control a class of 50 to 70. The TA becomes useless for such teachers.

I have to disagree! You are a local hero...lol!
No matter, we are all entitled to have different opinions, don't care about it.

#4 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-08
Re Let's stay on the point

Once one is in country a few years and picks up some of the language, teaching a class without a TA is preferred. The long term teachers I know all do it solo and can easily control a class of 50 to 70. The TA becomes useless for such teachers.

#5 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-05
Re Let's stay on the point

I suspect that many of the younger ones come to 'try to get away' from a bad drug problem back home.

#6 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-05
Re Let's stay on the point

And they'll also miss the non-accountability of the teaching if they were high school teachers teaching oral English with no end of term exams.

All of that is true and a perq at non-Uni posts, but the downsides are no longer tolerable and quals have increased dramatically.

3/4 yr Degree, CELTA, 2+ years teaching experience post-degree, a few ads want a real, credentialed, teacher at some schools.

Also current job requirements are approaching what is required for working in the Middle East (I believe that the Chinese companies are copying ads from the Gulf) but the Chinese only want to pay $1,000 to $2,500 USD per month for 8 or 8.5 months of the year...and you have to deal with all of the Chinese nonsense. Even the Saudis leave a note when the Mutaween inspect your apartment, and you are not followed constantly.

There is no way that ANY GCC veterans will teach in China.

If recent hires have a Masters, then they can go anywhere on this planet for much better money.

Teach subject at a school, anywhere.

China just priced itself out of the market.

#7 Parent Walter - 2015-05-05
Re Let's stay on the point

I'd say that those who leave will miss the short working hours and being
allowed to be out of school when they have no classes if they are teaching in the public
education sector. They'll also miss getting much higher salaries than Chinese colleagues
and living in better accommodation than new Chinese teachers, said accommodation being
at least rent-free. And they'll also miss the non-accountability of the teaching if they
were high school teachers teaching oral English with no end of term exams.

Bullshit! You are either a wumao or a very, very naïve foreigner.

Chinese staff do indeed earn a lower basic salary, but are legally allowed to work in second jobs or run businesses on a part-time basis. No visa violations to worry about. Then there's the grey income - Mercedes and Audis don't buy themselves, you know?

Many Chinese teachers that I've met already have an apartment of their own and will commute to work on a daily basis, many teachers will even sublet that apparently not so great apartment to students at the university! Yet more grey income that appears for them to be perfectly, socially acceptable to receive! That's before we even start talking about those Hongbaos!

Most foreign teachers are expected to hold not only end of term exams, but in many cases mid-term exams as well.
Some universities do observe teachers and although training centres may merely use a T.A as a spy, some (and sadly, still only some) actually have quite professional staff observing their teachers, not to mention class monitors who will at least snitch to the bosses if a teacher got a little bit too lazy.

Teaching at public universities is quite an easy job, but it doesn't mean that's better alternatives to consider elsewhere.

You are presumably teaching at public universities in China, but your reading skills aren't up to much. I wasn't talking about uni teaching! Yuncheng agents provide FTs mainly to high schools. There, FTs have much less work to do than Chinese teachers of English as a rule. I didn't mention that Chinese staff have to watchdog students 2 hours/evening for private study. We FTs don't do that. Fact is, you're naive, you know next to nothing about senior middle schools in China! My job is much easier than yours. As an oral English teacher teaching for Yuncheng agents, I can let my TA deal with classroom management in its entirety.And I need only prepare one 45-minute lesson/week with her help if I wish it. I've got the better job, not you! End of story.

#8 Parent San Migs - 2015-05-05
Re Let's stay on the point

Don't ever ask these guys to donate to charity. They're more worried about where their next beer/little bit of shitty weed/gram of K is coming from.

Most foreigners in China simply cannot be trusted. Even the ones at public jobs are no better. I asked for one email, which I have now let go, the past is the past, instead I got accused of being a criminal, having no pension, and being a spy. Yeah, and I donated to poor kids in Western China and the earthquake and ran stationery drives, but yeah, I am a bad guy...sarcasm. What was my thinks for 10 years of benevolence and charity and servitude to China? A visa for two fucking weeks ....and that, as the playwright, wrote, was that!

#9 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-05
Re Let's stay on the point

There are also the holiday training camps that many teachers have, where they pull in large sums to tutor classes on their subject.

Some schools have ''good luck'' for chukao, zhongkao and gaokao, and the apartments next to those schools are let out for thousands YYYY per month for the students who travel in to that test centre.

Then there are the red envelops to keep little jimmy's or suzy's grades up in the top decile.

More income for the local teachers.

You cannot buy a car on a salary of 3000 a month as local teachers claim they are paid. There are multiple income streams for the locals that need not worry about visa violations, income streams that FTs no longer have access to (they did to some degree pre-2012).

Recently the PSB have become extremely strict about where FT's teach. You cannot, for example, have an invite letter to a school and get your visa through their PSB, and then work anywhere else in China INCLUDING a neighbouring city/county/town where that school is under the jurisdiction of a different PSB.

So this shuffling of teachers by centres puts the teachers in yet another risk category.

training centres may merely use a T.A as a
spy, some (and sadly, still only some) actually have quite professional staff

Yuncheng EV are of the former.

The 22-23 year old girls that are TA's all finished Uni in July the year prior. They work for 18 months, mostly on getting a bf, fiancee and then husband. It's a pure Mrs. Degree. They spend almost all of their time on their smartphone chatting on qq and Wechat working on snagging the richest husband they can get. All the ads say that your TA will help you, give you Chinese lessons, translate for you when you shop - it's all a total lie. They do not know their own town, let alone this new town they are working in that they just moved to. They have no idea how to solve basic problems or find anything.

Chinese, as a rule, do not know anything about the world outside that is more than 200 metres from their home, office or school. It's all a grey foggy mist to them.

They are only there to make sure you don't discuss the 3Ts and to watch what you do, where you go, and with whom.

Also the unwritten rule in Yuncheng is that foreigners are not allowed to purchase utilities independently. They insist upon 'your chinese teacher' to sign for anything and act as a filter on your behaviour. Things like getting a mobile phone, or getting water delivered. There is no law about this - like 99.9 % of China it's an oral unwritten rule.

Your water delivery, btw - that is a main spy source. They enter everyone's house and apt and see who has what possessions.

Your cleaning lady, ayi? Also a spy. She also tells the school. EV, your assistant, the PSB, what you have, what you do, what is in your flat, what you bought, what is on your pc, etc.

Your assistant will then attend the monthly meetings and stand up and tell the collected TA's and company management where you went, who you went with, what you did, who you dated, who your friends are, where you holiday'd, if you show up drunk (which they do not mind, it is a form of control on you. If you are drunk you are not learning about China.) - everything.

Their job is to be a spy - that's all it is at Yuncheng English Village.

#10 Parent John O'Shei - 2015-05-04
Re Let's stay on the point

An excellent post. I'd say that those who leave will miss the short working hours and being
allowed to be out of school when they have no classes if they are teaching in the public
education sector. They'll also miss getting much higher salaries than Chinese colleagues
and living in better accommodation than new Chinese teachers, said accommodation being
at least rent-free. And they'll also miss the non-accountability of the teaching if they
were high school teachers teaching oral English with no end of term exams. But not
everything in the garden is rosy, as you have pointed out.

Bullshit! You are either a wumao or a very, very naïve foreigner.

Chinese staff do indeed earn a lower basic salary, but are legally allowed to work in second jobs or run businesses on a part-time basis. No visa violations to worry about. Then there's the grey income - Mercedes and Audis don't buy themselves, you know?

Many Chinese teachers that I've met already have an apartment of their own and will commute to work on a daily basis, many teachers will even sublet that apparently not so great apartment to students at the university! Yet more grey income that appears for them to be perfectly, socially acceptable to receive! That's before we even start talking about those Hongbaos!

Most foreign teachers are expected to hold not only end of term exams, but in many cases mid-term exams as well.
Some universities do observe teachers and although training centres may merely use a T.A as a spy, some (and sadly, still only some) actually have quite professional staff observing their teachers, not to mention class monitors who will at least snitch to the bosses if a teacher got a little bit too lazy.

Teaching at public universities is quite an easy job, but it doesn't mean that's better alternatives to consider elsewhere.

#11 Parent John O'Shei - 2015-05-04
Re Let's stay on the point

Your distress about his posts, if motivated by your own secure situation, is at best selfish.

There's an awful lot of guys like him in China. These guys will happily defend their own training centre for fear of receiving the bad treatment that the other guy got it seems. So logically, they'll choose to stick with the nicer treatment that they'll currently getting.

The common practice of being sympathetic to those in need is thrown straight out of the window. Don't ever ask these guys to donate to charity. They're more worried about where their next beer/little bit of shitty weed/gram of K is coming from.

It's a dog eat dog world in the Chinese ESL industry... Which would sound exciting if it wasn't for the fact that they're just scrapping for mere pennies for the entertainment of the Chinese managers. Not exactly Wolf of Wall Street, but more like becoming 'the poodle of Wall Street English.'

Many of those foreigners have no morals or backbone. Maybe they will have nothing back home to go to, when things go wrong? I've just got to wonder what really motivates these people.

#12 Parent Walter - 2015-05-04
Re Let's stay on the point

It used to be that Guanxi and money could fix this, but that has all changed since March, 2015. These changes accrued beginning August, 2014, but have really gotten out of hand since everyone came back after Spring Festival.

Since it appears that this trend of tightening application of the rules will not abate, it seems likely that there is at least 7 more years of this to look forward to under current leadership. I would not want to ponder what is next. Registration cards for foreigners? Restrictions upon foreigners travel freedoms? Access to global internet completely shut off? Worse?

Since the internet is all but broken in China for outside communication (I am surprised this site is still reachable), again this started in August, 2014, and is now extreme, it seems clear to me that things will be getting worse and not better.

Thus the recommendation to leave.

An excellent post. I'd say that those who leave will miss the short working hours and being allowed to be out of school when they have no classes if they are teaching in the public education sector. They'll also miss getting much higher salaries than Chinese colleagues and living in better accommodation than new Chinese teachers, said accommodation being at least rent-free. And they'll also miss the non-accountability of the teaching if they were high school teachers teaching oral English with no end of term exams. But not everything in the garden is rosy, as you have pointed out.

#13 Parent Walter - 2015-05-04
Re Let's stay on the point

I shall reply to that other poster's posts as and when I think fit. It's true that he has besmirched EV to some extent, as is his right. I won't follow suit and neither will I besmirch IELTS School, and I'm all for TAs, just like you. That's all I have to say in response to your post.

#14 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

I can only then infer that you have rather too much time on your hands.

If you are so concerned about all this why are you still here?

It is sad that you would ask anyone to justify why they care about warning others to avoid surveillance, passport seizures, apartment inspections, interrogations, illegal status, and the like.

#15 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

According to the PSB, the westerner was too old to teach!

I have repeatedly heard many stories on this.

Ads online state 60 as the cutoff in many cases.

The law in China is 60 for teachers or 65 if management.

Yuncheng EV says that 65 is the cutoff.

Older Yuncheng IELTS teachers had to leave at age 71.

Many teachers in rural China are 65-75, but that was pre-2012. The law was always 65 then lowered to 60 for teachers, but pre-2012 all laws were loosely enforced, if at all. Again, all this changed in March.

But the new law is age 60 and no more teaching, so anyone 62, 65, etc, is too old.

The teacher in Yongji with the spouse is one such example.

It used to be that Guanxi and money could fix this, but that has all changed since March, 2015. These changes accrued beginning August, 2014, but have really gotten out of hand since everyone came back after Spring Festival.

Since it appears that this trend of tightening application of the rules will not abate, it seems likely that there is at least 7 more years of this to look forward to under current leadership. I would not want to ponder what is next. Registration cards for foreigners? Restrictions upon foreigners travel freedoms? Access to global internet completely shut off? Worse?

Since the internet is all but broken in China for outside communication (I am surprised this site is still reachable), again this started in August, 2014, and is now extreme, it seems clear to me that things will be getting worse and not better.

Thus the recommendation to leave.

#16 Parent A discerning Dissector - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

Reading between the lines alerts me that the poster calling himself 'The Truth' is trying to dissuade foreign teachers from applying to EV Company for jobs. It also tells me that you are an employee or a former employee of IELTS School, but unlike him, you are not out to discredit EV.
I think you should cease replying to that whistleblower forthwith in order to exercise damage limitation regarding EV's good reputation.
I reckon you are a sensible bloke who appreciates the advantages of having a TA in class to manage the teaching in a positive way by disciplining naughty students and simpifying the teaching task through interpretation and translation. That other poster talks about greener grass elsewhere, but he fails to mention ease of teaching, which depends greatly on a TA!
All the very best to EV & IELTS Companies of Yuncheng!

#17 Parent martin hainan - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

If what you do say could happen to me then I do want to know about it but so far I haven't experienced
anything like what you have suggested is becoming endemic.

Endemic activity need not be universal. And this forum is not for your exclusive use.
The writer's specific observations and conclusions are the precise purpose of this forum.
Your distress about his posts, if motivated by your own secure situation, is at best selfish.
Worse, it may reflect your concern for the economic success of these corrupt agents and law-breaking schools.

If I was didactic and trite, I would suggest that everyone draw their own conclusion.

#18 Parent Walter - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

Xinjiang (not the province a small town west of Houma) let go all direct hires last year. They do not want foreign teachers any longer.

I think it's Xinxiang, which is a small county on the line that passes through Jishan and reaches Houma. From Houma you can either take a train to Yuncheng or to Linfen. Those two lines are separate from each other.

#19 Parent Walter - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

I wonder if I have met you in Hejin. Last academic year I was teaching at no 2 senior middle school of Hejin City and my colleague was Richard, a Ghanaian. We were teaching grade 1. A Polish girl and two Amercan men were teaching grade 2 for EV.
I had heard about the trouble in Yongji from my TA. At the end of the first term, Mayor was sent there to give one week of free teaching, to try to re-establidsh the enforced broken relationship between one of the schools there and Harry's company. However, he immediately got into hot water with the police, as he had left his passport in Lvcheng. He was forced to return there at once to fetch it to appease the Yongji PSB. I had also been told by my TA that the PSB there had refused to renew the work permit of an old foreigner with a Chinese wife, and that she was not at all happy about that. According to the PSB, the westerner was too old to teach!

#20 Parent Scotty - 2015-05-03
Re Let's stay on the point

I'm glad you are fine.

I can only then infer that you have rather too much time on your hands.

If you are so concerned about all this why are you still here? As you have mentioned repeatedly you could always go to where the grass is greener. I'm all in favor of free speech but on one hand you are effectively saying 'Get out now' but on the other you are saying 'Well I'm okay but I will spend my free time slating others'.

Let everybody draw their own conclusions.

#21 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-02
Re Let's stay on the point

It does appear by the sound of it you have been shafted somewhere along the line

Incorrect.

I am fine. My passport and visa and FEC are in my possession, I am paid on time, and I do not have to vacate my apartment for police inspections. My friends, acquaintances and fellow co-workers at Yuncheng English Village are the ones who are currently being shafted and some at other schools not hired through Yuncheng EV were shafted as well. Xinjiang (not the province a small town west of Houma) let go all direct hires last year. They do not want foreign teachers any longer.

The current state of affairs is unacceptable. Police inspections, surveillance, the constant monitoring by locals (which requires a degree of Putonghua fluency to be aware of), passport seizure, passports held, hiding from the police, moving out of their apt, and so on.

I haven't experienced anything like what you have suggested is becoming endemic.

Well then let's use Maths. You are one person. I know of at least 6 being treated as I report.

6 is larger than 1 last time I checked.

A 16% chance of being treated well, or a 63% chance of passport seizure and the lot of it.

I just wish you would be more factual.

Pardon? I have posted detailed facts. You ask for a huge burden of proof upon others, yet do not reciprocate.

Talk with the teachers in town, ask them. Go to HK or CI and they will show up eventually.

#22 Parent Scotty - 2015-05-02
Re Let's stay on the point

I must be lucky then, I am in the Yuncheng area in one your mentioned counties. I don't work for any of these companies but I do teach.

I have had no hassles whatsoever.

The only annual 'hassle' I have is to present myself at the police station for a photo.

It does appear by the sound of it you have been shafted somewhere along the line for which I understand your wish to vent. I just wish you would be more factual. If what you do say could happen to me then I do want to know about it but so far I haven't experienced anything like what you have suggested is becoming endemic.

#23 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-01
Re Let's stay on the point

Walter,

Yuncheng EV, Yuncheng English Village, place teachers and have placed teachers in all of those areas.

Wenxi, LvCheng, Hejin and Jishan are all part of Yuncheng and any schools that hire teachers in those locations would need approval through the Yuncheng PSB for passports, visas, and FEC's. Yuncheng is the government centre for that area. Teachers who work in those places come in to Yuncheng for visa paperwork, unless on marriage visas - those are handled in Taiyuan. A marriage visa, btw, is one of the few ways to limit (but not eliminate) some of the bad things I have written about in this thread. Being a German engineer for the local roads or TGV is another.

Wenxi took a huge economic hit when the steel mill shut down. More so than other places.

Hejin may be going the way of Ruicheng where they do not want foreign teachers.

The days of coming in on L/F visas, now L/M, are over. I continue to read of schools, agents and recruiters placing ads for jobs suggesting or saying that one can arrive on a tourist or business visa and then convert it and work, but this is illegal and now will get you in trouble. Lots of it. I see this for Yuncheng, but also for cities all over China.

The few direct hire schools in Yuncheng know this, and their ads are quite clear about what you need. These schools also make a point of saying they do the paperwork directly. They distance themselves from the others who do things incorrectly.

If your company asks you to travel to Hong Kong or Qingdao to get your visa paperwork done, then you are illegal and they are 'resetting' your visa and FEC so that you can continue to teach. Hong Kong by getting a visa 'out of the country', Qingdao via a company 'friend' who can do it there.
If you DO go to either place, open the packet they tell you not to open - inside will be the forged credentials that get you your visa under false pretenses. Someone else's degree, etc.

You must have a degree, 3 or 4 year, a TEFL cert is now all but required but sometimes not, and have real, actual, teaching credentials with 2-yrs in home country in class experience in a very few cases. Though the real teaching back home is far less often required and is for larger cities and the IB schools and such. In Yuncheng and Yuncheng EV they won't ask for such credentials.

Some Yuncheng agents state that a 2-year degree is enough, that's not legal and that ends up with inspections and passport seizures.

Arriving on a tourist or business visa will simply make money for your employer at the expense of your freedom, legality and bank account.

Do not do this - it is not 2012 any longer. You cannot do what those who arrived in earlier years have done. Those days are gone.

Since the police made much of their income on bribes, and those bribes have disappeared along with the banquet lunches and gifts since the crackdown began, they are seeking to recoup their lost income on the backs of foreign teachers.

It should be obvious that they do not care, at all, what foreigners think of them, Yuncheng, or China; nor do they care that they are taking your money in the form of fees and fines for violating various visa and FEC laws. You are one of the few sources of potential income remaining.

They just want their money, and it's going to come from you.

Yuncheng EV, Yuncheng English Village, Ji and the office staff will not be paying for those fines.

You will.

You also may get deported and a nice little "do not return to China for 5/7/10 years" stamp in your passport. You may also be placed into a database of course.

I know that most information online, on blogs, in forums, in books, from former teachers, says that China is 'the Wild West' and anything goes and that it is lawless and you do not need a degree to teach.

I know that most sites say that if you are young, speak English at any level, and are breathing you are hired.

Well, those days are over as of March, 2015.

After the Spring Festival 2 months ago, everything changed for the worse.

Even with a degree, CELTA and 2 years of experience, you may still be harassed and such.

I do not recommend teaching there, not any longer.

If you have a degree and CELTA you can teach ESL anywhere except the gulf.

If you have a credential and experience on top of that, you can teach in IB schools globally, or the gulf. Those positions will pay 3x to 8x what you will earn in China.

#24 Parent The Truth - 2015-05-01
Re Let's stay on the point

One additional morsel I did not mention.

Retention of existing teachers at Yuncheng EV, Yuncheng English Village, has dropped from 95% in 2006-2012, to 55% or lower in the past year.

They have a very high turnover, and turnover is increasing each year.

#25 Parent kitchener - 2015-05-01
Re Let's stay on the point

I haven't any knowledge about the currant situation in these areas about if there continues to be employment opportunities there for foreigners as foreign teachers or the recent phenomenon of hassle from the local police. But with the recent puniitive changes to the visa laws, no rightminded illegal will teach there, and those who have working visas won't either. China continues to shoot itself in the foot, that's how stupid the legislators are, and have been in the past. Or will the situation change in the future? Being an optimist, I's be pretty sure it will.
I expect that ielts school will rise from the ashes, and ev will be ok too. Money will talk if channelled into the right places!

#26 Parent Walter - 2015-04-30
Re Let's stay on the point

Any news regarding Wenxi County, another small county near Wenxi whose name I have forgotten, Lvcheng County of Hejin City, and Jishan County? J had previously taught at the ones marked in bold type on L visas without any hindrance from the local PSB, but that was way back then, not now!

#27 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-30
Re Let's stay on the point

Yongji does seem to be taking your hits at the moment.

No, the events are occurring in the Yuncheng county/city/area, and friends confirm identical PSB behaviours in Xi'an, Sha'anxi.

The teacher who was told to hide their possessions? Xiaxian.

The teacher who has no contract? Yuncheng.

The teacher who works two schools and spends 90 minutes a day on the bus? Yuncheng and Linyi.

The local veteran teacher whose passport has been sitting on a desk for 4+ months? Hejin.

The teachers who were told to get out, we do not need foreign teachers any longer? Ruicheng in 2013. Xinjiang in 2014.
Xinjiang is the name of a small city in the north of Yuncheng County, west of Houma.

These issues are regional with confirmation of the same PSB tactics in Xi'an. Two provinces are treating foreign teachers in this fashion, and these behaviours are not limited to only teachers working through Yuncheng English Village.

#28 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-29
Re Let's stay on the point

You reveal that you know little or nothing about the issue at hand, that you do not associate with other westerners, yet you write that "going on a tirade" won't win you any credibility, and you dismiss my opinion?

Against your wealth of facts. Which are...nothing.

If your documents are legitimate, it does not matter. Harassment occurred and is recurring regardless.

As for the terrorist thing, well if you
travel to certain places you take a risk.

Another typical misreading of a post.

The person did nothing, traveled nowhere, has all legal documents - yet was called into the police, and had their passport taken, and was grilled about being involved with terrorists. They did not travel to Mongolia - they were non-Chinese and that was all that was required to harass them.

I believe that someone did have their
passport seized but it appears to be a school issue.

That's harassment, and your reply is typical - make excuses for Chinese behaviour.

Most people do not enjoy Stockholm Syndrome as you do, and that is why I recommend that people look elsewhere.

#29 Parent Obie1 - 2015-04-29
Re Let's stay on the point

Wow! Someone has swallowed a dictionary. Rest assured I am not being a Chinese servant in any manner or form.

As I said I live in the area, I am not a teacher but have been here and married for a considerable time. I hardly associate with other westerners as I have my own life and certainly don't have any interest in visiting the hangouts you mentioned.

From my own digging it does appear that there is a lot of internal conflict within EV which seems to have escalated since Spring Festival. You have a right to vent your own grievances but I would caution against being too verbal. It is obvious that you have had some issue(s) and only you know what they are. As for the terrorist thing, well if you travel to certain places you take a risk. Mongolia maybe?

Yongji does seem to be taking your hits at the moment. I believe that someone did have their passport seized but it appears to be a school issue.

You are entitled to your own opinions but going on a tirade is not going to gain you any credibility whatsoever. Ultimately it is up to the individual concerned about where he/she wants to work. Again I reiterate if your documents are legitimate and you don't have anything to hide you shouldn't have to worry.

#30 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-28
Re Let's stay on the point

Firstly, I would doubt whether the author has been anywhere near Yuncheng in the first place.

Of course you doubt it, Obie. When the truth appears online, the obsequious Chinese apologists soon follow.

Do you want to meet at Paolo's pizzeria? The place that changed its name to the current C...I...? Perhaps snippet can greet us.

Perhaps you can add your currency to the map of the world painted on the wall next to Howard's Kitchen w.c.

Make all the excuses you want, the company Yuncheng English Village has become unreliable to the point where working for them is folly.

Call them rubbish, a scam, liars, thieves, dishonest, whatever word you choose.

In addition, that the PSB now openly harass teachers, should be enough for any sane person to avoid Yuncheng and Shanxi and Sha'anxi entirely.

Unless you are an apologist, drumming up business, or making excuses as you are.

Why would any rational person excuse passport seizure for profit from the police of any nation?

Any normal person would simply leave or avoid the place altogether.

If a degree, 4 year or 3 year, is a necessity along with a cert or CELTA and in some ads 2 years of experience post-credential (and home nation official teacher credentials as well), are now required in the Chinese market, why go there and be harassed by the police as a possible terrorist? You could work in saner nations that pay 3x to 5x more, with air, food and water that won't kill you.

Harassed by the police as a possible terrorist.

That happened in Yongji last year. Rounded up teachers, took passport, grilled them about knowing terrorists, would not return passport, would not allow persons to leave.

Posted foreigners names and bank accounts on the local bank wall to track down foreigners, too. Yongji again.

You know, Yongji, where someone had their passport seized by the police (again) last week?

#31 Parent Obie1 - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

I personally don't usually read these boards but a friend brought it to my attention. So here's my opinion.

Firstly, I would doubt whether the author has been anywhere near Yuncheng in the first place.

The requirement about a degree is more than likely correct but to specify a four year only degree is quite absurd. Its not just the UK that has three year degrees either.

I have never worked for EV or IELTS but I am familiar with the area. I have heard various stories about both of them, some good, some bad. At the end of the day wherever you work you are going to endure some of what the serial complainer is spuriously portraying.

IELTS are pretty much running on life support at the moment but they have been given the green light to resume their business model so I am also sure they will pick up some of their old contracts again soon. I just guess they will be super careful about who they hire from now on. Who they employed previously did get a lot of schools/parents backs up in the past.

EV have lost contracts too, they also have lost teachers, but as usual they will start their annual recruitment campaign soon. They do have a tendency to shift teachers around at a moments notice but thats part and parcel of signing up with such an agency. They shed a long term teacher recently citing age as the reason, in fact it transpired they simply didn't want to pay the extra insurance. Very short sighted actually as the school where the teacher had been loyal for a considerable amount of time has fallen out of favor with EV and will be ditching them and dealing with things solo soon.

Yuncheng like anywhere else has some good and bad points. It depends on you as a person. I do know, however that certainly in the last year a lot of people have left (either gone home or moved onto pastures new) so the number of foreigners is considerably lower than previously.

Just like everyone else reading this, I have had to deal with the endless beurocracy with working visas, and yes it is frustrating but I have just had to be patient. I certainly have never encountered anything on the level you present here. If all your documents are authentic then I don't see why you would be worried.

To suggest that any person avoids a city or province and heads to the big smoke just because the author may have had some unfortunate incident is at best misinformed and at worst misguided. I would take it with a pinch of salt.

#32 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

The Yuncheng agents won't accept foreigners if there could be a problem with visas locally.

Well Walter clearly they HAVE as there ARE many problems with visas locally yet they continue to lie and say that all is well.

I posted a half dozen examples from this month of visa issues, passport seizures, snap inspections, and so on.

They must have a foreign face at the teaching slot at all the contract locations to collect the money.

No foreigner, no money. So they lie to get foreigners to come to Yuncheng to keep the money flowing in.

They lie to existing teachers to keep the money flowing in.

#33 Parent San Migs - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

It needn't be a 4-year university degree!

True, but the wording is somewhat strange, it should state or 3 year degree from the UK.

Either way, good luck, visas for china are harder and harder to get, not easier.

#34 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

Walter,

五毛党?

I have no grudge. I am relaying to others what I have heard from several current teachers who work at EV in Yuncheng. My information is factual, current, up to date, and from the past week. April, 15th-25th, 2015.

In addition the same exact methods are being deployed in Xi'an. This from a conversation last night with a friend who is a DoS there.

Things are bad, they are getting worse, and I recommend that everyone teaching in Shanxi or Sha'anxi leave asap.

The new business model appears to be this:

--The PSB hold up visa and passport processing. This places the new teacher in disobedience of any of a number of laws. Locals spy on the foreigners at their apt, when they see a non-Chinese, they call the PSB hoping for the 5,000 rmb reward. The police show up, inspect the apartment. If the teacher is there, they seize the passport. Thus EV moves people from school to school, calls them up and tells them to hide their possessions, and so on.

The PSB seize the passport. Then the teacher must pay fines. EV won't pay them, the school won't pay them. It is the teacher that is responsible for being in compliance.

It is the teacher who must pay the fines. It is the teacher who is ultimately responsible for paying for any transgressions that EV makes or made.

This is not conjecture - one teacher working at EV had their passport seized last week. Another has had their passport sitting on a desk for over 4 months, with no visa.

A third has no contract. A fourth had to hide from a snap inspection. A fifth is spending 2 hours a day shuttling between schools working far too many contact hours.

The foreign teachers in Yuncheng who can access this site, and web access (VPN or direct) from Shanxi has been very poor for 6 months so many cannot, will know that what I post is true and recent information.

To repeat:
The strongest non-recommendation. Do not work in Shanxi, or at Yuncheng English Village.

#35 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

Please re-read Walter.

I posted about LinJin, a small town north of Yongji.

Linfen is north of the mountains that border Hejin.

EV, and many others - you can read the ads online from many schools - state that a degree, either 3yr or 4yr, is not required.

This is a lie, and will place the teacher in an illegal status that can requires many wan of fines to pay.

EV, the school, the university, will not be paying those fines even though they claim that the will.

Mr. Ji has never done so in the past, and surely shan't in the future.

He rarely pays for trips to Qingdao, Xiang Gang and Taiyuan for visa related matters.

What makes you think he is going to pay thousands of yuan for fees and fines?

Yuncheng English Village is unreliable, and frankly teaching in China is now bordering on dangerous with the constant PSB harassment outside of BSG. I suggest moving to another nation.

#36 Parent The Truth - 2015-04-27
Re Let's stay on the point

As more information comes to light, I shall post it here. Let the teachers in Yuncheng, who likely cannot access this site, confirm or deny what is posted.

What is most troubling is that the same behaviour has been confirmed to be occurring in Xi'an, a different province that is on the south western border of Yuncheng.

That suggests that this policy of harassment and forced fines may be at least regional, and perhaps national.

If the police have lost 50% of their income due to the crackdown, then it is possible they will attempt to make it up on the backs of teachers.

They do not care if this makes teaching a losing financial proposition for foreign teachers. They want their cut. Period.

#37 Parent Walter - 2015-04-26
Re Let's stay on the point

The Yuncheng agents won't accept foreigners if there could be a problem with visas locally. And I'm NOT advising anyone to teach illegally. As far as employment through EV and IELTS School is concerned, we can wait and see if they advertise for the coming academic year. Once they have signed contracts with their client schools they will be ready and willing to employ more foreign teachers. Of course, those foreign teachers must have initially been deemed worthy of employment by the client schools, who will have received the credentials of job applicants through the agents as a first step.
As for the poster who has been whingeing about EV, I'd take his words with a large pinch of salt - I SUSPECT HE HAS A GRUDGE AGAINST SAID AGENT.

#38 Parent martin hainan - 2015-04-26
Re Let's stay on the point

As for your visa scaremongering, I dismiss that, as local relationships continue to hold firm
to protect foreigners teaching without z visas or relevent Residence Permits is what
I've been told. Those two agents are extremely careful about that, and they obviously
need to be!

I have a 3 year Bachelor's Degree from a university in the UK

Walter,

You inform us that these Yuncheng recruiters need to be careful that the local officials "protect foreigners" who are working illegally without Z visas or residency permits. But you, Walter, have "been told" by the school owners that the recruiters' "local relationships" with these corrupt officials "hold firm".

I do hope that you are posting with a VPN, Walter.

You are advising foreign nationals to come to China without proper visas to work illegally. And you have communicated personally with both the recruiters and school owners about their illegal activity in concert with local Yuncheng officials.

I'm quite certain that no one would be foolish enough now to fly to Yuncheng to work illegally.

What surprises me is that you would post your involvement with this activity on the internet in China.

#39 Parent Walter - 2015-04-26
Re Let's stay on the point

The info I have does not agree fully with what you say, as regards IELTS School. It's true Harry has lost contracts with public schools in the Yuncheng Area. But there is a logical reason for that. It's because the local education bureau has forbidden public schools from adding on extra fees for foreign teachers' oral classes to pay for foreign teachers' classes. So schools won't do contracts with IELTS and EV. However, the aforementioned restriction has now been removed, and in the light of this, I think that Harry/River will be very busy these days going round the schools to obtain new contracts. I heard that Harry has already been awarded a contract for the best public middle school in Yuncheng City, after having lost it.

As for your visa scaremongering, I dismiss that, as local relationships continue to hold firm to protect foreigners teaching without z visas or relevent Residence Permits is what I've been told. Those two agents are extremely careful about that, and they obviously need to be!

I have a 3 year Bachelor's Degree from a university in the UK, which is of course acceptable! It needn't be a 4-year university degree! Finally, Houma is in a different administrative region as regards education from the Yuncheng Area, as of course is Linfen.

#40 Parent the truth - 2015-04-25
Re Let's stay on the point

10:48 pm 04/25/2015
Short version:
Do not work in Shanxi or in Yuncheng at any company in that city/county. Perhaps you can work in Shanghai, Beijing or Shenzhen but any other cities in China are now suspect. Backlash due to the economy and rising anti-foreigner sentiment coming down from top leaders.

The fact is that English Village in Yuncheng, Shanxi, has, for whatever reason, become very unreliable.
All other small towns in the area are bad also. Yongji, Houma, Ruicheng, Hejin, Linjin, so on. Just avoid Shanxi entirely.

Yuncheng IELTS has nearly gone out of business with only 3 teachers and no real authority to hire and place teachers in schools. They are limping along and may shut down after this year.

Maybe it is the national crackdown, maybe it is the provincial and local racism - regardless things are very bad and getting much worse.

Obviously the company, Yuncheng English Village, the County/Area/City of Yuncheng, and Province of Shanxi should be avoided like a bad tube station at midnight.

New teachers are not getting visas, passports are being held for months, they are lying about contract terms in all aspects, they move teachers from one school to the next every other month, they do not pay bonuses, they do not pay full salary, they do not provide FEC, they do not provide work permits, the do not provide proper Zed visas, they tell you that you do not need a degree, flats are sketchy, locals spy and report back to the company on you, teachers are required to work two schools separated by a 90 minute bus ride each day, and so on.

The new, as of March, 2015, law is that you MUST have a 4 year real accredited degree to get a work visa and FEC in China, and requiring an FEC and proper Zed visa has always been the legal way to work in China. Now the local and national authorities are enforcing all aspects of the law strictly, and teachers pay the price when the school or company does not do it right.

Yes advertisers still say you do not need a degree to teach in China - that is a lie. You do as of March, 2015. You just are working illegally while your visa sits on a PSB, Public Security Bureau (Police), desk as they wait for your degree, fake or otherwise, that never arrives. Then after months you get angry, demand your passport, and leave.

It is the teacher who pays and is on the hook for anything the company does, not Yuncheng English Village. If immigration officials catch this at the border, you are the one who pays the fines when you attempt to leave China.

When Yuncheng English Village tells you that you are ok, they are simply lying to you.

Well, they are lying in nearly all aspects. They have no credibility at all.

One needs to seriously consider teaching in another country. With a degree, certificate and perhaps education credentials, as some schools in China now demand, you can work in Korea, Japan or The Gulf - for 3 times the money, and clean air, real food, and clean water.

English Village Yuncheng, Shanxi - stay away.

The strongest possible warning and non-recommendation.

#41 Parent Beelzebub - 2013-06-18
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Absolutely! I've worked for Mr Rivers of IELTS. He doesn't look too closely at how the foreign teacher's teaching unless the school's has complained.
Shucks, IELTS is making money and so is the foreign teacher! That's the name of the game, earning one's daily bread with as liitle stress as possible.
The people of Shanxi, Yuncheng and its counties, tend to be laid back and friendly. Life is at a slow pace. Plenty of time for leading the life of a retired gentleman with money in your pocket.
Actually, Mr Rivers was introduced to the company by the erstwhile director of foreign teachers called Paul, but he left there years ago. He told me that he had come across Mr Rivers in a poor county of Yuncheng, and was greatly impreesed with his English, ambience and integrity. So he recommended him for the vacant post of vice-headmaster. Mr Rivers was born and bred in Huarong county of Yuncheng, as a matter of fact. He still lives there.

That's interesting, i never knew that history of Paul and Mr River. Paul was a tall Canadian, wasn't he? i never worked there but was friendly with some of the FT's-stayed in their compound from time to time-Lots of fun-happy days.

#42 Parent silverheels - 2013-06-18
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Ielts school is crap for actually teaching the kids English on account of all the none English native speakers they employ- they can be barely understood; however, a great gig for the likes of old blue eyes like me. They pay on time-they don't fiddle you- a great place to work.

Absolutely! I've worked for Mr Rivers of IELTS. He doesn't look too closely at how the foreign teacher's teaching unless the school's has complained.
Shucks, IELTS is making money and so is the foreign teacher! That's the name of the game, earning one's daily bread with as liitle stress as possible.
The people of Shanxi, Yuncheng and its counties, tend to be laid back and friendly. Life is at a slow pace. Plenty of time for leading the life of a retired gentleman with money in your pocket.
Actually, Mr Rivers was introduced to the company by the erstwhile director of foreign teachers called Paul, but he left there years ago. He told me that he had come across Mr Rivers in a poor county of Yuncheng, and was greatly impreesed with his English, ambience and integrity. So he recommended him for the vacant post of vice-headmaster. Mr Rivers was born and bred in Huarong county of Yuncheng, as a matter of fact. He still lives there.

#43 Parent Beelzebub - 2013-06-17
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

EV, Ielts and the other agent (she supplies foreign staff to kindie and elementary school foreign experts), are all regarded highly by Yuncheng schools. Contrary to what you say, there are at least 50 foreigners working for the agents there. If it was so crap there as you would have us believe, those agents wouldn't be able to recruit new expatriat talent rather easily semester after semester!
I guess you have a personal grudge resulting from your work experience there. Nonetheless, I must agree with you that Helen of EV is at least as cunning and deceitful as they come in the context of her employment as a Chinese lackey. As for the teaching assistants, they've very liitle to gain by treating foreigners badly. Most of 'em resign from their positons within a couple of years as the pay is rather low. But of course, there'll be the odd bitch among 'em who thrives on waging war with her foreign teacher!

Ielts school is crap for actually teaching the kids English on account of all the none English native speakers they employ- they can be barely understood; however, a great gig for the likes of old blue eyes like me. They pay on time-they don't fiddle you- a great place to work. English Village is okay too.

#44 Parent Beelzebub - 2013-06-17
Re: Let's stay on the point

Seriously people:
Do we really care if they hire non native blacks, or native Whites to teach in class. The main point of this blog or thread is to discuss about
the working conditions of EV or any of the other companies in the Yuncheng area. I think it is important that we educate potential new teachers
to the truth about working for these companies. I can not in good faith say to any new potential teacher who wants to come to China that EV or any
company in this area is reliable, dependable, and worth the trouble. Let's be real, and honest. They treat foreign teachers like cattle, like warm bodies to fill
in the seats, to be a dancing monkey. They make millions of yuan every year, and we get shit apartments, low salary, incapable assistants, staff that don't call you
back or answer your questions, or they lie to you, or tell you what ever you want to hear. If you are looking for a place to teach..... stay away from Yuncheng Valley companies.
In fact stay away from Shanxi province. It is the lowest paying of all the Provinces..... Run, run run..............

All I know is that i have met quite a few FT's who have worked in Yuncheng & Yongji and have had a gay old time- also the flats were not that bad, with exception of a teachers' compound belonging to ielts, where the flats were okayish but had a lock-down at night. How many other provinces have you worked in?

#45 Parent silverheels - 2013-06-17
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

EV, Ielts and the other agent (she supplies foreign staff to kindie and elementary school foreign experts), are all regarded highly by Yuncheng schools. Contrary to what you say, there are at least 50 foreigners working for the agents there. If it was so crap there as you would have us believe, those agents wouldn't be able to recruit new expatriat talent rather easily semester after semester!
I guess you have a personal grudge resulting from your work experience there. Nonetheless, I must agree with you that Helen of EV is at least as cunning and deceitful as they come in the context of her employment as a Chinese lackey. As for the teaching assistants, they've very liitle to gain by treating foreigners badly. Most of 'em resign from their positons within a couple of years as the pay is rather low. But of course, there'll be the odd bitch among 'em who thrives on waging war with her foreign teacher!

#46 Parent the truth - 2013-06-17
Let's stay on the point

Seriously people:
Do we really care if they hire non native blacks, or native Whites to teach in class. The main point of this blog or thread is to discuss about
the working conditions of EV or any of the other companies in the Yuncheng area. I think it is important that we educate potential new teachers
to the truth about working for these companies. I can not in good faith say to any new potential teacher who wants to come to China that EV or any
company in this area is reliable, dependable, and worth the trouble. Let's be real, and honest. They treat foreign teachers like cattle, like warm bodies to fill
in the seats, to be a dancing monkey. They make millions of yuan every year, and we get shit apartments, low salary, incapable assistants, staff that don't call you
back or answer your questions, or they lie to you, or tell you what ever you want to hear. If you are looking for a place to teach..... stay away from Yuncheng Valley companies.
In fact stay away from Shanxi province. It is the lowest paying of all the Provinces..... Run, run run..............

#47 Parent the truth - 2013-06-17
A Link you should read before teaching in China

Read this article, and this link if you want to teach in China. Wake up!!!!!

#48 Parent John O'Shei - 2013-06-16
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Well said, you have got to bear in mind that naturalised citizens of some Western countries don't speak very good English either.

#49 Parent Beelzebub - 2013-06-16
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Certainly, there are plenty of Africans who have terrible English and should not be working as teachers even in the field of ESL, but there are also real western teachers who I have met that are of African heritage who can teach English just fine.

Why bother to even say that- of course your heritage doesn't matter, as long as you were born(or arrived at the docks aged 5) a Native English Speaker??? We were taking about blacks from Africa, and you should stick to the point. Am I right or am I right?

#50 Parent Dragonized - 2013-06-15
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Certainly, there are plenty of Africans who have terrible English and should not be working as teachers even in the field of ESL, but there are also real western teachers who I have met that are of African heritage who can teach English just fine. I do think Yuncheng is not the type of city that would attract the best types of teachers, even pretend ones in the ESL field. On the other hand, the types of expats who work at these places both native and non-native no matter the skin color are not the kinds of folks I would ever keep in touch with if I ever have worked with them previously. Assholes and pieces of shyte come in all colors, genders, and backgrounds. A hative speaking idiot of English is still an idiot at the end of the day. Glad to hear you left the place, hope you find something better.

#51 Parent Beelzebub - 2013-06-15
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Listen,
If you really want to know the truth....
EV is a best of 3 shit choices in this area. All the companies in this area are shit.
Why is EV SHIT
1. Don't follow or respect contract
2. Housing is small, or what ever they can find cheap.
3. Helen will never answer your questions, if she does it is a lie. Will only tell you what you want to hear.
4. They only care about money..... plain and simple.
5. The assistants are shit, they gossip about all the teachers, spy on you, and tell the company every thing you do.

these are just a few. I could tell you more. Things other teachers tell me and others. The truth is it is a terrible company. But it is the best in Yuncheng.
The others are full of blacks who's English is terrible (most of the blacks will tell the Chinese they are Americans, lie). And yes, I know this to be a fact. I have been to their parties, I have
been to their company events. Example: Christmas party this year for Ielts, 3 white people and 10 blacks. I saw the group pictures. I would say if you want to teach in China. Don't come to Yuncheng. All the companies are shit, and only care about money. You are a tool for them, and when your usefulness is up or you are no longer needed they replace you. I will not or would not recommend this company or any local company to a foreigner. Stay away, run.

That's the truth!!!!!!!!

If you are saying, and I think you are, that only native born English Speakers should teach oral English, you obviously couldn't be more right; otherwise,the Chinese students are being short-changed; and anyway teaching oral English should be a birthright for all first language English speakers, irrespective of holding a degree or not. However, these blacks cannot be blamed for trying their hand and earning a decent wage; and even lying about their origins. I blame the Chinese bosses for hiring them in the first place; having seen all their ID's, qualifications and passports, they will know exactly where they originate. The Africans to the man are perfectly legal and have attended universities in Africa- and have 'proper' degrees.....well they are legal..yet any sewer worker from Northern England will have a thousand times more English at his command than, a degree in English African.

Mind you, I still say, that schools like Yuncheng IELTS and English Village can be good starter schools for newbie FT's.

#52 Parent telling the truth - 2013-06-15
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Listen,
If you really want to know the truth....
EV is a best of 3 shit choices in this area. All the companies in this area are shit.
Why is EV SHIT
1. Don't follow or respect contract
2. Housing is small, or what ever they can find cheap.
3. Helen will never answer your questions, if she does it is a lie. Will only tell you what you want to hear.
4. They only care about money..... plain and simple.
5. The assistants are shit, they gossip about all the teachers, spy on you, and tell the company every thing you do.

these are just a few. I could tell you more. Things other teachers tell me and others. The truth is it is a terrible company. But it is the best in Yuncheng.
The others are full of blacks who's English is terrible (most of the blacks will tell the Chinese they are Americans, lie). And yes, I know this to be a fact. I have been to their parties, I have
been to their company events. Example: Christmas party this year for Ielts, 3 white people and 10 blacks. I saw the group pictures. I would say if you want to teach in China. Don't come to Yuncheng. All the companies are shit, and only care about money. You are a tool for them, and when your usefulness is up or you are no longer needed they replace you. I will not or would not recommend this company or any local company to a foreigner. Stay away, run.

That's the truth!!!!!!!!

#53 Parent Mancunian - 2013-03-02
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

not going to bother with replying to your white racist power comments anymore, good luck mancunian.

Hello San Mig
Don't go all fragile on me please, San Mig; you should harden up and concentrate on what you want to achieve-am I right or am I right?

I don't believe that many of the African FT's have the received pronunciation which you would have us believe they have, and are often considerably more difficult to understand than the Chinese teachers. What Foxy Poster maintains, that the Middle schools actually ask Yuncheng IELTS school to send them African FT's instead of Native Born Teachers beggars belief; unless a deal has been struck in the purchase of sub-standard FT's for a cheap price. Anyway, I don't really care, this is a Chinese thing, and they can do whatever they please. Yuncheng ielts school remains a jolly good gig for newbie teacher; especially if you lack certain qualifications; they are not overly fussy; they pay on time; you get a flat; and they won't refuse to reimburse your air fare.

#54 Parent Dragonized - 2013-03-02
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Hey San Migs it's good to see you back on the board.

Yeah, regarding English. I am a Native English Speaker, but if Turnoi had advice for me on anything that is language related I would not hesitate to lend my ear and listen humbly. He is someone whom I respect, and he is a non-native speaker.

On the other hand, if someone like any of the Kevins, Londongirl, Mancunian, or ASTF who as far as we know are all native speakers tried to even give us free English courses, I wouldn't bother looking in their direction nor give them the time of day.

Certain native speakers who push the agenda of not giving non-native speakers a chance fail to see the history of their own language. Did Anglo-Saxons originate all 30+ million words in the English language, NO. Countless groups contributed, and it is still evolving thanks to the growing number of people who are trying to learn English. The sharing of British English with American English as the two dominant types of English being learned shows that we can speak the same words but to us Native speakers we are speaking different languages. In my opinion as an American I think that South Africans who are considered Native Speakers are harder to understand than Nigerians and Filipinos. Some Filipinos I have met can speak a near native sounding American accent.

People who do think their language is so superior would do best to carry themselves in a manner that justifies the superior market value, or else the value will go down within the sphere of influence for those folks. Let's hope it's not too big.

#55 Parent San Migs - 2013-03-01
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

Afraid you are wrong, we can never agree. Nigerians can speak and teach english better chinese teachers (commonwealth country), how do I know, I know from experience and FACTS dear boy as you like to quote so often, not going to bother with replying to your white racist power comments anymore, good luck mancunian.

#56 Parent Mancunian - 2013-03-01
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

What's this rubbish mean? Don't you realize that Ielts school firstly sends its client schools the teachers' resumes? Secondy, the schools accept or reject said teachers on that basis.
Another point, how do you know the Africans are barely understandable in their work environment, as opposed to native speakers of English? Probably the client schools that accept them do so in the knowledge they are getting a good deal because they're shelling out less to Ielts School, which will mean the Africans are earning less, but the students' English is so pathetic there, so they couldn't appreciate any kind of pronunciation. Incidentally, know you not there are native speakers bred in Tyneside, for example. But nobody except their fellow Geordies can follow what they are saying! Likely they are more difficult to follow than Africans. As an FT, you are so naive that it's unbelievable! [edited]

Exactly, some schools read these CV's and on the basis of the FT not being a native-born English Speaker they get rejected. Some Shanxi schools accept Africans and some do not; either way both kinds of FT come at the same price as far as Yuncheng ielts school is concerned; although, this might not be reflected in what the FT gets.

You're another charming individual are you not "What's this rubbish mean?"

People from Tynside are native-born English speakers, so they can speak however they please. People from Africa(apart from South Africans) are not native-born English speakers; so, should teach Swahili, or whatever Bantu language. Same with Russians; they should teach Russian.

How do I know, Mr Clever Cloggs, how Africans sound in a classroom? Because I have had the misfortune to sit in and listen to them.

#57 Parent foxy - 2013-02-28
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

There's a lot of misinformation going on here. I've worked for Yuncheng English Village for two years, so to help set the record straight:
I know Helen, she's friendly, fair, and she and English Village do honour their contracts with teachers.

I'm from England, and I know many other foreign teachers who work at Yuncheng English Village schools: all from native English speaking countries, UK, US, Canada, Australia.

Getting visas for China is complicated and can be a long process, but if you work for English Village you will definitely get a Z Visa (work visa). And not all English teaching companies in China do this, that's for sure.

I'm from north of the border, and I met one of EV's FTs, who happened to work at the same school as me, also on an L for a good few weeks. He was from SA, his forename was Paul, he was white. At that time I worked for River's outfit. Subsequently, said teacher had to do a visa run, along with others employed by his and your agent, to get Z's from HK. I didn't have to do so to remain employed - as I chose to use my "longer-term" so-called spousal L to teach out the semester.

But I can say from memory that the neg stuff re EV was started on Dave's Cafe by one of EV's former teachers who felt lied to and mistreated, who posted on said board, but didn't name and shame EV specifically. So, his complaints could have been wrongfully attributed to River's outfit. One of River's foreign staff working in Yuncheng city did say to me that EV expects some of its Yuncheng FTs to drop everything to teach weekend classes at very short notice, just like training centre bad practice here. So, if I were interested in teaching for EV, I wouldn't do so in Yuncheng city, so as to avoid crap like that, and I'd only do so on an L, and no medical! But I'm happily retired!

#58 Parent anti-trolls - 2013-02-28
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

I do understand that all of EV's teachers are native-born English speakers; whereas, ielts relies on barely understandable Africans for the bulk of its workforce.

What's this rubbish mean? Don't you realize that Ielts school firstly sends its client schools the teachers' resumes? Secondy, the schools accept or reject said teachers on that basis.
Another point, how do you know the Africans are barely understandable in their work environment, as opposed to native speakers of English? Probably the client schools that accept them do so in the knowledge they are getting a good deal because they're shelling out less to Ielts School, which will mean the Africans are earning less, but the students' English is so pathetic there, so they couldn't appreciate any kind of pronunciation. Incidentally, know you not there are native speakers bred in Tyneside, for example. But nobody except their fellow Geordies can follow what they are saying! Likely they are more difficult to follow than Africans. As an FT, you are so naive that it's unbelievable! [edited]

#59 Parent Moses - 2013-02-28
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

I do understand that all of EV's teachers are native-born English speakers; whereas, ielts relies on barely understandable Africans for the bulk of its workforce.

I don't know what you say about EV is the truth, but I know for sure what you say about IELTS school is misinformation. Actually, the bulk of its foreign staff are white folks these days. You should also be informed that IELTS school will only employ a foreigner to teach English if a client school has agreed to accept him (or her) in the first place. How understandable the spoken English of the foreign teachers is isn't and shouldn't be the issue here as they aren't teaching you nor me. The client schools have accepted them. So, IELTS school gets paid. This means the foreign teachers get paid by IELTS school.

#60 Parent Mancunian - 2013-02-28
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

There's a lot of misinformation going on here. I've worked for Yuncheng English Village for two years, so to help set the record straight:
I know Helen, she's friendly, fair, and she and English Village do honour their contracts with teachers.

I'm from England, and I know many other foreign teachers who work at Yuncheng English Village schools: all from native English speaking countries, UK, US, Canada, Australia.

Getting visas for China is complicated and can be a long process, but if you work for English Village you will definitely get a Z Visa (work visa). And not all English teaching companies in China do this, that's for sure.

If you want to chat to some of the foreign teachers who work for EV then it's no problem, they can give you our Skype/QQ/email.

Cor blimey, you dug up an old post. I'm afraid to say, that Silverboy Poster, following a pasting from the GW's fled long since, and won't be back in a hurry.

I have heard a lot of good things about English village; it is in constant competition with Yuncheng ielts School, for contracts in Yuncheng, Yongji, and other areas. I do understand that all of EV's teachers are native-born English speakers; whereas, ielts relies on barely understandable Africans for the bulk of its workforce. That said, they are both good gigs for newbie FT's.

#61 Parent Yuncheng EV Teacher - 2013-02-28
Re: Rubbish Yuncheng Middle School, China

There's a lot of misinformation going on here. I've worked for Yuncheng English Village for two years, so to help set the record straight:

I know Helen, she's friendly, fair, and she and English Village do honour their contracts with teachers.

I'm from England, and I know many other foreign teachers who work at Yuncheng English Village schools: all from native English speaking countries, UK, US, Canada, Australia.

Getting visas for China is complicated and can be a long process, but if you work for English Village you will definitely get a Z Visa (work visa). And not all English teaching companies in China do this, that's for sure.

If you want to chat to some of the foreign teachers who work for EV then it's no problem, they can give you our Skype/QQ/email.

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