SCHOOLS AND RECRUITERS REVIEWS
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#1 Parent Canadian Guy - 2018-03-29
Re Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

Could you tell me more about this Canadian guy. I am a Canadian Guy with a school in Bayuquan and it seems like you are attacking me and my "crappy school" directly. I have never attacked you or your school. This seems very unprofessional.

I web search Bayuquan every once in a while. I seem to recall another teacher, who I knew personally, complaining about the same issues and you defending the school. You knew what you were getting into.

#2 Parent Rob Osborne - 2017-07-07
Re Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

I worked at this school previously and I know that this post was real and not posted by a recruiter. It is accurate in so much as the staff at the school are genuinely nice people who make you feel welcome and are willing to help you. Bayuquan is a great place to live, but as one of the very few foreigners living there you will always be treated like an alien who has just landed in the town.

What it fails to mention is that the owner of the school insists on providing accommodation that doesnt have working heating and in winter it gets pretty cold. It didnt just happen to me, two other foreign teachers who worked their had to freeze their way through a winter also.

The actual management of the school is terrible and everyone I worked with their became so frustrated that they left. Tax is not paid legally by the owner so you may run the risk of getting into trouble with the authorities too.

If you are foolish enough to consider a position at this school be prepared for the owner to give with one hand and take with the other. I accept many people will reply with 'thats China' and they would be right but its easier to put up with this in a larger city.

It is clear that after one year Falyn is leaving this 'amazing' school and has been asked by the owner to write the post under duress. Be wary of the posts written by John O Shea, I have a feeling that this is the Canadian guy who has a crappy little school in BQ and tries to influence people not to go to BQ in order to keep students at his school.

#3 Parent John O'Shei - 2017-07-05
Re Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

I think that I have a bizarre and disgusting fetish of sorts for travelling to some of the shittier places in China. Not necessarily full-on third world but going beyond the third tier. Mundane rather than impoverished. Sometimes the suburbs of larger, more famous tier one and two cities fall under this category as they are spoken about as towns in their own right. The places that need you to hire a minibus and driver for a week because trains, buses etc won't quite stretch out so far. Especially those suburbs that form the taint between two larger cities.

As far as those cities within cities go, Bayuquan is not that bad BUT it is probably coming off the back of recent economic good times, many of the true locals are let's say... Very, very Dongbei. There's a middle class of sorts that are arguably better off and wealthier than in Shenyang, Yingkou, maybe even Dalian but not Panjin.

These people are often the nouveau riche that made money either via very questionable means or being very technically competent and getting paid that little bit extra (probably as danger money) for leaving a nicer, more civilised hometown/place of study behind. There's nearby towns that have even more going on with raw materials, steel etc; where the presence of these newly moneyed types results in some ridiculously fancy KTVs staffed by plenty of poor rural farmer girls that are just looking to be the next mistress for some corrupt factory boss or government official. Should you ever end up having to drink most likely fake Whisky/Cognac, do meth and bang hookers to the beat of shitty Chinese disco music together with such people in a big private room... Oh yes, that's 'the real China' that half of these silly newbie teachers have been spending ages looking for.

Mind you, my comments about the reality of doing business in such smaller towns will probably do much more to sell the opportunity than the stupid wumao post where they talk about the 'welcoming family' at Eton. If you've to got to leg it because you owe child support payments, are on the run from the pigs or anything else that you need to escape from back home; then this might be the perfect opportunity. If you have a real degree certificate, can speak English and shower on a daily basis, remember the following:

1.) If a school's name mentions Eton, Oxford, Harvard, Tsinghua, Beida etc and it's a f**king kindergarten or something; it is the complete opposite of such institutions.

2.) Don't play life on hard mode, get a teaching job in Shanghai, Beijing etc. Don't try to find 'the real China.' The Real China will find you, wherever you are. Besides, if you're on a dodgy visa, do you really want to stand out like a sore thumb in the countryside?

3.) Developing upon point 2 - You're looking for a job, not a holiday. Hence, choosing a more developed city with shops, bars and good transportation will make your life a lot easier. You can always pick up some Chinese chick and use her as a tour guide should you wish to go exploring later.

#4 Parent Silverboy - 2017-07-04
Re Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

A good reply to that wumao post. Yes, I'm sure those areas are tough to live in and the people are much tougher than other Chinese also,
not like the wussy, lazy and weak and sissy men and women you find in Shanghai, Guangzhou, or even Nanning in Guangxi

#5 Parent John O'Shei - 2017-07-04
Re Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

I've sold products around that area in Bayuquan and some little towns in Gaizhou, Wafangdian, Zhuanghe etc a few years ago. You aren't by any chance a fat ugly butch Serbian/Hungarian woman that tells the kids she's from America are you? Just joking, I know that this a wumao advertising post.

The only jobs worth doing for almost any foreigner in Yingkou, Anshan, Benxi and those cities are in manufacturing and engineering; it's an industrial part of China that isn't for the light hearted. I kind of like those shithole towns because the men aren't girly sissies like down South; they're good fun when they don't want to fight or force you to drink toxic quantities of cheap baijiu and most of the women are friendly, if not a bit naive and excessively curious around foreigners; it's just like stepping back in time 10 or 15 years.

Those towns are strictly for business trips, not long term residence especially in the worst areas. That pollution in winter will remind you of the time that your old man caught you smoking and forced you to chain smoke a whole box of 20 Marlboro Reds to put you off ever wanting to smoke again. Hopefully new regulations can fix that, but if you're new to China, it will come as a shock to you.

As for hotspring clubs and the like, they're ten a penny in that part of China and some of those open markets are absolutely scabby as f**k, larger cities in China are clamping down on the farmers, but there would be too much risk of social unrest if such a policy got carried out there. If you like to go on poverty safari, go ahead but don't talk about it like its the most wonderful thing you've ever seen.

It is far from being the worst area in the world, but if you are a newbie and don't speak Chinese, you'll be screwed.

Falyn Swerer - 2017-06-30
Bayuquan and Eton Foreign Language School

As a current foreign English teacher at Eton Foreign Language School in Bayuquan, this experience has exceeded my expectations. From day one, everyone at Eton has been very supportive and welcoming. I was nervous to move from New York City to Bayuquan, which I knew virtually nothing about. However, I now feel like I'm right at home because of the Eton family who have taken me in and shown so much kindness to me. Bayuquan is a beautiful and safe community with excellent food (especially the BBQ and hot pot), fresh outdoor markets, shopping centers, parks, community activities, beaches, hot springs and greenery. As far as the work environment goes, everyone is professional and is true to their word. There are currently two Eton Foreign Language School's in Bayuquan which I've had the opportunity to teach at both. The company is growing and additional locations will open soon. I highly recommend Eton Foreign Language School to English teachers from around the world.

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