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Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

Hello I have a question. Has anyone taught English while studying for a degree in China. Any information would be helpful. Thank you.


Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

I think it's quite common here. You can teach English as a part time job.

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

I'm a Canadian Medical School student teaching as an english teacher during the weekends in China...So ya and I know a lot of people like me....Can you be more specific as to what you mean? What exactly do you want to know? Oh and what part of China are you at?

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

HI ,I am chinese ,Do you want to learn Chinese ?Maybe we can exchange Email add:yangqian_1988@yahoo.com.cn

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

No, but I have worked at English centers while going to school in the states. Same difference but I don't know anything about getting a degree here. I took all my classes in North Carolina, Texas and California. I have taught English here but yeah they hire people without a degree just I wouldn't want to get mixed in with that too many people saying they want a degree but with teaching or being in the military it is way too hard.

I was in the military full time for three years and couldn't attend school would think it would be the same if you were working as a teacher as well. It's better to finish your school first or try to teach but you are supposed to have a degree the downside is it will be hard to do both so Pick one!
=D>

Shakespeare Coined the phrase "in a pickle", Queen Elizabeth I ate sweets until her teeth rotted, Einstein failed his college-entrance exam. They probably didn't want you to know.....Power to the user! Michael

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

Dear mattaya,

Please stop raping the English language.

Thanks.

Signed,

EVERYONE.

Honesty

Empathy

Respect

Open-mindedness

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

By the way "mattaya" sent me a private message entitled "your one my ingore list".

He can't even type out a correct title to a message.

Idiot.

Honesty

Empathy

Respect

Open-mindedness

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

mattaya0812 wrote:
No, but I have worked at English centers while going to school in the states. Same difference but I don't know anything about getting a degree here. I took all my classes in North Carolina, Texas and California. I have taught English here but yeah they hire people without a degree just I wouldn't want to get mixed in with that too many people saying they want a degree but with teaching or being in the military it is way too hard.

I was in the military full time for three years and couldn't attend school would think it would be the same if you were working as a teacher as well. It's better to finish your school first or try to teach but you are supposed to have a degree the downside is it will be hard to do both so Pick one!
=D>

Why couldn't you attend college while you were in the military? While I was in the service we were encouraged to get as much education as was possible and our schedules could even have been adapted to our education schedule. While I was in the service I was frequently taking a class some place and, to the best of my knowledge, the services all have their own courses that will count toward a college degree. I do know that the Navy/Marines have courses that are approved by the Naval Academy.

Unless you were stationed in far northern Alaska it is confusing that you were not able to take some sort of college courses while you were in the service.

美国鬼子

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

mattaya0812 wrote:
I was in the military full time for three years
=D>

Girl Guides doesn't count.

Sometimes the same is different, but mostly, it's the same.

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

zhenlai wrote:
mattaya0812 wrote:
No, but I have worked at English centers while going to school in the states. Same difference but I don't know anything about getting a degree here. I took all my classes in North Carolina, Texas and California. I have taught English here but yeah they hire people without a degree just I wouldn't want to get mixed in with that too many people saying they want a degree but with teaching or being in the military it is way too hard.

I was in the military full time for three years and couldn't attend school would think it would be the same if you were working as a teacher as well. It's better to finish your school first or try to teach but you are supposed to have a degree the downside is it will be hard to do both so Pick one!
=D>

Why couldn't you attend college while you were in the military? While I was in the service we were encouraged to get as much education as was possible and our schedules could even have been adapted to our education schedule. While I was in the service I was frequently taking a class some place and, to the best of my knowledge, the services all have their own courses that will count toward a college degree. I do know that the Navy/Marines have courses that are approved by the Naval Academy.

Unless you were stationed in far northern Alaska it is confusing that you were not able to take some sort of college courses while you were in the service.

Yeah well unfortunately for me I joined the military and got out of the military officially when the war started and when the war ended so I was in one of the largest squadron deploying people. My schedule might have been different from yours. I was a MC&A maintenance controller but when they started shipping everybody out they needed more help so I got sent to help the supply squadron deploy troops and my schedule would not allow me to attend any school. It was like working 5 to 8 oclock it would have been impossible for me to do both and pass a class.

Shakespeare Coined the phrase "in a pickle", Queen Elizabeth I ate sweets until her teeth rotted, Einstein failed his college-entrance exam. They probably didn't want you to know.....Power to the user! Michael

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

wave wrote:
mattaya0812 wrote:
I was in the military full time for three years
=D>

Girl Guides doesn't count.

LMFAO.....hahaha! You need to learn some respect sir! Rolling On The Floor

Shakespeare Coined the phrase "in a pickle", Queen Elizabeth I ate sweets until her teeth rotted, Einstein failed his college-entrance exam. They probably didn't want you to know.....Power to the user! Michael

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

i'd like to learn english with you !
NO.:15801217274
e-mail:jh_830909@163.com
ken

Do what you want,anything!

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

About Employer:
Part-time Native English Teacher Wanted
Full-time Native English Teacher Wanted
EET international language center is currently looking for some qualified teachers for children’s club.
its headquarters is in shanghai and 27 subsidiaries in Baotou, shanxi , and Beijing.

Work Location:
tiantongyuan, Chaoyang, Beijing
Job Description:
Requirements:
1. Native English speakers
2. A four-year bachelor's degree or a master degree from an accredited college or university (overseas students in China’s top universities are also qualified)
3. Good command of critical thinking skills, enterprise skills (teamwork and leadership) and communication skills.
4. Flexible time, available to work flexibly during the week days (4-8 classes per week).
5. Initial training and orientation is required before teaching.

Job Description:

The teachers are expected:
1. To teach children aged between 2--7 years old in Beijing, with about 4 periods per week in each school for each class. The program is estimated to last for one academic year starting from this October and the total teaching time is anywhere between 100-150 hours, depending on the quality of teaching.
2. To cooperate and coordinate with EET and the school in assessment and moderation process of the course.

To Apply:
Please send your resume to email us

Please indicate how long you will be in Beijing to be able to participate in the program
Tel: +86-10-5718-4578/9 (Beijing)

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

hi , im seeking a english teacher to improve my english speaking now, mybe you can call me , thanks

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

Summer yang wrote:

HI ,I am chinese ,Do you want to learn Chinese ?Maybe we can exchange Email add:yangqian_1988@yahoo.com.cn

I have recently joined as a Logistic Incharge at Shanghai Port,not comfortable with the Chinese language,willing to learn soon so that it helps in my job.

summer study abroad egypt

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

Summer yang wrote:
HI ,I am chinese ,Do you want to learn Chinese ?Maybe we can exchange Email add:yangqian_1988@yahoo.com.cn

I have recently joined as a Logistic Incharge at Shanghai Port,not comfortable with the Chinese language,willing to learn soon so that it helps in my job.

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

zhenlai wrote:
mattaya0812 wrote:
No, but I have worked at English centers while going to school in the states. Same difference but I don't know anything about getting a degree here. I took all my classes in North Carolina, Texas and California. I have taught English here but yeah they hire people without a degree just I wouldn't want to get mixed in with that too many people saying they want a degree but with teaching or being in the military it is way too hard.

I was in the military full time for three years and couldn't attend school would think it would be the same if you were working as a teacher as well. It's better to finish your school first or try to teach but you are supposed to have a degree the downside is it will be hard to do both so Pick one!
=D>

Why couldn't you attend college while you were in the military? While I was in the service we were encouraged to get as much education as was possible and our schedules could even have been adapted to our education schedule. While I was in the service I was frequently taking a class some place and, to the best of my knowledge, the services all have their own courses that will count toward a college degree. I do know that the Navy/Marines have courses that are approved by the Naval Academy.

Unless you were stationed in far northern Alaska it is confusing that you were not able to take some sort of college courses while you were in the service.

Are you sure you were even in the US military? Many people aren't allowed to take any college courses until all their military training is complete. In the Air Force that includes basic training, 'set school' and CDC (career development course) and exam. For me those combined courses and training spanned around 3 years and being transferred from/to TX,CO, England, SC, and Korea.

The other odd thing you mentioned was not being able to study in Alaska. While I was stationed at Eielson AFB for 3 years, I took many college courses...

Sure the military encourages taking college courses, but it doesn't mean it's always possible or even allowed.

I don't know much about the Navy, but I wonder how difficult it would be taking classes on a nuclear sub.

Oh sure, its fine when a monkey does it. But when I throw barrels at an Italian plumber, they call it a hate crime!
-Stephen Colbert

Re: Teaching English and Studying for a degree in China.

samaramfo wrote:
Summer yang wrote:
HI ,I am chinese ,Do you want to learn Chinese ?Maybe we can exchange Email add:yangqian_1988@yahoo.com.cn

I have recently joined as a Logistic Incharge at Shanghai Port,not comfortable with the Chinese language,willing to learn soon so that it helps in my job.

Your English isn't so great either. "Join" requires a direct object here. "So that" should be replaced by "because." The entire post is one run on sentence. I'm not trying to be a sh*t. But I, a native speaker, was puzzled till I re-read it twice.

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