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My Experiences Teaching English at the University Level in China

Gain valuable insights from International TEFL Academy (ITA) graduate Kiran Bhat as he shares his remarkable experience teaching English at a university in Shanghai, China.

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I moved to China quite randomly. Due to family pressure to do something that earned more, I decided to quit my job teaching online, but I still wanted to pursue a life lived globally. Shanghai is considered to be one of the rising cities of the world, I had visited China in 2013 for a month and fell in love with the city during that time. I thought if there was a place with work that paid well, but also the grit and the edge that made a place feel like home, Shanghai would be a good match.

Read more: A 6-Step Plan to Get a Job Teaching English in China

So, I came to Shanghai on a tourist visa, chose a cheap place to live via Airbnb, and spent my first week on a job hunt. At first, I was a little disappointed. Most of the work was geared towards teaching children, a field I had no exposure or interest in. I interviewed for some tutoring agencies, but they were only willing to take me as a part-time teacher, meaning I would get paid little. And, a lot of the prestigious English learning centers were notoriously corrupt in China, famous for not paying their teachers on time and forcing them to work beyond the required hours. But, I had one giant hope in the back of my mind before all of this began, that I would be able to work as a college teacher in Shanghai.

Read more: What is the Salary for an English Teacher in China?

Unlike in the U.S., India, or many European countries, where the path towards being a college teacher requires a lot of education and luck, Chinese universities are known to recruit English instructors on the basis that they are a) native speakers, b) hold passports from the U.S, U.K, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, or South Africa, c) have graduated from university d) have an accredited TEFL certification or teaching certificate and e) have more than two years of work/teaching experience.



Since I cleared all of these qualifications, I was actually in a good position to be hired at a university. The main problems were that 1) I was in Shanghai, when most of the university positions were in Beijing or in small Chinese cities, and 2) I had come in early September when most university positions were filled, and most classes were already starting. If I had come in April or May, it would have probably been easier to have been considered for multiple positions.

Teaching at the University Level in China

Luckily, I was accepted for an interview at the Shanghai Industrial and Commercial Foreign Language College. The interview was competitive and had multiple candidates. We were asked during the interview to talk about what it means to be a teacher, explain our experiences and values, and plan a lesson about film, and do a short mock class in front of the interviewer. I went home convinced that I hadn’t gotten the position, and that I was most likely going to have to take a job tutoring or working for an English center. I think I made a fist pump to myself when two days passed, and I got a message from the interviewer saying they wanted me to come to the office immediately to sign my contract.

Read more: What Are the Requirements for Teaching English in China?

On the first day, I put on one of my best suits, boarded the free shuttle to the university at 7 in the morning, and held copious notes in front of me as I prepared for my first class. I was expected to teach three days a week and to have four classes of 80 minutes each day.

The first batch of students were surprisingly naughty. They spent a lot of time chatting amongst themselves, openly using their phones, and clapping loudly every time I said something. I was convinced Chinese students were quite rowdy until I attended my next set of classes. Most of the students were shy, diligently taking notes, and repeating my corrections. Only a small minority were big personalities, and a smaller minority were not paying attention, or sleeping. I finished my first week knowing that I had a lot of classes to prepare, and students to finesse. One of my colleagues told me that, as I was telling her about all the work I had to do, I had the biggest grin on my face.

Teaching at the college is my favorite job thus far, but like with any other work, I would recommend it with the following caveats.

  • In Shanghai and most global centers, working at a college pays a lot less than working at a private training center. Colleges are usually financed by the government or do not have a lot of money, so they usually pay a wage acceptable on the local level. Training centers, on the other hand, are usually where the wealthy people of Shanghai flock to, so they get a lot more students and thus are able to offer a lot more services. In Shanghai, the average training center, for 40 hours of work per week, will offer 16,000 to 20,000 RMB per month, health insurance, flight allowance, housing allowance, and transport reimbursement. I am currently being paid 10,000 RMB per month, and I get no extra benefits.
  • Lesson planning and grading does take a lot of time, and it is unpaid. Training centers usually allot a certain amount of their paid work weeks for office hours, giving you time to prepare that is during work. Colleges, however, more or less expect you to do all the work on your own time. You have to usually prepare the readings, grade the activities, print papers, and work on various bureaucratic forms, and all of the time and energy comes out of your pocket. I am being paid to teach for 16 hours a week, but with the lesson planning, I am probably working something like 25.

Read more: How Do I Get a Visa to Work in China?

That being said, there are mostly benefits to teaching at a college.

  • Contracts are usually per semester, whereas in private training centers, they last for 12 months. A semester lasts for 4 months, so if you find yourself not liking the job, it is a lot easier to wait for 4 months to end over an entire year. Additionally, training centers have a lot of contingencies, and if you do end up breaking your contract, they could end up withholding pay, taking away all the benefits they promise, and get you in trouble with the authorities. The only disadvantage to breaking my current contract is that I will have to pay 3000 RMB to the school.
  • I work a lot less than at a training center. I am only contracted to work 16 hours, or 3 days a week, meaning I have four days a week to do whatever I want. Some teachers choose to take other part-time jobs to earn more money, others use it to gallivant around China, but the point is that I am much freer than someone who works 40 hours a week from 8 AM to 4 PM each and every day.
  • I have a lot of freedom to plan my lessons. Unlike in training centers where one usually has to follow the whims of the directors, I can teach pretty much whatever I want. For example, my current syllabus is about the origins of English, and I am concentrating each module on a different English-speaking country (the USA, India, and a country of the student’s choice). I have chosen the films I want to show them, and the short stories I think would best benefit them, and I am testing them using reaction papers and in-class assignments. All of the preparation work is my own, but it is my own. I have found this work to be the most gratifying as a result.
  • The prestige and power of working at a college. Working at a training center is more about teaching the basics of English, where I will have the ability to shape young minds and play a role in their lives much in the way that my professors inspired me. To teach is not merely about drilling facts into someone’s head, it is about sharing a worldview, and giving people the chance to broaden their minds, and I would not have as much power to do this at a training center. Not to mention the hidden bonus of getting to tell my relatives at the Bangalore gatherings that I am a college instructor, which will certainly put a grin on their faces, too.

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