Popular Post Nick in Thailand 150 Posted March 25 Popular Post Share Posted March 25 I've had a really hard couple of years. I'm very professional but I just want an easy job for a year or so. Anyone taught EFL in a government school who can give me a quick rundown? 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Popular Post tonray 14197 Posted March 26 Popular Post Share Posted March 26 Not Easy. Large classes, extremely noisy and unruly students. Administration will put absurd demands like attending weekend camps, etc. The plus side is you are largely left alone in the classroom, up to you how you handle your lessons. Can bew rewarding because some of the students are real gems and touch you, but in general....you'll be wiped out at the end of every day, most classrooms are not air conditioned, so be prepared to sweat in dress shirt and tie. You said EFL but I assume you mean ESL ? 3 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Popular Post CrunchWrapSupreme 1279 Posted March 26 Popular Post Share Posted March 26 Out in the Issan provinces, yeah. They're always looking for foreign teachers. Not so much for the kids' education, but because a farang standing next to them makes for great photo ops, and they'll get a cut of your salary each month. Expect 30k or less. Don't go to an agency. They are ruthless. Don't go to the big provincial schools. They're a joke academically, but take themselves way too seriously. Expect a lot of meaningless extra tasks, paperwork, and bad attitudes. Go directly to a thesaban (municipal) office, to teach at a municipal school. Not many farangs do this, the further out you go, and they'll be happy to have you. They're essentially daycare centers. Most of the kids will end up in factories, farms, or small family businesses. They won't really care what you do with them, as long as they're occupied and generally happy. Play games, sing songs, make easy, fun worksheets. I'm in BKK now, and somewhat miss that job, the relaxed nature, the slower pace of the country. But I don't miss the pay. If you could make it work, and want it easy, it's the way to go. 4 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Nick in Thailand 150 Posted March 26 Author Share Posted March 26 18 hours ago, CrunchWrapSupreme said: Out in the Issan provinces, yeah. They're always looking for foreign teachers. Not so much for the kids' education, but because a farang standing next to them makes for great photo ops, and they'll get a cut of your salary each month. Expect 30k or less. I've been offered a job right out in a small city near the Cambodian border and a job in a huge school in a North East city. Both paying 35k. Any thoughts about the benefits of each? Thanks for the help so far. Link to post Share on other sites
CrunchWrapSupreme 1279 Posted March 27 Share Posted March 27 5 hours ago, Nick in Thailand said: a job in a huge school in a North East city I wouldn't take the huge school. They've got more of an image to maintain. They'll have you doing more ridiculous tasks, activities, gate duty, extra classes where the students do nothing. Much of it's just sitting or standing around. Less of this at the smaller schools. There'll always be activities, but at the smaller schools, they actually mean something, and you can actually participate. Doing the obstacle course with the kids on scout day was fun. At a big school, you might just stand with them for the assembly, then they'll send you back to the office. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
youreavinalaff 590 Posted March 27 Share Posted March 27 21 hours ago, Nick in Thailand said: I've been offered a job right out in a small city near the Cambodian border and a job in a huge school in a North East city. Both paying 35k. Any thoughts about the benefits of each? Thanks for the help so far. One particular poster on here is generalising too much. I taught in Thai government schools around Issan for over 20 years. Each school is different. It is no way different according to how big the school is, how far out of town it is or anything like that. A lot depends on the demands of the director and the head of English. Head down to the school that has offered you the job. Speak to people. Go to the morning assembly to see how the kids behave. You could even, as I did, go to do a couple of classes to get the idea. There is no one fits all here. A school 1/2 a mile down the road could be the polar opposite of the one you go to. Take it easy and see how it goes. Good luck. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Nick in Thailand 150 Posted March 27 Author Share Posted March 27 2 hours ago, youreavinalaff said: There is no one fits all here. Thanks. I'm not in TH right now but I'm trying to get a feel for the schools during interview. Was thinking of a small rural school because of the other poster but now I'm in 2 minds. Link to post Share on other sites
youreavinalaff 590 Posted March 27 Share Posted March 27 1 hour ago, Nick in Thailand said: Thanks. I'm not in TH right now but I'm trying to get a feel for the schools during interview. Was thinking of a small rural school because of the other poster but now I'm in 2 minds. There is not going to be a small rural school with 35k a month in the coffers for a native English teacher. Schools with that much budget are going to be large schools. Likely 2000+ students and 100+ teachers. Link to post Share on other sites
ThailandFoodExpert 25 Posted March 29 Share Posted March 29 On 3/26/2021 at 8:34 AM, tonray said: Not Easy. Large classes, extremely noisy and unruly students. Administration will put absurd demands like attending weekend camps, etc. The plus side is you are largely left alone in the classroom, up to you how you handle your lessons. Can bew rewarding because some of the students are real gems and touch you, but in general....you'll be wiped out at the end of every day, most classrooms are not air conditioned, so be prepared to sweat in dress shirt and tie. You said EFL but I assume you mean ESL ? and what if someone fuxx the rules and just does as he wants, not doing the $hit paperwork and attending the idiot meetings ? Link to post Share on other sites
tonray 14197 Posted March 29 Share Posted March 29 2 minutes ago, ThailandFoodExpert said: and what if someone fuxx the rules and just does as he wants, not doing the $hit paperwork and attending the idiot meetings ? Fired usually. But usually after first term completed. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
ThailandFoodExpert 25 Posted March 29 Share Posted March 29 21 minutes ago, tonray said: Fired usually. But usually after first term completed. so public schools will never improve ?! 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Solinvictus 1081 Posted March 29 Share Posted March 29 You can always expect to have a 'grass' within the staff break room also. It seems to be quite the norm for either the Head of the English department or the bilingual Thai teacher to have such a messenger. If they are western, they should be ashamed of themselves in my opinion. Oh, and at government schools you will have more antics or non-teaching issues that 'they' like to focus on. No matter how good you are in the classroom. And of course you always have the 'bitter faced' old hag who can't smile with a foreigner. Not to mention non-NES who take it to heart you get paid more. They suck and are quite negative overall. All in all, once you find a comfortable place to work, I'm sure you will be happy once you find your groove. Find where you like and what suits you best! *Objectivity* Link to post Share on other sites
Scott 16515 Posted April 3 Share Posted April 3 On 3/29/2021 at 12:16 AM, ThailandFoodExpert said: and what if someone fuxx the rules and just does as he wants, not doing the $hit paperwork and attending the idiot meetings ? I've run into very few teachers that were so good and so dynamic in the classroom that doing the paperwork or attending meetings is overlooked. Of those few who were that good, I always provided them with as much support as possible. I helped with their paperwork. They were not difficult employees, just occupied with other tasks. They did follow instructions, they did follow lesson plans, even if I had to fill out the forms for them. The students learned well, like the classes and were motivated. The other 99% were both worthless in the classroom and as an employee. They were fired. Link to post Share on other sites
kynikoi 18 Posted April 7 Share Posted April 7 I think Thai students deserve more regardless of the energy you wish to put in to the job. This is the same poster that asked if it was alright to bring a gf he doesn't have around to the school who is only a few years older than his students. Presumably, M6 students. Let us hope. Nick IN Thailand is actually NOT in Thailand. Sad really. Put the two posts together: I'm interested in coming to Thailand. I understand I can get free money by pretending to teach English. My primary goal is to land a gf yet unknown and potentially teen-aged. I'm not really concerned about the ethics of it but only appearances and how it might impact my free money. Link to post Share on other sites
cyril sneer 3844 Posted April 7 Share Posted April 7 From my experience teaching in government schools, teaching is the easy part 90% of the stress comes from having to mix with other teachers, both foreign and Thai Link to post Share on other sites
kynikoi 18 Posted April 7 Share Posted April 7 9 hours ago, Nick in Thailand said: Thanks for the reply, Karen. But so true yes? You have posted a trolling response and an ad hominem attack. You of course could identify the latter because you are an English teacher. Both your OP posts were absurd baiting questions that should have been locked immediately. I pity the students you may one day stand in front of. Karen Link to post Share on other sites
Farang123 37 Posted April 8 Share Posted April 8 The teaching itself is pretty easy, of course you will be responsible for creating lessons which can take some time depending on how diverse your classes are. What will really drag on you will be interacting with co-workers as someone else mentioned. They will gradually start asking you to do more and more, come in on the weekends, stay later, do gate duty. Nothing is really about how you teach the students in a Thai government school. Most of the Thai teachers who teach in them can't speak very well and pass on bad habits to the students. The salary is pretty bad too, I just finished a year working for 28,000 a month. Not worth it at all IMO but covid was coming and I needed a visa quickly. 2 Link to post Share on other sites
Nick in Thailand 150 Posted April 8 Author Share Posted April 8 7 hours ago, Farang123 said: The teaching itself is pretty easy, of course you will be responsible for creating lessons which can take some time depending on how diverse your classes are. What will really drag on you will be interacting with co-workers as someone else mentioned. They will gradually start asking you to do more and more, come in on the weekends, stay later, do gate duty. Nothing is really about how you teach the students in a Thai government school. Most of the Thai teachers who teach in them can't speak very well and pass on bad habits to the students. I'm hearing a lot about the co-workers. I am readying myself. Thanks for the heads up. 1 Link to post Share on other sites
Solinvictus 1081 Posted April 9 Share Posted April 9 (edited) On 3/28/2021 at 1:00 AM, youreavinalaff said: One particular poster on here is generalising too much. I taught in Thai government schools around Issan for over 20 years. Each school is different. It is no way different according to how big the school is, how far out of town it is or anything like that. A lot depends on the demands of the director and the head of English. Head down to the school that has offered you the job. Speak to people. Go to the morning assembly to see how the kids behave. You could even, as I did, go to do a couple of classes to get the idea. There is no one fits all here. A school 1/2 a mile down the road could be the polar opposite of the one you go to. Take it easy and see how it goes. Good luck. Yeah normally if the owner or director is a male you will have more professionalism I find. With women directors or owners, you will have more petty and negative 'group' like mentalities. Here in Thailand, it is not a matter of how well you can teach as this will get you the job and your foot in the door easily. Especially if you are beautiful or handsome. The reality and hard truth is that you must practice patience and tolerance of 'sh*tty people' who can't think much beyond the 'box' they are in. Nor find a new job easily, as you may be able to. It boils down to how much you can tolerate for the money they are giving you. Especially while being disliked for getting more salary from the start! Watch out for the falang who has 'his roots down.' They most of all compared to the others will be the one that plays the game of 'high school' better than anyone else. A snake in tall grass for newcomers. These types of falangs are amongst the worst of people, IMO. Oh and watch out for those who say they are 'Christians' also. Rampant in government schools. ✝ Edited April 9 by Solinvictus Link to post Share on other sites
Solinvictus 1081 Posted April 9 Share Posted April 9 23 hours ago, Nick in Thailand said: I'm hearing a lot about the co-workers. I am readying myself. Thanks for the heads up. Thai / Filipino co-workers...*Everyone is okay with something that is not right* No problem. One person speaks up to say it is not right. They get fired... Link to post Share on other sites
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