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Posts: 188

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Q: How much do teaching jobs pay in Suzhou?

12 years 17 weeks ago in  Business & Jobs - Suzhou

 
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Posts: 150

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Seems like jobs pay anywhere from 6,000 to 10,000 a month.

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12 years 17 weeks ago
 
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We r looking for a ESL teacher here in Suzhou. and the payment will be around 12,000 RMB per month.

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12 years 9 weeks ago
 
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It depends largely on which age group you want to teach.

Kindergarten classes typically pay a crapload, upwards of 12,000 RMB...but you go cuckoo after a few months. Middle and high schools will pay less, the highest I think would be 10,000, most will be less.

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12 years 9 weeks ago
 
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"We r looking for a ESL teacher here in Suzhou. and the payment will be around 12,000 RMB per month."

Your ad says 10,000 so which is it?

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12 years 9 weeks ago
 
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The jobs I work with in Suzhou pay between 7,000/month (including housing & meals) - 16,000/month without housing/meals.

Every job will have a salary to vacation time balance. Public schools and Universities pay less, but have lots of time off. Private language schools pay more and you work more. It's all about what kind of job fits you best.

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12 years 3 weeks ago

http://www.teachingnomad.com - Your connection to teaching in China

 
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It depends on what school you work for. Kindergartens and private language schools probably pay around 10,000 RMB/month. Universities will pay less but you'll have less/more flexible hours.

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12 years 3 weeks ago
 
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Answer of the DayMORE >>
A: 1. Apply at FindJobz, top L corner of this screen! 2. Have a look
A:1. Apply at FindJobz, top L corner of this screen! 2. Have a look over the Internet with "Requirements for an English teaching job in China" in search for more details.You could also look at the guidance titled "How to use an Internet, search engines in particular ..." for more in-dept knowledge. 3. As you can see from no. 2,, main requirement for an ET job in China is holding of a native English passport (UK, Ireland, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and S. Africa), no different than anywhere else in the world. 4. Non-English native passport holders qualify for an ET job in China only if they hold BA degree completed in the native English country.However, most recruiters and hiring managers in China aren't aware of that exemption, so if you hold a degree from one or two native English countries, I suggest you include that into Introduction letter. Good lucky! P.S.Application for the NASA's Moon-to-Mars Program at the Cape Canaveral is less stringent than applying for an ET job as a non-native Englisher ...That of course, is an opinion of a non-English native teacher with lengthy English teaching experience in several different countries.  -- icnif77