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Posts: 2

Peasant

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Q: I graduate in 2027, Is it too early to look for teaching jobs? I am from England.

5 weeks 1 day ago in  Business & Jobs - China

 
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You need two years of work experience to qualify for a work permit, so yes. 

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5 weeks 18 hours ago
 
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If you don't have BA, it's too early, but it won't cost you anything to try at FindJobs and start sending your job applications.

Chinese job recruiters don't answer to the each job application with "Thank you for your application ..." same as western recruiters do. Chinese just move to the next, more suitable job application, so 'never stop sending your job applications to the new job openings!' was my moto.

Looking for the new position was like a part-time job in my time in China.

 

If I would be hiring, I'd say, you're too young. Now, Chinese Language Schools might not think the same.

 

Have a read on this link:

 

https://chinabyteaching.com/teaching-english-in-china/am-i-eligible-to-t...

 

Good luck!

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5 weeks 1 day ago
 
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You need two years of work experience to qualify for a work permit, so yes. 

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4 weeks 2 days ago
 
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A: Someone doesn't count ...  Potential employer/Z visa sponsor
A:Someone doesn't count ...  Potential employer/Z visa sponsor will tell you that.Never mind, I just point that out.Your previous working experience can be considered, but it should be at STEM or at least at English teaching.Now, if employer wants you really bad, they'll skip that part and proceed with 'Working Permit' application issued by the .gov.School must convince .gov to issue a Working Permit. Once you have that, you'll proceed with Z visa application at Chinese Embassy in your home country. The other matter you should consider is a Native English passport requirement.You can score Z visa as a non-native English teacher only when/if you hold a degree completed in a native English country (UK, USA, Canada, Ozz, New Zealand, S. Africa or Ireland, I think.) ... and many employers are not aware of that, so make sure, you point that out on your CV! ... if you hold BA from a native English country ... ... and if you don't hold BA degree completed in a native English country, you don't qualify for a Z visa, i.e. you can forget about legally working in China as an E.T..This is an old Chinese Labour law provision ... since 2009 or even earlier ... -- icnif77