Current English teaching requirements(slim) and benefits(hefty) in Beijing
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3 reqs: native English speaker, be positive, be on time
Pays $50+ an hour, as many hours as you want.
One on one tutoring.
I was checking English teaching jobs again for the podcast and it looks like there areabout 20 listings so far this month with multiple positions available for each listing, salaried jobs or part-time, paying 50 plus an hour or salaried 10 to 30 hours per week for 2800 to 4900 USD per month.
These listings are from the beijinger, a very popular Beijing magazine and although this is the general classifieds section, most of the listings are for English teachers.
If you have any questions about traveling, English teaching, or living in china, let me know.
This magazine/site is legit, I used it while I was teaching in China and it's a very popular and professional resource.

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3 reqs: native English speaker, be positive, be on time
Pays $50+ an hour, as many hours as you want.
One on one tutoring.
I was checking English teaching jobs again for the podcast and it looks like there areabout 20 listings so far this month with multiple positions available for each listing, salaried jobs or part-time, paying 50 plus an hour or salaried 10 to 30 hours per week for 2800 to 4900 USD per month.
These listings are from the beijinger, a very popular Beijing magazine and although this is the general classifieds section, most of the listings are for English teachers.
If you have any questions about traveling, English teaching, or living in china, let me know.
This magazine/site is legit, I used it while I was teaching in China and it's a very popular and professional resource.

But that involves living in china and that just won't do.
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But that involves living in china and that just won't do.
You've just lost social credits
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But that involves living in china and that just won't do.
Living in China is convenient, comfortable, and an amazing learning experience with countiess opportunities.
Lots of problems, like most places, and many, many advantages.
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You've just lost social credits
That's fine. I am seeing if the number underflows back to positive.
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Living in China is convenient, comfortable, and an amazing learning experience with countiess opportunities.
Lots of problems, like most places, and many, many advantages.
But I enjoy freedom of internet access and being able to be critical of my government.
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But I enjoy freedom of internet access and being able to be critical of my government.
Most people do.
You are dismissing the an entire country and insulting 1.5 billion people based on your ignorance and misguided nationalism.
Comments and questions are welcome, but ignorant sniping violates both rules.
This travel community is for sharing information and learning.
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Most people do.
You are dismissing the an entire country and insulting 1.5 billion people based on your ignorance and misguided nationalism.
Comments and questions are welcome, but ignorant sniping violates both rules.
This travel community is for sharing information and learning.
I don't see how not wanting to live somewhere is insulting the people. If people say they don't want live in Australia because they are unhappy with government policy of excessive mining and natural destruction of the Great Barrier Reef, that isn't an insult to the people who live there. There are reasons for not wanting to live places that are based on personal experience.
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I don't see how not wanting to live somewhere is insulting the people. If people say they don't want live in Australia because they are unhappy with government policy of excessive mining and natural destruction of the Great Barrier Reef, that isn't an insult to the people who live there. There are reasons for not wanting to live places that are based on personal experience.
Yes, there are.
Nobody is forcing you to live in china, yet you were rude and dismissive(rule 2) based on vague and inaccurate implications(rule 1).
Personal comments are fine, just follow the two rules that make this a welcoming and positive community.
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Yes, there are.
Nobody is forcing you to live in china, yet you were rude and dismissive(rule 2) based on vague and inaccurate implications(rule 1).
Personal comments are fine, just follow the two rules that make this a welcoming and positive community.
Well, it's good to know critique of the Australian government is OK, but critique of the Chinese one is being uncivil.
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Well, it's good to know critique of the Australian government is OK, but critique of the Chinese one is being uncivil.
You're incorrect.
As you're attempting to mislead the thread by speaking for me, then arguing against your straw man, your comment will be removed for misinformation.
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You're incorrect.
As you're attempting to mislead the thread by speaking for me, then arguing against your straw man, your comment will be removed for misinformation.
Good to see you are consistent in not removing critique of the Australian government.
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Good to see you are consistent in not removing critique of the Australian government.
If you don't spread misinformation and are civil, your comments stay.
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Didn't realise the great firewall of china was misinformation.
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Didn't realise the great firewall of china was misinformation.
Nope, it's real!
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So are you going to restore the comment about it then? Seeing as it is not misinformation?