Teaching English in
In this
file photo, used for illustrative purpose only, a Vietnamese teacher teaches
English at a foreign language center in
There's a shortage of good jobs for recent graduates in the
West. I know; I am one. The only financially viable post-university options
included either returning to my parents' house, returning to non-graduate
employment or interning for free while sleeping on sofas.
In
such an unforgiving employment market, the option of teaching English in
Vietnam’s
rocketing economy and optimistic government targets about wanting every child
to have some access to a native English teacher by 2020 has resulted in an
increasing demand for native English speakers.
Such
high demand for native speakers has shaped the utopian nature of the living
and working conditions being advertised to prospective Western teachers. A
quick internet search returns loads of promises for ample pay sweetened with
teacher testimonials about the beauty of the local culture, the friendly
people, and endless pictures of beaches and beers.
It’s no
wonder that loads of Westerners move to
Yet for
all the benefits these companies advertise and provide for Western employees,
the employment of locals is characterized by exploitation, scapegoating and
subcontracting. Here, I will focus on the practices employed at two specific
English language centres: Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123 and Shiny Happy
English Smiles.*
The
most obvious difference between treatment of local and Western staff is the
gulf in pay. Western teachers are offered full-time contracts which, for
about 20 hours teaching a week, will get them anywhere from US$1000-2000. In
Our
rights are also actively protected and advocated for. One of the first things
Ted Osius, the new
The
Vietnamese administrative staff of Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123 and
Shiny Happy English Smiles do huge amounts of work to make sure that the
companies don’t fold in. Their wide-ranging remit includes advertising for
new teachers and new customers, managing teaching schedules and finances,
making sure that teachers have all the equipment they need, dealing with
complaints, and inducting students and new staff – all while providing
invaluable support to teachers as they experience the teething problems
associated with working in a foreign country. Administrative staff earn
roughly US$250-300 per month.
Teaching
assistants don’t even get full time contracts. They are all bilingual, with a
high level of English proficiency, and provide a bridge between the students
and English teachers - most of whom do not speak Vietnamese. Teaching
assistants set and mark homework, complete attendance registers, note what’s
been studied, and deal with the complaints of demanding parents. Native
English teachers, on the other hand, prepare a few games and then go and play
them with the students.
As
teaching assistants are on casual contracts, Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello
123 and Shiny Happy English Smiles do not have to pay them in line with a
fixed monthly minimum wage (
A
pernicious clause in the employment contract of teaching assistants at
Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123 states that if they do not work for two
months, employment is terminated. Since the teachers' hours are set by the
employer, this arrangement results in a working relationship that
Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123 can sever without having to enter into the
costly process of officially sacking a teaching assistant.
At
Shiny Happy English Smiles, teaching assistants are employed on an informal
‘verbal agreement’ and are paid in cash at the end of each month. The
teaching assistant has no rights or job security; the employer retains the
ability to terminate employment immediately and without warning.
The
practice of subcontracting is also widely used by both companies to increase
profitability by using a third party company to take responsibility for
employing and remunerating staff. At Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123,
working contracts for cleaners and security guards are outsourced. To use the
cleaners as an example: they work 9 hours a day, 6 days a week, and get about
$145 a month; many complain that they are often not paid on time. The
cleaners’ salary was recently lowered. Those who complained were fired.
All the
Vietnamese staff are scapegoated in ways that the companies wouldn’t dare to
try with the expat teachers. If a teacher claims that money has gone missing
from their bag, the cleaner who cleans the area near the bag gets fired immediately
without her story being heard. Promised pay rises and bonuses for Vietnamese
staff are arbitrarily denied with abstract excuses about how the staff member
hasn’t achieved as much as they should have.
Employment
conditions at these two English teaching companies are divided along foreign
vs. local lines, with Westerners getting the better deal by far. The attitude
of these companies toward their Vietnamese staff, whom they consider
expendable, is despicable. With so few Western recruits aware of the gulf in
employment conditions between themselves and local staff, these English
Language Teaching (ELT) companies cleverly maintain the facade that the world
of ELT in
The
truth, however, is that ELT employment in
By
*These names are pseudonyms.
Melbourne-Massachusetts Hello 123 and Shiny Happy English Smiles each has
over 20 campuses throughout
** The writer is British, and lived and worked in
|
Thứ Tư, 24 tháng 12, 2014
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét