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| Teaching In Thailand Teaching in Thailand can be a great career with salaries in the range of $2,500 to $6,000 per month, or you could become a TEFLer with a salary range of 350-500 pounds per month, no experience necessary. |
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| | #1 (permalink) | |
| Thaiophile slayer Last Online: Yesterday 04:07 AM Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Land of shifty lethargic smiling retards
Posts: 4,030
| TEFLers who don't have a clue how poorly paid they are I guess being allowed to stay in Thailand is sufficient payment. Graduate engineers and salesmen earn more than TEFLers everywhere, so why is he so surprised about this? Quote:
Last edited by Smeg : 29-08-2008 at 09:16 PM. | |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Nakhon Ratchasima Last Online: Yesterday 06:25 PM Join Date: Jul 2008 Location: Electric Avenue - North West Of Eden
Posts: 242
| Wages for teachers have started to hit the glass ceiling it seems. Seven years ago the teachers were happy (ish) with 30k baht per month. If they were a shortage of teachers and they fought for higher wages then there might be a change. But too many teaching folk need Thailand more than Thailand needs them. The governments English Speaking program is too entrenching in the class system; send the rich kids abroad and the ones left behind get the sub-standard english teachers (as a general rule). |
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| | #3 (permalink) | ||
| Elite Member Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: In a rather cold and dark place
Posts: 10,500
| It's quite obvious with the change in regulations of late that there are the people who need to be there and the people who are there for fun. The ones who are there for fun have left or are planning on leaving. The ones who need to be there are prepared to jump through hoops to make sure they can stay. Be this an 80k course or a more expensive Masters program or even just resitting 4x4,000B exams again. EPs can't afford to pay more. They never raise their prices from their basic levels. Even if they get more students in they will reach a maximum capacity after six years. Max per class in an EP is 30 students - so being conservative 30x (at my old school ) 35,000 per year x6 = 6,300,000 Having one whitey per class acting as a teacher/homeroom teacher/english or science. at 40,000 per month - not hard to get if you are good. 40 x 12 x 6= 2880000 leaving 3.5 million per year. take away running costs - a/c computers, books, equipment - 2,000,000 per year. Maybe 1.5M to play with - probably closer to 1M. They don't have the money to pay any more.
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Ranong Last Online: Today 06:52 AM Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 368
| Bangkok Phil is a bit obtuse, and has a tendency to wildly exaggerate his business acumen/experience. Hat's off to him for his success in inheriting ajarn.com, but like a lot of small timers who've caught a whiff, he often overestimates his grasp of things and likes to project/present himself as a know-it-all guru. For example: "I rather naively thought that all professional Thais at managerial level earned about 30-40K a month." That's not only naive, but just plain dumb. "All" professional Thais, as if "professional" was a homogeneous group...and not taking into account different industries, such as advertising, construction, IT, agriculture, entertainment, etc. Just as it is back home, there's quite a difference in "professional" salaries across various industries and occupations. Why would one assume that there's a standard baseline for professional salaries? Anywhere? Furthermore, his examples: engineering, sales managers, accounting, finance...I think it's pretty safe to say that these folks tend to make more than schoolteachers just about anywhere in the world. Is it really that surprising that the professions he mentioned offer higher salaries than TEFL teachers, even by Thai standards? Real professions have vetting, qualification, and performance/experience thresholds. Said thresholds are extremely relaxed or non-existent for TEFLers making 30K a month. It may come to a surprise to Phil and his little buddies that there's more to being a professional than simply calling yourself a professional. Even in Thailand, FFS. Last edited by Bexar County Stud : 29-08-2008 at 04:00 PM. |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Thaiophile slayer Last Online: Yesterday 04:07 AM Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Land of shifty lethargic smiling retards
Posts: 4,030
| ^ Of course I have. There isn't much demand for people who are in the main trying to spend their life as if they are on holiday and have 4 weeks professional training. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| The Dog | I thought proper teachers earned tonnes of money over here, can't understand why these TEFLers don't get properly qualified and start looking for jobs in the 150k baht per month and up, instead they do a 4 week course and then whinge when they get paid what they are worth.
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| The Dog | Lets look at this logically, if your white you can come here, do a 4 week course and get a job that pays 30 k baht per month, but only when your working, plus you would probably end up paying for your own visa runs etc, so lets say school is open 8 months per year, you are gonna earn 240k baht per year minus visa runs, or..... You spend 3 years getting a proper degree, yep you have lost that chance of earning 720baht over the 3 years you could have spent in Thailand, but hell you get a job in a proper school you could earn that 4 to 5 months, be like KW with his maids and gardeners and drivers etc instead of living in a 3,000baht per month flea infested box. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Thaiophile slayer Last Online: Yesterday 04:07 AM Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Land of shifty lethargic smiling retards
Posts: 4,030
| Bangkok Phil finally snaps out of his 20-year daydream in which he is convinced farangs in Thailand (such as him) are special and thus automatically deserve and receive premium salary levels over the locals. Wakey wakey Philip. |
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| The Dog | Quote:
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Burning in Hell Last Online: Today 01:29 AM Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb
Posts: 4,337
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Elite Member | Quote:
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Thaiophile slayer Last Online: Yesterday 04:07 AM Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Land of shifty lethargic smiling retards
Posts: 4,030
| AO, I saw that you are heading home in July 09. Good luck. I also saw on Phil's thread that my OP is taken from that your Mrs earns 200k per month or thereabouts. Hope she''ll be able to make a mint in the states, or its gonna be all up to you! |
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| | #16 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Last Online: Today 01:53 AM Join Date: Jul 2005 Location: In jail
Posts: 5,853
| I've said for a long time that Phil and I were earning around the same hourly wage in '96 (when we breifely worked together) as teachers do today. IMHO, teaching salaries in Thailand have not kept pace with increases in cost of living - and with inflation/cost of living rising in Thailand, things must be hurting. But, I would also say thatteachers in Thailand are not alone in that boat. I know a few teachers here in Sydney and, on average, they are on around 35k a year, which is about 2/3rds of the average salary. Today there are certain occupations that are seen as vocational - teaching and nursing being classic examples (and here in Aus, the fire dept.). I feel very sorry for people who elect to work in this sector of society: they serve a far better purpose than most and get fuck all - not even a "thank you" - in return. In this regard, Thailand is catching up with the, so-called, "developed" world. |
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| | #18 (permalink) |
| I am in Jail Last Online: Yesterday 09:38 PM Join Date: May 2007 Location: Samut Songkram
Posts: 314
| Teflers are overpaid morons worth about 10 k per month at best. No one here ever tells the truth about thai native teachers salaries. addvertied and paid are totally different. very few get less than 60k per month plus benefits. |
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