timtscott Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 (edited) Anyone here teach at a University in Thailand? I am curious what a normal workload would be. In China, class room hours seem to be minimal (12 to 14 hours per week). Looking to teach a little before going into full retirement mode but not willing to do a 40 hour a week grind. Hoping to teach at an international uni so I can teach something other than English although would teach English if nothing else was available. Any feedback is appreciated. Thanks! Tim Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect Thailand Edited November 4, 2013 by timtscott Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CharlieH Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 Teaching forum would be better help probably. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timtscott Posted November 4, 2013 Author Share Posted November 4, 2013 Thank you. Yes you are right. My apologizes. Still learning my way around here. Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect Thailand Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Johnniey Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 At the university I taught at most teachers taught between 10 and 14 hours per week. Sent from my GT-I9152 using Thaivisa Connect Thailand mobile app 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timtscott Posted November 4, 2013 Author Share Posted November 4, 2013 Thank you Johnniey. Much appreciated. What type of salary could one expect with that workload? Thanks again! Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect Thailand Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ajs500 Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 I only went in to use the 'phone (in bygone years of course), but 10-12 hours. Some places want you there when you are not teaching, avoid them. They say for preparation/marking..what's wrong with my student notes? What has changed.? Once a fellow student insisted that the lecturer return his "homework". grumblingly he went to his minvan and was ankle deep in papers of yesteryear. Another lecturer told us to mark our own papers. Another when asked for assistance.. "I've taught you all I know". Another rattled incessantly on the board, dot and cross products, and never looked at us or spoke a word. Chinese students will never question you, even if you insist black is white. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
timtscott Posted November 4, 2013 Author Share Posted November 4, 2013 (edited) I only went in to use the 'phone (in bygone years of course), but 10-12 hours. Some places want you there when you are not teaching, avoid them. They say for preparation/marking..what's wrong with my student notes? What has changed.? Once a fellow student insisted that the lecturer return his "homework". grumblingly he went to his minvan and was ankle deep in papers of yesteryear. Another lecturer told us to mark our own papers. Another when asked for assistance.. "I've taught you all I know". Another rattled incessantly on the board, dot and cross products, and never looked at us or spoke a word. Chinese students will never question you, even if you insist black is white. Thanks Asa! Just to be clear...you mean 10 to 12 hours is the norm in Thailand , as well, as China? Is the salary for that work load 30,000 Bahts? If that's the case it would seem that is not such a bad gig? Am I wrong? Thanks again! Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect Thailand Edited November 4, 2013 by timtscott Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HeijoshinCool Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 14-18 per week is typical. Even some government schools, in larger towns, teach science and math and health in English, not just private schools or universities. The year I spent teaching, I worked M-TH, mornings, for 14 hours per week. No other hours, show up, teach, go home. Was supposed to be only conversation, but I wove science and health and even some math in. 20k per month. There are agencies, or you can knock on doors. But I wouldn't work for any school that made me hang around 7:30 -4:30, five days a week, when I only had a dozen classes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scorecard Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 (edited) I only went in to use the 'phone (in bygone years of course), but 10-12 hours. Some places want you there when you are not teaching, avoid them. They say for preparation/marking..what's wrong with my student notes? What has changed.? Once a fellow student insisted that the lecturer return his "homework". grumblingly he went to his minvan and was ankle deep in papers of yesteryear. Another lecturer told us to mark our own papers. Another when asked for assistance.. "I've taught you all I know". Another rattled incessantly on the board, dot and cross products, and never looked at us or spoke a word. Chinese students will never question you, even if you insist black is white. Thanks Asa! Just to be clear...you mean 10 to 12 hours is the norm in Thailand , as well, as China? Is the salary for that work load 30,000 Bahts?If that's the case it would seem that is not such a bad gig? Am I wrong? Thanks again! Sent from my iPhone using Thaivisa Connect Thailand Lecturing at Thai universities, some comments in regard to western / foreign lecturers: - Rare to have an overall employment contract. In which case it would be a yearly contract but sometimes with a possibility of renewal. - Mostly done by 'invitation to teach' a specific course(s) / course by course. - Total number of courses is very semester by semester - and no guarantee of even one course in some semesters. - For the current semester I'm teaching three course at one uni - 21 hours per month (in the full months), and 8 hours per month at another uni. In December I have no courses. In January I have 30 hour intensive MBA course in an adjoining county. In Feb 2 MBA courses in Thailand, total of 24 hours a month and March MBA 40 hours intensive program. - Daytime lectures: could be: 6 hours a day / 2 hours a day / 3 hours per day. Evening lectures usually 3 hours per evening, generally twice a week per course, sometimes with all day Saturday or Sunday or Saturday & Sunday added. Lecturing fees: very case by case / uni by uni / different for bachelor level compared to masters level. From my experience (others will have different numbers) between 1,200 to 2,200Baht per hour. No additional payments for lecture / course preparations, marking your test papers, completing course reports, etc. Most Thai universities require a masters degree and some good and aligned work experience to teach bachelor and some masters courses. Some require a Ph.D. for some masters programs. Extras: if you have a Ph.D. and the uni (dean / doctoral studies director) likes you, there are occasional opportunities to teach the initial course work for doctoral candidates and sometimes opportunities to join doctoral committees case by case. Fees are good 3,000+ for course work, and up to maybe 3,000 per meeting (usually 1 to 1.5 hrs) to listen to / comment on presentation from individual doctoral candidates. But Ph.D. work is rare. Edited November 4, 2013 by scorecard Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
richard10365 Posted November 16, 2013 Share Posted November 16, 2013 At my university you need a masters degree in the field you are teaching to teach at the bachelor's degree level. If you don't have that, you can't teach in any program in Thailand that is accredited by the Ministry of Education in Thailand. At the master's level, you need a PhD unless you're teaching some kind of foundation class. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Water Buffalo Posted November 20, 2013 Share Posted November 20, 2013 9am til 4pm. Leaving early is ok sometimes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wittywitty Posted January 13, 2014 Share Posted January 13, 2014 Normally Thai people teach about 10+ hours per week. I know a foriegn teacher who teaches 20 hours per week. I do only 3 because I do other work that involves travelling around inside and outside the country. So when I am gone for a week, it won't cause too much troubles to students. However we all get paid the same. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post pauleddy Posted January 15, 2014 Popular Post Share Posted January 15, 2014 I worked at a "famous" public uni for five years. You had to do 12 hours contact, plus all the basic marking and paperwork. Often freshmen level, using Headway or a US version (yuk!) The salary was about 20k plus 10k housing allowance. On top, there were always chances to do "international" courses (where the parents pay for little Somchai to do a BABA using English)...if you knew the right people and if you were 'good'. Those courses paid very well, maybe now about 3k per hour--altho doing two extra of those is/was enough to take home 60-70k so don't overdo it. A few tips (unis only, not schools): Don't work at the Rajabhats. Some of the English Teachers (thai) can't speak English. The kids are mainly dumb as well. Some will use their mobiles in class. Many will be late for class. Try to lay the law down early. Much of this applies everywhere, but the Rajabhats are worse. 90% of Thai kids, especially the rich ones who are more interested in Paragon handbags, are not really interested in your teaching or in the content. It's a chore for them and for you, plus they expect an A plus because daddy owns a beer company and 300 7-11s. As many sites will tell you, this is Thailand. Academic rigour is less important...being an entertainer and a mime dancer is where it's at. DONT work anywhere that makes you stay there 8-4.30 every day. Any half-decent place will not look for you on a friday afternoon, as long as you are pretty good and work well. During the LONG break April-May, expect to come and go and to have a real official holiday as well. Again, nobody chases you once the marking is done and the new courses are prepped. Always appear well-intentioned and attend meetings which concern you, even semivoluntary talks and training. Get a name for yourself by volunteering to do quizzes for the English club and writing helpful handouts. Don't get involved in "reading through my daughter's MA thesis". You will have to change it 95%. Many/some ajarns do editing at 500b a page. Refer the Thai person to them. Don't ever get involved in factions. ever. A lot of the Thai staff hate eachother, and there are clans and factions. The gossip level is huge. Avoid the politics. Get used to the fact that some Thais will never like you anyway. You are the native speaker. There is sometimes chip-on-shoulder, because you know a Brummie Accent, the subjunctive, and strange idioms. Even some of the PhDs have no idea. I have heard of strange Phds, like a PhD in video presenting and a PhD in "reading books". All c**p. An MA is normal if you are teaching BAs. a PhD is better if you are teaching MAs. However, this is not gospel, and i know some excellent teachers who just have BAs. At Thai unis, some places want an MA but some don't. But, you won't get a Uni job after a 4-week TEFL. In general, the whole system is *****d because the kids never get taught properly from age 4. English teachers in normal upcountry/province schools can't teach, and just recite grammar and rhymes. There is also corruption, paying for grades and selling of exam papers. It will take another 50 years to change it all, if ever. One bonus is that if a kid goes to another country to study for a time, the change can be seismic. They lose that Thai solipsism and fake cutie stuff. Some have seen the big world and they can really be very good/bright/keen. On an endnote--when Thai teachers are good, they can be damn good. dedicated, willing, excellent and good friends as well. Far better than I, were I to teach Thai in the US (no chance anyway). Trouble is that those ones are hens' teeth. Eddy 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zeichen Posted January 17, 2014 Share Posted January 17, 2014 I like Pauleddy's post, a little synical but overall similar to my experiences. One addition to Pauleddy's comments about office politics. Don't compliment Thai teachers on how good they speak English. Most of my colleagues got their PhD's from the US or Australia. So it is kind of a backhanded comment implying that most don't and it can back fire. I don't agree with his assessment on their degree's or quality. My experiences are much different. I have worked with many very well qualified Thai teachers. My problem is that many got their degrees 15-20 years ago and still think that their research is current or topical. Not to mention that they will occassionally correct you, just ignore it. They often can have some arrogance because of their seniority or degree. Don't ever compare, complain or suggest things to be done different even with colleauges that you think are your friends. Agree with ridiculous comments and then just do it the way that you think best. Don't take things off a colleagues desk without asking even if it is just a paperclip. Leave any arrogance of how better you are than Thai colleagues. Even if it is true, humility is definitely the way to succeed here. As a full time lecturer especially if there is a relatively small foreign staff, you will do a lot of peer editing. Though your classroom hours can be anywhere between 12-18 hours, you will always have office hours. Only part time teachers can leave right after class. As Pauleddy said schools that require you 8-4+ kind of suck but most will require at leat a certain number of office hours. Being seen in the office and being socially polite are very important. Popularity is usually the only form of assessment for quality of teaching so many think that all you need to be is an entertainer. I don't agree with those statements. A very effective teacher with high standards can still be popular. Never show your emotions, displeasure, raise your voice at a student, colleague etc. no matter what. Don't hit on students. We lost 2 teachers 2 years ago for doing this often. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DavidBonnie Posted February 26, 2014 Share Posted February 26, 2014 Cynical . . . . I beg to differ, teacher? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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