PolishForums   Republic of Poland Online
Home . Polls . Search Witamy,  [Guest 38.103.63.18]  Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts
 Please register or login below:

 » Username  » Password 
Polish Forums / Life in Poland / Start a new topic in the [Life in Poland] forum

For all english teachers in Poland (who work for only $1000 a month)


Page:  «« 1 2 3 [4]
posts: 107
 
Seanus
  Jan 28, 08, 03:53  #91

I have to disagree Michał, the wide scope of the job allows u to branch out and u have a fair bit of leeway. Having to be very precise as some kind of specialist is more taxing on the soul. I agree with u in that, occasionally, the regularity aspect isn't there as students cancel (private schools) but u r usually able to make up your quorum by the end of the month. At the risk of sounding conceited, I often got thanked for my teaching abilities. For me, I just put my head down and get on with it but students like what I do. It's all laid out for me pretty much so how can I take pride in that?


Member
Posts: 4176
Joined: Dec 25, 07
                              
Reply
Michal
  Jan 28, 08, 11:36  #92

I sometimes wonder though, if teaching the Poles is a good idea. I was in a restaurant today and we had lunch. It was dreadful and everything we ordered was finished and not available. A good looking Polish girl took my card for payment and she came from Bałystok. A cocky big headed girl, not my type at all. They are becoming spoiled and arrogant. Britain giving them leave to remain in England and work without visas was the worst thing we ever did.

Member
Posts: 2313
Joined: Feb 27, 07
                              
Reply
polishcanuck
  Jan 29, 08, 16:39  #93

^ Only Polish girls in the UK are spoiled and arrogant? You know, many waitresses have bad days, especially when they have to deal with pricks like you. I would know, my girlfriend is a waitress and often has rude customers.


Member
Posts: 188
Joined: Feb 11, 07
                              
Reply
Seanus
  Jan 29, 08, 16:46  #94

I share ur reservations Michał. I have had a few doubts of my own recently.


Member
Posts: 4176
Joined: Dec 25, 07
                              
Reply
Bushman
  Feb 2, 08, 06:07  #95

Hmmm, i think i'm choosing an interesting time to join this conversation... I've been living in Poland for 4 months now, and been having a really hard time learning the language. Going to one of the local pubs is great though, because all the barladies speak reasonably good english. Me and my Fiance (polish) have both worked in pubs (i've been in management), and sometimes staff do just have a bad day... being able to speak english is not going to affect the level of service you get.
As to the original point of this thread, i work less than 20 hours a week, as an english teacher, and i clear almost 2500 PLN per month. Hour-for-hour, i earn a hell of a lot more than i did while working (in management) in the UK. Teaching can be a rewarding job, but it can also be a really crappy job, depending on the motivation of your students.


Member
Posts: 17
Joined: Oct 10, 07
                              
Reply
Seanus
  Feb 2, 08, 09:36  #96

Hi Bushman, raking in that amount is quite good. U r right about the motivational aspect but I've found that if u adopt a commanding presence, the students will respond in kind. I'm not an in-your-face teacher by any stretch but I've upped the ante a little as there is a danger that classes can go stale and u r the General in the class, so to speak. U can come out feeling drained but it is as the maxim/adage goes, 'no pain, no gain'.


Member
Posts: 4176
Joined: Dec 25, 07
                              
Reply
CJ Jordan [Guest]
  Feb 29, 08, 04:55  #97

'lo all.

I'm an English teacher (read native speaker) in two English schools in Warsaw. I started last year with no previous teaching English experience.

What I had going for me was: an American education, friendly personality and a good interview personality.

I work in-house in different companies: banks, power plants, insurance companies. In an average week I do about 20 hours per week (45 minutes each). After adding the time for getting to the companies and prep time it's about 30-35 hours per week. So about 75% FT. This nets me (after taxes, in hand) over 4,000 PLN per month.

I'm thinking of taking on a few more hours, but probably not any more than 30. 5,000-6,000 PLN per month range.

Is this good money? Yes. Very good. In fact, I get paid more than most of my corporate clients (vp's, HR managers, accountants) who make (and are very open about their earnings, apparently the topic of wages isn't a taboo in Poland) between 3,000 and 4,000 on the average.

Is it enough to survive in Warsaw? DEFINITELY.

My living arrangement cost me about 1,200 PLN a month. Granted I will probably never buy a flat here (not spending a million for a ******, dingy place in the concrete jungle), but my living's very comfortable and close to the center (10 minutes by tram). Travel card costs me 70 PLN per month. Bills: about 200 PLN. Groceries: 600-900 PLN.

Do the math: that leaves you 1600-2000 PLN per month for fun, savings (vacation time!) and fun with girls. :)

Guest

                              
Reply
nomyth36
  Feb 29, 08, 22:40  #98

Hi all,
I'd like to thank all teachers of English in Poland for contributing to this thread. It's quite informative. Is there any possibility for summer employment? I'm a veteran teacher in the U.S. Thanks.

Member
Posts: 1
Joined: Feb 29, 08
                              
Reply
Gilly [Guest]
  Mar 1, 08, 01:02  #99

nomyth36 wrote:
Hi all,
I'd like to thank all teachers of English in Poland for contributing to this thread. It's quite informative. Is there any possibility for summer employment? I'm a veteran teacher in the U.S. Thanks.


Absolutely, thanks for the offer, Lots of needy Polish children need English training from a obliging well wisher, I'm sure free rent will be enough will cover your services
You Americans are so generous..God Bless

Guest

                              
Reply
Lady in red [Guest]
  Mar 1, 08, 04:50  #100

Bushman wrote:
i work less than 20 hours a week, as an english teacher, and i clear almost 2500 PLN per month


That's quite interesting.


How did you find the job in the first place ?

Guest

                              
Reply
scottie1113
  Mar 1, 08, 06:30  #101

My experience is similar to bushman's but I teach a little over 20 hours a week and take home just a little less. It's more than enough.

I did my CELTA in August at Bell in Warsaw. While I was there I asked if they had anything available in Gdansk and sure enough, they did. You can also check out www.tefl.com and view the current opportunities in Poland, or you can just go from school to school with yiour CV and see what shakes out.

Member
Posts: 68
Joined: Mar 13, 07
                              
Reply
Bushman
Edited by: Bushman  Mar 4, 08, 05:22  #102

Hi all, me again :-) nomyth36 mentioned summer work... this interests me too! Unfortunately in my town, the demand for english virtually disappears during the summer (and i'm not the only one with this hassle - the other native language speaker here is having the same issue). So, any idea's about where to get extra work in the summer? Camps, short courses, etc? Advice would be appreciated. - oh, Lady in Red: my fiance works at the same school. she organised me an interview last year already, and as i was the only native speaker in town, at the time, it was gift wrapped :-p i was rather fortunate to get it so easily, i will admit.


Member
Posts: 17
Joined: Oct 10, 07
                              
Reply
Harry
  Mar 4, 08, 12:50  #103

There is very very little teaching work in Poland over the summer. A lot of teachers go to the UK and work in language camps there. Standard pay is in the region of £250 to £300 per week and you get board and lodging thrown in.

Member
Posts: 494
Joined: May 2, 07
                              
Reply
Buddy
  Mar 7, 08, 04:12  #104

A friend of mine, Native speaker takes home between 3600 and 4000zl a month after tax. He doesn't work more than 26 hours a week. Nor is he based in a major city, rather a small town. It just depends on your employers really.

Member
Posts: 250
Joined: Nov 18, 07
                              
Reply
Rote [Guest]
  Mar 13, 08, 09:55  #105

My children did Helen Doran courses, they hated it and had much more fun and learnt more on summer camps. The Helen Doran teacher was unproffessional and there were a lot of accidents during lessons.

Guest

                              
Reply
andysterdam
  Mar 14, 08, 16:19  #106

valmoe1 wrote:
I admit, there are many disadvantages but life expierence is the largest benefit and if that delays my 401K or big screen.... so be it. I will NEVER forget my time here. Ever.


That's what I'm counting on too in my decision to (probably) move there soon.


Member
Posts: 51
Joined: Mar 12, 08
                              
Reply
dcchris
  Mar 16, 08, 06:23  #107

oh its terrible here dont come less native speakers more money for me
sorry just joking for a first step out of the country I would say this isnt a bad place a bit different than north america but not shockingly there are surely worse places to go but it isnt going to pay your horrible student loans no the us wants you to be in their system first for me the people are alright here. they dont bother you and the students are high level management and they are quite normal down to earth people one student of mine who enjoys classical music told me he likes emimem! I was shocked to say the least

Member
Posts: 27
Joined: Oct 29, 07
                              
Reply
Page:  «« 1 2 3 [4] Similar Threads¦Latest Discussions Go UPtop of page

Home / Life in Poland /

Your Reply re: For all english teachers in Poland (who work for only $1000 a month) 

Bold  Italic  Horizontal Line  Cite Source 
Ą  ą  Ć  ć  Ę  ę  Ł  ł  Ń  ń  Ó  ó  Ś  ś  Ź  ź  Ż  ż

 If you read this, you are probably not a registered user yet and cannot access all forums and features!

 - Before creating a new topic, make sure to follow the Topic Title Creation Rules.
 - Your message must comply with the General Forum Rules.
 - If you have further questions, check the Forum FAQ & Feedback section.

 To post anonymously, please enter a temporary and unique Username (without password).


 Please register or login below:

 » Username  » Password 

Newer thread in this forum: Older thread in this forum:
What is the ZUS rate? I'm an EU citizen and want to get "officially registered" in Poland

72 users online in the last hour [Guests - 51 / Members - 21] All times are CST (GMT -6)

Home . Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts . Statistics
© 2005-08 PolishForums.com | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy, TOS, Rules | Poland Advertising | Support PF