Qualifications and Requirements #
1. Native speakers;
2. Bachelor’s degree holders or above
3. Minimum 2 years of English teaching experience;
4. TESOL, TEFL, or CELTA holders with priority.
Responsibilities: #
1. The work schedule is from 8/8:30 am-6/6:30 PM at the weekend or 3:00 pm-7:00 pm (4 hours a day; it depends on the classes) Wednesday-Friday;.
20 hours teaching hours +3 hours office hours per week
2. Plan lessons and teach in one specific class;
3. Teaching materials: some are provided by the school; some need to be created by teachers.
4. Ensure the children are care-given and supervised, with discipline and health and safety maintained as well at all times;
5. Participate in required discussions, meetings, classroom decoration, outside kindergarten activities, communicating with parents and lesson planning;
6. Regularly complete student process reports with parents, such as weekly lesson plans and monthly goals, and be responsible for the completion of other related written materials, such as observation records and so forth;
7. Accept the assessment, evaluation, and risk/reward based on the performance evaluation criteria during his/her tenure;
8. Will lead the class all day and be in charge of all aspects of the class.
Salary and Benefits: #
1. Salary: RMB16-18k before tax per month (depends on teaching hours) (negotiable).
2. Providing medical insurance;
3. Housing allowance: RMB 2,000 per month or free apartment
4. 14 days (2 weeks block) paid holiday; on February and August
5.11days full paid yearly holidays
6. half-month end of contract bonus;
Salary: RMB21000-25000 per month, (after tax, including all)
Holidays: 21 paid holidays including public holidays.
Visa: Working visa, (must provide proper documents required)
About #
Jinan , or Chi-nan conventional Tsinan, City (pop., 2003 est.: 2,346,000), capital of Shandong province, eastern China. It dates to the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 bc) and earlier and has been an administrative centre since the 8th century bc. Nearby Mount Tai was one of China’s greatest holy mountains; many Buddhist cave temples were built in the hills south of the city in the 4th–7th century ad. It was made the capital of Shandong under the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). Opened to foreign commerce in 1904, it developed further after becoming a railroad junction in 1912. It is now a major administrative and industrial centre and Shandong’s chief cultural centre, with agricultural, medical, and engineering colleges and a large university (1926).