wonderboy416
Active Member
Hey, those of you that know me are aware that I packed up and left Toronto to teach in Seoul for a year. Up until now the experience has been terrific and everything has been really great. I've learned to read/write Korean and communicate (albeit in a fairly basic form) verbally, I've learned much of the transit system (the subway map which I first thought was insane now makes perfect sense in my mind) and have really taken to the food, the people and the lifestyle here. Everything is on a much smaller scale than North America, public spaces are more confined, everyone lives in a high-rise or apartment villa, cars are small, trucks are small, there's people everywhere... retail is usually stacked 3-4 floors high... the typical coffee shop or mcdonalds is 3-4 stories and each level is usually packed with people, the population density is insane and I love every bit of it. Teaching has been good too and my school has been very fair and honoured all the terms of the contract I signed... until now.
I'm not sure how to proceed so I'd just like some advice/opinions.
The economy is in Korea is quite poor and sending your kids to an English private academy for kindergarten and after school classes has suddenly become something of a luxury, so our enrollment is way down. The school has let go some of the Korean teachers and increased our hours (within the limits of the contract), so the 7 of us foreign teachers (4 Canucks, 1 Kiwi, 1 Brit and an American) really have no reason to complain. We have a new boss and one of the first changes she implemented was that all teachers must be on the school property during the day...
And this is where we have our problem, if I worked 10-7 before... I'd have 3-4 40 minute breaks throughout the day which I'd come home and relax, make some food etc (the foreign teachers live across the street from our school). This new rule now means we can no longer do that and are now spending 9-10 hours (in some cases more) hours a DAY at the school... even though that is just sitting in our desks reading a book, playing nintendo ds or doing NOTHING. Our contracts state we're paid for teaching time (100 hours/month, anything in excess is to be paid overtime, anything over 110 hours requires our consent), prep time (1 hour before our first class), additional classroom duty (handing out snacks, helping them with their coats etc) and that we can be given work to do up to our total maximum amount of hours (110). No where does it say anything about our break time... we are in fact not paid for that time so there for we feel we should be free to do as we please. This is an extra 2-3 hours a day that each teacher is being forced to sit there and do nothing, it's quite possibly the stupidest thing I've ever witnessed an employer make their employees do... their reason is that the business is bad and they need us to be there in case we need to "help out"...
Has anyone ever encountered such a similar situation? I know we're in a different country but it blows my mind that they can do this. Our boss didn't want to talk about it and said that during the school hours we are "property of the school". This is not in our terms of employment.
My thoughts are:
- get the school to put this policy in writing and have the president sign it (if the school can't do this clearly they admit they're in the wrong)
- take a copy of our contract and said policy to a lawyer and find out what their legal opinion is and what our options are
Also the contract states the terms under which our employment may be terminated... which is violating the terms of the contract... the way I see it, that time is mine and as long as I'm not breaking the law or violating my contract I'm free to do whatever I want with it and the school cannot terminate me (or the other teachers for it).
Am I nuts or is this a reasonable course of action?
It's a little scary in a foreign country where you don't have easy access to the laws (then again even in Canada things like labour laws are best left to experts in the field). So this is putting a pretty big damper on "all the fun" in Korea, especially since I have a few buddies from Toronto coming this month to stay with me for 3 weeks.
Also 3-4 foreign teachers walking out would pretty much destroy the school since we're the reason why the parents pay the kids to come there in the first place. It takes about a month to arrange for a new teacher (recruiting, getting the VISA etc etc) if everything goes smoothly and even then a lot of people get cold feet and never step onto the plane. Also with the Korean won being so incredibly low I can't imagine too many people are lined up to come teach here.
Oh well.. just a rant... but how would you like to sit at a desk for 20 hours a week with NO work to do and NOT get paid for being there?
I'm not sure how to proceed so I'd just like some advice/opinions.
The economy is in Korea is quite poor and sending your kids to an English private academy for kindergarten and after school classes has suddenly become something of a luxury, so our enrollment is way down. The school has let go some of the Korean teachers and increased our hours (within the limits of the contract), so the 7 of us foreign teachers (4 Canucks, 1 Kiwi, 1 Brit and an American) really have no reason to complain. We have a new boss and one of the first changes she implemented was that all teachers must be on the school property during the day...
And this is where we have our problem, if I worked 10-7 before... I'd have 3-4 40 minute breaks throughout the day which I'd come home and relax, make some food etc (the foreign teachers live across the street from our school). This new rule now means we can no longer do that and are now spending 9-10 hours (in some cases more) hours a DAY at the school... even though that is just sitting in our desks reading a book, playing nintendo ds or doing NOTHING. Our contracts state we're paid for teaching time (100 hours/month, anything in excess is to be paid overtime, anything over 110 hours requires our consent), prep time (1 hour before our first class), additional classroom duty (handing out snacks, helping them with their coats etc) and that we can be given work to do up to our total maximum amount of hours (110). No where does it say anything about our break time... we are in fact not paid for that time so there for we feel we should be free to do as we please. This is an extra 2-3 hours a day that each teacher is being forced to sit there and do nothing, it's quite possibly the stupidest thing I've ever witnessed an employer make their employees do... their reason is that the business is bad and they need us to be there in case we need to "help out"...
Has anyone ever encountered such a similar situation? I know we're in a different country but it blows my mind that they can do this. Our boss didn't want to talk about it and said that during the school hours we are "property of the school". This is not in our terms of employment.
My thoughts are:
- get the school to put this policy in writing and have the president sign it (if the school can't do this clearly they admit they're in the wrong)
- take a copy of our contract and said policy to a lawyer and find out what their legal opinion is and what our options are
Also the contract states the terms under which our employment may be terminated... which is violating the terms of the contract... the way I see it, that time is mine and as long as I'm not breaking the law or violating my contract I'm free to do whatever I want with it and the school cannot terminate me (or the other teachers for it).
Am I nuts or is this a reasonable course of action?
It's a little scary in a foreign country where you don't have easy access to the laws (then again even in Canada things like labour laws are best left to experts in the field). So this is putting a pretty big damper on "all the fun" in Korea, especially since I have a few buddies from Toronto coming this month to stay with me for 3 weeks.
Also 3-4 foreign teachers walking out would pretty much destroy the school since we're the reason why the parents pay the kids to come there in the first place. It takes about a month to arrange for a new teacher (recruiting, getting the VISA etc etc) if everything goes smoothly and even then a lot of people get cold feet and never step onto the plane. Also with the Korean won being so incredibly low I can't imagine too many people are lined up to come teach here.
Oh well.. just a rant... but how would you like to sit at a desk for 20 hours a week with NO work to do and NOT get paid for being there?
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