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FG Lurker wrote:You've been working in Eikaiwa for 8 years!? Holy shit man, that's horrible! In the very least you should set up your own school where after some time & effort you can expect to make a half-decent wage of 400,000 a month or so.
Fat Man wrote:It is not as easy as you think, money does not grow on trees.To start up an English School you have to pay alot of money up front, find a good location and probably the hardest is getting the students.
If you teach in your own home it won`t cost so much, won`t look very professional and I think most students prefer to not to study at somebody`s home.
Fat Man wrote:No, I have alot more than that, saving about 100,000 yen per month after taking out all the monthly expenses.
sillygirl wrote: However, I worked hard and was a good employee (I actually enjoyed my job...shock, horror) and they treated me so well.
At one time I tried to quit. They offered me an instant pay rise and 2 weeks off the next month - I even got mae gari on my salary to pay for my flight home.
Basically, it boils down to this. Eikaiwas are businesses. If you are super popular and make money for them, not losing clients, your bosses will treat you properly.
Fat Man wrote:Now it`s a good company to work for but there still alot to go to improve the working conditions for all employees and the future generations.
FG Lurker wrote:So that would be 1.2million yen a year, or about 10 million yen in savings? That's a lot more than the "couple of million" that you wrote before.
If you do have 5million yen in the bank then start up capital for your own school isn't an issue... Unless you suck as a teacher and won't be able to get students of course. (Not meant as a flame, merely an observation.)
Fat Man wrote:.
1 Joined the Union
2 Got my employer investigated by the LSO
3 Took payed holidays
4 Enroled myself in unemployment insurance
5 Handed out flyers in front of the School
6 Had a meeting with the children parents about my problem with my employer
7 Didn`t go to the Christmas party
8 Started up a petition
Can anybody give me some more suggestions just incase my employer tries something nasty on me?
Fat Man wrote:.
1 Joined the Union
2 Got my employer investigated by the LSO
3 Took payed holidays
4 Enroled myself in unemployment insurance
5 Handed out flyers in front of the School
6 Had a meeting with the children parents about my problem with my employer
7 Didn`t go to the Christmas party
8 Started up a petition
Can anybody give me some more suggestions just incase my employer tries something nasty on me?
sillygirl wrote:Your profile says you're American???
FG Lurker wrote:You've burnt your bridges there, you are no longer welcome! They won't fire you because they know you are a trouble-maker. But they will continually make your life there less and less pleasant until you quit. This is a very common Japanese method of getting rid of problem employees such as yourself.
FG Lurker wrote:Yeah, quit before they really get pissed off. I woulda fired your sorry ass long ago.
Fat Man wrote:Yea, what ever you reckon!
I would have taken you to court , sued you for every yen you have for an unfair dismissal, you prick.
FG Lurker wrote:Man, I feel sorry for your wife. You're obviously a loser who is going nowhere in life.
Fat Man wrote:Man, you have some type of attitude problem, need a good hidden to wake you up out of your own world.Take a walk, you are not welcome here mate.
sillygirl wrote:trollish
Fat Man wrote:Yea, what ever you reckon!
I would have taken you to court , sued you for every yen you have for an unfair dismissal, you prick.
Ketou wrote:EDIT: This study is a good read and may help you understand what it is you are up against. The Unspoken Contract
Ketou wrote: This study is a good read and may help you understand what it is you are up against. The Unspoken Contract
non-immersed wrote:....inability of the host population [Japanese] to distinguish immersed foreigners from non-immersed foreigners leads to stress, anxiety, paranoia, self-alienation and emotional trauma for the immersed foreigner as he/she is presumed by the host population [Japanese] to be non-immersed.
cstaylor wrote:For someone who was constantly quoting Einstein out of context, the author forgot the most important one: "Make things as simple as possible, but no simpler." You could summarize that entire article in three words: "people are prejudiced".
FG Lurker wrote:Sounds more like gaijin inferiority complex to me.....
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