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Nomad School

1.9k members • $99/year

544 contributions to Nomad School
2 likes • 1d
Here are my travel plans versus the reality plans! 1, winter break in Hainan (The Hawaii of China) reality, no need we live in a hot place! 2, winter break in Chiang Mai, the reality, it will happen, maybe in March or Arpil 3, summer in the UK, reality it will happen (and I am dreaded it) 4, Weekends in Macau and Hong Kong (literally a bus drive away) reality, definitely, the plan is Hong Kong for my birthday, the big 60 this year! We have really settled in to life in Zhuhai, south China, lovely and warm all year round, a bit windy and wet through the typhoon season, but we can always go somewhere else! Business is busy as I head into the Chinese winter break and new year.
0 likes • 23h
@Brett Dev we have not experienced the gun fight with water pistols yet! When is it??
English Loses Appeal as China’s International Schools Scale Back
A recent blog (below) has raised concerns that English language learning is losing its appeal, and some schools around China are starting to scale back there businesses, as Chinese families curb there enthusiasm towards English being an essential tool as the gateway into Western Universities and schools. Where the stay raise teachers stress levels, for me it screams more students will seek alternative ways of learning English. Plus the report goes on to say that STEM (STEAM) subjects are now becoming a mainstay of what Chinese families are seeking for their younger children, again another subject to which to offer services too. Prestige Fades as International Schools Scale Back China’s international school market, which expanded rapidly for more than a decade, is now entering a period of contraction. As concerns grow over school governance and the perceived return on investment, enrollment momentum has slowed noticeably. Not long ago, families in major urban centers such as Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen routinely paid tuition fees exceeding 300,000 yuan per year in hopes of securing admission to leading overseas universities. That enthusiasm has since cooled. Education sector data shows that the total number of international schools in China began declining in 2023 for the first time. Several high-profile institutions run by overseas organizations from Europe and North America have either shut down or reduced their presence. In mid-2024, a large international academy in Shenzhen closed abruptly despite enrolling more than a thousand students. When refunds were delayed, groups of parents organized public demonstrations demanding reimbursement. Since then, the city’s international school count has fallen sharply from its previous peak. Reports also suggest that at least one foreign education group operating multiple campuses nationwide is reassessing its footprint. Staffing Challenges Intensify Amid Geopolitical and Pandemic Aftershocks Geopolitical friction between China and the United States, combined with the long-term effects of pandemic-era restrictions, has significantly reduced the number of experienced foreign educators willing to work in China. Industry observers report a sharp decline in the proportion of teachers who are native English speakers compared with pre-pandemic levels. Frequent staff turnover has become a growing concern. In some schools, parents report that subject teachers are replaced repeatedly within short periods, disrupting academic continuity and weakening instructional quality. As the expatriate population shrinks, the student mix has also changed. Non-Asian international students now represent a much smaller share of enrollment, prompting debate over whether some schools can still maintain a genuinely international environment. At the same time, disputes involving student safety and discrimination have attracted attention online. Parents have raised complaints about inadequate oversight and unresolved bullying incidents, further undermining trust in school administration.
English Loses Appeal as China’s International Schools Scale Back
1 like • 7d
@Cinthia Racicot-hamelin I think it’s hot air Cinthia! Although it’s being spoken about I haven’t seen a drop in student numbers, in fact it’s the opposite! But that’s the paradox here, officials say this, the people do the opposite! When the Chinese government removed the one child policy and said you can have 3. (Called the double reduction policy) all aimed at improving birth rates and highlighting the high cost of education, the birth rate in China went down! Crazy times ahead! I might find a cave to live in for a decade or two !
Online teaching rates?
I'm curious... for those of you in the group who are teaching English online, what is your current hourly rate? How much do you actually make?
Poll
7 members have voted
Online teaching rates?
9 likes • 9d
Don’t sell yourself cheap! Teaching English might sound ordinary to some, but the students you’re teaching see it as a gateway to success and opportunities, that’s what you sell, the dream, the possibilities and their potential. The first question I lead with is “why do you need to learn English?” When they tell you their why, make sure you tell them it’s priceless.
Laying the Foundations for Location Freedom — Transitioning from Corporate
Hi everyone 👋 My direction is to build location freedom. This year, I’m laying the foundations to transition from corporate finance and create a non-location-dependent business. After 25 years in the corporate world, this feels like a conscious and well-timed shift. I’ve already reduced my working hours and I’m retraining while setting up my business, with the goal of completing this transition this year in a thoughtful, intentional way. For those of you who’ve already made the move (or are in the middle of it): What did you personally find hardest during your transition to location freedom? And what do you wish you had known earlier? I’d really appreciate your insights.
1 like • 9d
My transition was 10 years in the making! Knowing that I would eventually move to online teaching, but feeling loyal to my school. Life being life, the school closed, I took a univeristy job which had no office hours and little contact time, this was perfect for me to realise my dream on moving towards online teaching, I had a year with a moderate safety net of income while building my online teaching business. Thats the way it worked for me, is your new business the same as you paid employment? Are you able to subtly bring any clients with you on your journey?
Internet behaviour of westerners in China?
I tried to post this in the Warrior Forum, but the admins rejected it stating that their forum isn't for surveys. I am looking into the internet behaviour of Westerners who live within China. I appreciate that due to the great firewall and some other restrictions, Google, Facebook, and other large western sites are not accessible without the use of a VPN or the right Esim. However, I would like to know what westerners' typical behaviours are, when accessing the internet in Mainland China. Do they typically: 1. Access their western EMAIL; Can they access their Gmail inbox (or similar) on their phone or computer [with or without a VPN]? 2. Access a China-friendly EMAIL instead, while in China? 3. Use Google to perform regular Web Searches [with or without a VPN]? 4. Use Baidu [Chinese search engine] to perform regular Web Searches [with or without a VPN]? 5. And; what Social Media sites (like Facebook, etc) do they access on a regular basis [with or without a VPN]? Any feedback would be welcome. Thanks for reading
1 like • 12d
Hey Toby, so if you can get an official WeChat account, when you post on this, its reach is more, it isn’t restricted to your WeChat contacts. I have an official account now, and it gets views and shares!
1 like • 10d
@Toby Barnes at the moment HK has no internet restrictions, Facebook and Google work without a VPN!
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Clive Kingshott
6
103points to level up
@clive-kingshott-9261
I’m a teacher, living and working in China. Eventually we’ll be an online educator. Bit of an academic but don’t let that scare you!

Active 21h ago
Joined Dec 24, 2022
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