iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Travel
 

Teaching English In Mexico: A Decent Living?

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Douglas Bower

What's more disappointing than a person who makes a promise he can't keep? A person who makes a promise that is a lie. Many promises to make a "decent living" teaching English in Mexico are just that—a lie.

If you do a phrase search on Google, "teach English in Mexico," you will get almost 900,000 hits. Some of these sites are filled with tantalizingly appealing phrases like,

"For only a few dollars a week you can have_____in Mexico".

"First-class bus travel to such and such a place is only____".

All are allurements trying to sell their how-to book, tapes, seminars, or placement service for teaching English abroad. They give the impression that you will be able to make enough money to live a life of luxury and ease with all that money you will make teaching English in Mexico.

We've met many young women who come to Guanajuato with the hope and dream of getting a teaching job making a bundle. The word "shock" is putting it mildly when they find out what their salaries will be in some of these private schools. A good pay scale would be less than $3.00 an hour. I know of some schools that pay even less than that amount.

Can you imagine how many hours you would have to work to make ends meet? Minimum wage is about $400.00 USD a month. Granted, many Mexicans live on that. But could you—an American? Could you downscale to living on so little?

Four types who come to Mexico to teach English are:

1) Someone who wants a new adventure—something different.

2) Someone who wants to build a resume, no matter the salary.

3) Someone who wants to earn a little traveling money.

4) Someone who thinks they can earn a decent living. Groups 1 through 3 don't care what the dollar sign is in their salary. They have other sources of income like savings or parents who help support them while they are in Mexico. These are the most transient. Here today, promising their employers a year contract, and gone tomorrow. Some employers will not hire these "floaters." Schools would love to hire those with ties to the community but they are rare.

Group 4, people who think they can make a living, do not accept the reality that you can rarely make a living at teaching English in Mexico. They are like those who go to Hollywood with the delusion of becoming an actor, "Oh, it's a long shot, but maybe I can do it."

In an informal e-mail survey I took of Mexican schools that offer ESL classes, the overwhelming majority agreed that it is rare for anyone to make a living at teaching English in Mexico. One called it "an unrealistic expectation" to believe otherwise.

"...the pay is very low and it is difficult to imagine how one could live on it."

Another source told me that unless the teacher had signed a contract with a large established organization before departure to the country, it was unlikely that a good salary would be waiting for them. Countries like Japan or China offer a competitive salary with benefits.

Mexico does not.

Most of the available jobs are with small private schools that pay little.

Some told me that those who do not fulfill their teaching commitments no longer surprise them. They've grown accustomed to this unethical practice by North Americans.

Some have come to Mexico and made a living teaching ESL. But, that is all they can do—work until they drop. They usually have to sign on to teach with at least three schools to get enough hours to earn enough to pay for cost-of-living expenses. There is little time to anything else.

A life of luxury, excitement, and adventure? Hardly. But they keep coming, filled with the delusion that perhaps they can make it work.

Sad.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Article Tags: living [See Dictionary], schools [See Dictionary], teaching [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on December 09, 2006 at Isnare.com
 
Rate [Ratings: 5 / 5] [Votes: 1]

A Guanajuato, Mexico Vacation Still Makes Sense Even in Scary Economic Times
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Though the Worldwide Economic Crisis seems to have the world in a tizzy of worry and despair, Gringos are still coming to Mexico...

Sneaking an Early Peek at Our Lady of Guanajuato
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

From my vantage point I could see everything Sitting in a small sidewalk café with the very original name, El Café (The Café), I was working on my third cup of Nescafe while watching Mexicans walking by like someone was chasing them...

The Uninvited Church Parishioners in Guanajuato, Mexico
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Arriving at Guanajuato's Templo de la Compañía is always a strange experience It's a church connected to the former Jesuit seminary, which is now the University of Guanajuato...

Guanajuato, Mexico Tourist Season 2008
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

In the middle of the night when the bombing (Day of the Dead fireworks) began and I was startled awake by my three-foot, straight-up jump out of bed, I suddenly remembered I had forgotten to write my annual article about this year's Guanajuato Tourist Season...

When Gringos Attack
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

I thought I would write another article about a subject that's been near and dear to my heart since the wife and I moved to Central Mexico...

The First Step In Your Expatriation Adventure
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

The very first thing you should consider once you've made your mind up as to where you are going to live overseas might surprise you...

Guanajuato: Too Many False Expectations
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

A friend of mine told me about a conversation she had with a person she knows in one of the Mexican Prime Living Locations on the west coast of Mexico...

Learning Spanish: The Affective Factor
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

The chief problem for most Americans who want to learn Spanish but who don't succeed is the Affective Factor...

Living In Mexico: Fight Well, Love Better
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Though a conservative, I read liberal points of view I do so for two reasons...

Learning Spanish: Begin By Listening - Part 6
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Most folks, when they set out to study a new language, begin by enrolling in Spanish I at their local Junior College...

Living In Mexico: Where Did That Bus Driver Go?
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Gringolandians, those living in Gringo enclaves, live such isolated and bizarrely separate lives from the Mexicans in the same town that they have on more than one occasion called me an absolute liar for the things I've reported happening in the Mexican city where I live...

Mentor For Hire Services Eases Your Move To Mexico
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

Sometimes I marvel at how my wife and I arrived in Guanajuato, Mexico, with so little Spanish and with so few cultural skills...

Learning Spanish: Begin By Listening - Part 5
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

To maximize our brain's ability to store visual and auditory impressions in the target language, we must constantly, each day, create an atmosphere in which we are hearing and seeing the language we seek to acquire in an immersion situation...

How-To Conquer Central Mexico In Your Next Vacation
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

I've noticed lately the tourists that make their way to central Mexico (Guanajuato) tend to be either the loosey-goosey backpackers or the tourist elite who tend to have a lot of experience in coming to strange and new places...

Learning Spanish: Begin By Listening - Part 3
Submitted by: Douglas Bower

The way in which adult Africans, and I believe many of the adults I've met in the resort areas of Mexico, have developed a high degree of spoken fluency is the same way in which we learned our native tongue as children—Passive Listening...

Swine Flu and Flights to Mexico Advice
Submitted by: Adriana N

Due to the spread of Swine Flu / H1N1 across the globe, governments have stepped up and offered recommendations regarding travel to Mexico, as well as offering safety measures that travelers may want to implement before embarking on their trip...

Driving While Intoxicated
Submitted by: Brenda Williams

When I used to be a police officer, I used to dread working the night shifts because inevitably, I knew that I would arrest someone for an offense related to alcohol and drunk driving...

Exploring Barcelona
Submitted by: Beatriz Lopez

Barcelona is located on the Northeastern Spanish coastline, in a region of the country called Catalonia...

5 of the Best Family Days Out in Marbella
Submitted by: Rob Griggs

Marbella is one of the most popular places for a holiday in Spain, and thousands of people flock here every year to take advantage of the sun, sea and sand...

Surfing, Wineries and Working Holidays - Margaret River, Western Australia
Submitted by: Sandy F

Lush green trees, so dense amongst picturesque rolling hills, yet only minutes away from pristine beaches...

Date Beautiful People In Baltimore
Submitted by: Matt Fuller

The illustrious state of Maryland is home to 5,779,400 locals (as of 2009) It's capital city, Annapolis, is the busiest sailing address on the Eastern Seaboard...

A Honeymoon in Bermuda - Newly-weds Destinations
Submitted by: John Jamli

The newly weds can never be wrong by deciding on spending their honeymoon in Bermuda, an elegant and sophisticated island that is recognized globally for other commercial markets as well...

Highlighting Tips For Your Honeymoon
Submitted by: Max Hyndk

It would be a plus for would-be brides and grooms to perform all the wedding and honeymoon arrangements at once to avoid any hassling after the big day...

A Honeymoon in the Caribbean - Ideal For All
Submitted by: Steven Suejkd

There is absolutely no better place for a newly wedded couple to celebrate their beginnings together than where they could explore seven thousand islands if they can afford in the Caribbean...

Helpful Honeymoon Tips and Ideas to Practice
Submitted by: Jason Benjdi

Searching for valuable honeymoon tips and ideas is one of the best tasks that aspiring brides and grooms should do to celebrate their engagements and also because they wont be sorry when the time to depart alone and together to a destination of choice comes...

Britain’s Newest National Park
Submitted by: Amy Activ

So Britain has its newest (and ninth) national park Stretching from Beachy Head in Sussex to the very edge of the city of Winchester, the South Downs National Park contains some of the most beautiful countryside in Britain...

Insure Yourself Against the Airlines!
Submitted by: Patrick Chong

There are few people (apart from those who can afford to travel first class) who can claim to really enjoy the process of travelling by air...

Saving Money on Your UK Travel Insurance
Submitted by: Patrick Chong

While foreign travel may be all the rage, many people still choose to take the majority of their holidays in the UK, to cut costs or just for the convenience of holidaying locally...

Planning Your Son Bou Villa Holiday
Submitted by: Brenda Jaaback

Son Bou is renowned as one of the finest resorts in Menorca, with the stunning two and half mile beach the main attraction of the area...

The Colours of Son Bou Holidays
Submitted by: Brenda Jaaback

Son Bou is a picturesque resort located on the shore of the Mediterranean Sea, half way along the south coast of Menorca...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy