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Posts: 2

Minor Official

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Q: What has happened to online ESL companies?

There were many companies overcharging Chinese parents for ESL lessons their children received. Have these companies been able to refund monies owed to parents? 

I see some recruiters looking for native English speakers on this forum. How can this be legal given the mandate? This is directed towards all Chinese cities that utilized online ESL tutoring.

2 years 26 weeks ago in  Business & Jobs - Beijing

 
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Posts: 3921

Emperor

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this is a question directed to the companies themselves i think.
you are unlikely to get the answer you are looking for.

"overcharging"? 
normal greed in China

from a job-seekers perspective, just steer clear of them.
indecision
 

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2 years 26 weeks ago
 
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A: Nobody can tell you that! You could look at no-response-time in t
A:Nobody can tell you that! You could look at no-response-time in two ways: 1. 'Nobody is interested in your CV and hiring you ...'; or 2. 'Never, ever stop sending your CV to the daily posted job openings and simply disregard no-replies thingy!' It's wrong, to expect replies from the Chinese advertisers of a new job openings, 'cause Chinese don't behave same as western recruiters by replying: "Thank you for your job application. Unfortunately, you weren't selected at this time. We'll keep your CV on record and if new opportunity arises..." or something in those lines. So, the only remaining choice is no. 2. Looking for the new (non-native E.T.) position in my time in China was like a daily part-time job.  Good luck! -- icnif77