"I nominate Wall Street Institute in Buenos Aires, Argentina (there are about 30 centers, and I've worked at 3). It's commonplace here to disrespect teachers, apparently, and pay them pitifully, and lie to the customers to get them to sign up, ...
- You will get 13 pesos/hour (U$D 4), and way fewer hours than you were promised when you began, meaning that you will only be earning, approximately, a measly 1000 pesos/month (U$D 300). My rent is 900 pesos, so you can imagine what a fantastic wage WSI was gracing me with.
- The ultra-neurotic manager rudely criticizes teachers about their hair and attire.
- The director doesn't even speak English, never says hello and is never friendly.
- The turnover rate is staggering. I wonder why!
- The teachers are grossly over-qualified and exploited. Most don't know better until after they get screwed over, at least a month into it.
- The WSI materials are full of spelling mistakes and wrong answers in the keys!
- Students complain about getting cheated by the salespeople, getting things promised that turned out to be lies and they can't get their money back.
- If a class gets cancelled more than hour or so before it's scheduled, you don't get paid for it unless you do "busy work", and if there's nothing to do ...
- They don't respect teachers' time. If the last class is cancelled or the student doesn't show up, you do not get paid for it, no matter what. Why? Because you were going to leave anyway ...
It is ridiculously inadequate and and a blow to your dignity to work there."
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Inspector McHammered of the Lard in Pamplona, Spain
1 comment:
Heya, I have a phone interview with WSI Buenos Aires tomorrow. Are there are any specific questions I should ask them? I'm just looking for a good program in Buenos Aires, preferably before I move there. Any advice? (or should I just look at better paying programs in Japan/Taiwan)
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