'Devils' or 'superstars'? Making English language teachers in China
'Devils' or 'superstars'? Making English language teachers in China
This chapter focuses on the experiences of young Westerners who travel to China to teach English, often as a first job. In recent years, demand for native-speaking English language teachers (ELTs) has boomed across China, moving beyond the established urban areas into more remote cities and even towns and rural villages. The seemingly unstoppable demand has not only led to an increase in opportunities for trained language teachers, however, but has also led to a buoyant underground market for young, white, native English speakers to obtain work quickly and easily, whether or not they are appropriately qualified. However, very little is known about what it may mean to work ‘below the radar’ in China, disenfranchised from official visa recognition and employed by rural or lower-tier city schools with little training provision or support and perhaps being ‘the only foreigner in the village’. I draw on new qualitative research conducted with a sample of largely unqualified ELTs of various nationalities teaching across China, in both rural and urban locations, to demonstrate that the contradictory discursive context about foreigners in China demands careful negotiation on the part of the new migrants to fashion an identity which both meets the cultural expectations of students and maintains a personal sense of self. In the process, teachers are implicated in new contextual understandings of the meanings of race, nationality, and gender which necessitate decisions to be made about identities, performances, and social relations.
China, Immigration
147-172
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1
2019
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1
Leonard, Pauline
(2019)
'Devils' or 'superstars'? Making English language teachers in China.
In,
Lehmann, Angela and Leonard, Pauline
(eds.)
Destination China: Immigration to China in the Post-Reform Era.
New York.
Palgrave Macmillan, .
(doi:10.1057/978-1-137-54433-9_7).
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Book Section
Abstract
This chapter focuses on the experiences of young Westerners who travel to China to teach English, often as a first job. In recent years, demand for native-speaking English language teachers (ELTs) has boomed across China, moving beyond the established urban areas into more remote cities and even towns and rural villages. The seemingly unstoppable demand has not only led to an increase in opportunities for trained language teachers, however, but has also led to a buoyant underground market for young, white, native English speakers to obtain work quickly and easily, whether or not they are appropriately qualified. However, very little is known about what it may mean to work ‘below the radar’ in China, disenfranchised from official visa recognition and employed by rural or lower-tier city schools with little training provision or support and perhaps being ‘the only foreigner in the village’. I draw on new qualitative research conducted with a sample of largely unqualified ELTs of various nationalities teaching across China, in both rural and urban locations, to demonstrate that the contradictory discursive context about foreigners in China demands careful negotiation on the part of the new migrants to fashion an identity which both meets the cultural expectations of students and maintains a personal sense of self. In the process, teachers are implicated in new contextual understandings of the meanings of race, nationality, and gender which necessitate decisions to be made about identities, performances, and social relations.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 June 2018
Published date: 2019
Additional Information:
Pauline Leonard is Professor of Sociology in the School of Social Sciences, University of Southampton, United Kingdom. She has published extensively on privileged migration, including Expatriate Identities in Postcolonial Organizations: Working Whiteness (2010) and Migration, Space and Transnational Identities: The British in South Africa
Keywords:
China, Immigration
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 420335
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/420335
PURE UUID: f34eb742-11f0-4890-9afa-064ca82f9f36
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Date deposited: 04 May 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:48
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Contributors
Editor:
Angela Lehmann
Editor:
Pauline Leonard
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