Threats Don’t Work
I was a summer teacher at one of those Korean SAT prep schools that hired U.S College students for a summer, and then promptly worked them to death (although, I will admit the pay was pretty good). We taught 8.30 am thru 5.30 pm with an hour’s lunch but had homework to grade every evening, prep work, etc. Well, they were mainly focused on teaching English, but I was a math and physics major, so they had me teaching SAT math and college prep physics. No problem.
Then they decided since I studied physics, I should also teach their chemistry class. I tried to tell them I didn’t know much about chemistry, but they insisted. So I worked my a** off, refreshing myself on all of the stuff before I taught it, while still teaching another Math and Physics class.
One day in the middle of this I got legitimately sick. I called in the night before, per the rules, and told them I couldn’t come in. I took one day off, sleeping in my apartment, and then dragged myself in the next day. When I show up, they pull me aside and say “So how do you plan on making up the time for the classes you’ve missed?” “Excuse me?” “Well, we didn’t have anyone to teach your classes, so all the kids are behind now. You have to make up the time. We figured you could just extend your morning class an hour for the first week (aka- teach over lunch) and your afternoon class could then start an hour early for the next week.” “Why didn’t you have a sub teach my class?” Then they screwed up, they said “We don’t have a sub.”
“Well then, no, I’m not going to skip my lunch because of your guy’s poor planning.”
“We’ll fire you, and then you won’t get your plane ticket reimbursed” they replied.
“Go ahead. First, I followed the rules and gave you notice I was going to be out. Second, you just told me you don’t have a sub for my classes. That means if I leave, you’re going to lose all of those students that I’m teaching. That will cost you a lot more than the planet ticket will cost me.”