Partner Article
Haida HR tops the list of job agencies for feeding China with skilled foreign educators
You might have heard of Haida HR from a friend. This Chinese human resource recruitment agency is rather different from the employment agency rabble. It gives sinophile educators an easy opportunity to work and live in China. All one has to do is make an account on the **Haida HR **website and apply as a foreign teacher to the open positions displayed on the website. The recruiters set up an interview, based on your application, followed by a few verifications.
Paperwork is a major deterrent to the ambitions of skilled professionals to work abroad. **Haida HR helps overcome that difficulty by managing the unnecessary red tape. This includes visa applications, insurance, residential permits, and various over-the-head formalities. After the due processes are complete, Haida HR will assign you to the educational institute that has raised a request for a professional with your talents.
Training is an essential part of your life in China. Haida HR needs foreign English teachers the most. It provides free TEFL training to those interested in the Chinese life but are relatively weak in English. **Seminars and one-to-one sessions help the foreign teachers understand the Chinese education system. The foreign teachers are given reviews on a monthly, sometimes weekly basis.
A day well spent at work deserves spoils. Haida HR will help you integrate socially by organizing trips and introducing you to potential beer-totting friends who will accompany you to the local bar. It’s a close-knit community that looks after each other. You’ll be surprised how Haida HR finds you an accommodation, much like a friend would do.
Experience speaks volumes. You can hear interesting testimonials from skirmishers who have figured out the Chinese way of life. One testimonial explains that China isn’t a bad place, but you need moral strength to live there. True, a country with over 370,000 words made from 23,000 characters isn’t an easy place to live, but being a sinophile made it easy and exciting, didn’t it?
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by sofia .
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