Angry Expat: Auxiliares de Conversación

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Teach English in Spain

Ok, I hardly ever write angry posts. Because let’s be honest, who wants to read an angry blog? Nobody. I always try to focus on the positive in my writing, the good experiences, lo bueno as we say in Spain. I may throw in some disgruntled statements here and there topped with a boatload of sarcasm, but I always try to revert back to the positive in the end. I always try to be a positive person. However, this is an angry post. No two ways about it. I am pissed, no wait, livid. That’s right, LIVID: ALL-CAPS AND MULTIPLE EXCLAMATION POINTS!!! (If you want a typical happy Liz travel post, stop reading now and scroll down farther. You’ve been warned.)

As most of you already know, I teach English in Spain on a grant from the Spanish Ministry of Education called Auxiliares de Conversación or English Language and Culture Assistants. I wrote this long blog post last March with my thoughts on the program. So much has changed since then, and now I am going to tell you what I really think. I would say about 95% of people who do this program do it because they want to live in Spain. Not because they want to be teachers, not because they want teaching experience, not to help little children learn about English language and culture. Sure, that may be part of it, but I bet you the main reason is because they want to live in Spain, and it’s one of the only ways to live legally in Spain as an American. And you know what? The Spanish government takes FULL advantage of that.

Our contract says that we are to work 12 hours a week and be paid 700 euros a month as a stipend from October 1 to May 31. Really awesome, right? The program also tells us that we should come with about $1000 saved up to live off of for the first month until we get paid at the end of the first month, around November 1. However, it is almost Christmas and many of the auxilaires around Spain have still not been paid, that’s right, 3 months late. The program has been around for years, and yet, this issue comes up every year. Not with every region, but for many. Last year in Andalucía, my school just paid me every month and then kept the checks when they finally arrived from the government, but after all the budget cuts going on, few schools are willing to do this. After so many years, how can the Ministry of Education still be so disorganized?

Thousands of foreigners come every year with this scholarship to teach English in Spain, it is not a small group of people who is affected. And thousands more apply and don’t even get a spot. This program has become extremely popular, especially in the States as an ideal post-college pre-real world second study-abroad opportunity. The Ministry of Education knows this and knows how much we want to be here, and I think they take advantage of that by making us put up with a lot of bureaucratic bull****, knowing that we can’t and won’t do anything about. Not getting paid for 3 months? It’s not like we’ll stop working and go home. We can’t even afford a flight since we’ve used all our savings to live off of. Want to complain to someone about it? The majority of government don’t answer their phones or emails. Ever.

Besides, the people who run this program in Madrid and in the various Autonomous Communities around Spain are champions at not taking the blame for anything. If you can miraculously get a hold of someone to talk to about this program, they most likely cannot resolve your issues or even put you in contact with someone else who could. Nor will they fight for you. They just say, yeah we understand, it sucks. Sorry. Bye. I wish I was kidding! I have had this conversation with various government workers over the years, and it always ends the same. Oh no, it’s not our fault, it’s so-and-so’s fault but it will be fixed soon. When? Not sure. Soon. Don’t worry. If I had a euro for every time I had this conversation with a government employee I would be rich; I would certainly get more money from the government that way than from my actual work contract.

So what triggered this angry blog post? About this time every month I call up the Ministry of Education coordinator in La Rioja to ask when will I be paid for this month’s work. And yes, you got it, today was that happy day. Can we just start with the fact that I have to call them in the first place? That should give you some idea of what this program is like. 3 months later I still haven’t been officially paid yet, along with hundreds of other Americans in Spain. Luckily, one of my schools has been lending me the money, but I found out today that that’s going to stop for December. When will I get paid for December was my next question. Especially since the schools go on holiday from the 23 to January 9th. No matter how many ways I asked this question, the only answer I got was that they don’t know but hopefully soon, it’s out of their hands, it’s not their problem, ect. Word for word they said it was not their responsibility to make sure we get paid. Finally when I asked to speak to the director, he came on and said there was nothing more he could say and hung up on me. Yeah, he flat out hung up.

Again, it would be one thing if this was the first time this has happened, but this is the 3rd month in a row. I am also very angry at the way the Ministry of Education workers have been treating us. Every time I get off the phone with them or leave a meeting, somehow I feel like this is all my fault for not being OK with not getting paid. I mean, I am pretty sure I have the right to be paid for the work I do or at least know WHEN I’ll be paid, and I certainly don’t respect being spoken to in such a rude manner and being hung up on just for trying to figure out when I will be paid. I only have my rent to pay, along with bills, all my living expenses, student loans, ect. Not to mention they are violating our visa contracts by not paying us monthly. So for now, I have absolutely no idea when I will be paid, and according to my boss and my boss’s boss, it is not their responsibility or their problem, rather, it’s mine.

If this were my only issue with the program, things might be different, but it’s not. After the huge nightmare I went through last year renewing my residency papers to problems with my school to problems with the heath insurance, I am sick of it. I know many people don’t have the problems I am going through, but I also know many people are going through much worse than me, as in not being paid and not being able to borrow the money either and not even be able to talk to someone about it. The Ministry of Education has put us in the most uncomfortable, uncompromising and downright horrible situation: really what are we supposed to do? What options do we have? Go home? Complain some more to people who don’t care and won’t do anything about it? We have no options, no choice but to put up with this bureaucratic mess! And what makes this situation so effed up and horrible is that the government KNOWS this and uses it to their advantage. It’s times like this when living in Spain feels like living in a 3rd world country. At the end of the day, we shouldn’t have to be going through any of this. We keep up our end of the bargain and do our job, why can’t they?

So dear all future auxiliars, what sacrifices are you willing to make to live in Spain? How much are you willing to put up with? If you are already an auxiliar, have you gone through anything like this? What are your thoughts?


Teach English in Spain

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76 Comments on “Angry Expat: Auxiliares de Conversación

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  1. Gareth, blaming Liz for not receiving a timely paycheck is not only unhelpful and unkind, but absurd. I find your second “point” to be the most offensive…to accuse Liz and the other assistants of being undeserving of pay for somehow “taking advantage of the system” is out of line. Whether or not you think using untrained native speakers to assist in classrooms is a valid use of Spanish money has absolutely no bearing on this conversation. I happen to disagree with you, and think that it is pretty great deal for both Spanish schools and for the assistants, but this is irrelevant. The fact of the matter is, the program exists and contracts were signed. The discussion at hand is about how unfortunate it is that despite signing a legal contract, the Spanish government has not upheld its end, and furthermore has been uncooperative and unhelpful as the assistants try to sort out this mess.

    I’m sending good vibes/karma to Liz and all the other assistants who have yet to be paid what they are owed! No good vibes for Gareth, however.

  2. I did the program last year and it wasn’t quite this bad. I’m in the same situation as you all but I’m pretty sure it just comes down to us being at the bottom of the list of people they have to pay and they don’t even know where to get the money to pay us at this point… problem is they can’t just tell us to go home because hell would break lose in the U.S.A about this and something as small as this could really destory the countries image. Everyone is going through a rough time… try to borrow money from a friend and hang tight…we will eventually get the money and when we do it will be oh so sweet!

  3. Honestly, I think it would be very unwise to just believe the idea that we should have patience because Spanish people believe they are sure that they will pay everyone in our program soon. I understand that the last thing this country has to worry about is its foreign workers, but WHY HAVE THEY CONTINUED TO OPEN THIS PROGRAM YEAR AFTER YEAR??? I don´t understand. It´s ridiculous to me because I feel they keep the application open each year in order to ¨stay on the safe side.¨ I think the best thing we can do is to make sure this program is NOT being advertised in such a positive light anymore. Yes, being in Spain has been a wonderful experience, but unfortunately, I have also been left with many negative experiences that I know will continue to bother me when I return back home. If I were a person who is continuously not receiving payments, I would give up the school auxiliar program until payment is actually received. There are plenty of independent English academies that will be more than happy to hire a native speaker, as well as more than enough Spaniards who would be willing to pay more for private classes. Since I have been through a similar experience, I can say that without a doubt that I am better off when I work private classes and at private institutes than at my public school.

  4. hola ,me llamo Pere y leyendo vuestros blogs me sabe mal esta situacion tan desagradable acentuada en este caso por vivir en un país extranjero.Las cosas aquí en España van mal por la crisi ,últimamente pasan cosas que antes no pasaban ,sin ir mas lejos la semana pasada la oficina de desempleo estaba saturada de gente porque aún no habían cobrado el paro el dia estipulado, algo impensable hace poco.Sólo deciros ánimo y paciencia porque estoy seguro que cobrareis pronto

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