Question 1:<\/strong> What are the standards for selecting teachers on italki? I`ve viewed some popular teachers on italki whose education and work experience don\u2019t match with the language they are teaching. However these teachers are tagged as professional teachers. How do you make sure these are qualified teachers?<\/p>\nKevin:<\/span><\/strong> We have two types of teachers – Professional Teachers and Community Tutors. Professional Teachers are exactly that, people who teach as a job, have an educational background as a teacher, or have an education certificate (CELTA, etc.). Community Tutors are just native or near-native speakers that can be helpful as a speaking partner or for general homework help. For example, I am not a teacher and don’t have a teaching background, but I could definitely help someone with their homework or to have a conversation. We screen people when they apply to be teachers on italki. They upload documents to us which our teacher service team checks. Some teachers are English teachers for their home countries (example, a teacher with Russian nationality, who teaches English to Russians in Russia). This person is not a native English speaker, but has a background in teaching, and is specialized for teaching English to Russians. In general we leave it to students to pick a teacher that is right for them. Rather than set one standard, we allow people to choose the teacher that fits their needs. Some people don’t think you can learn English from a Filipino teacher, but it might be right for someone else.<\/p>\nQuestion 2:<\/strong>Will italki train their own teachers? And do you have some highly recommended teachers? If yes, what is the criterion?<\/p>\nKevin:<\/span><\/strong> italki does not plan to train its own teachers. In general, we don’t have a system for “highly recommended” teachers. Some teachers have long and positive teaching records, and they tend to be more expensive than teachers that are relatively new to the system. Some students care a lot about teacher experience, while some students are more price sensitive. New teachers also generally have more time to help their students. Students can make their own choices about which teacher is right for them.<\/p>\nQuestion 3:<\/strong>There are lots of languages on italki. How does Mandarin Chinese fare compared to other languages? Could you please tell us your views on the Chinese teaching market?<\/p>\nKevin:<\/span><\/strong> On italki, Mandarin Chinese is growing in popularity, but it is still a relatively small proportion of the lessons on the website. It’s a little more popular than Japanese, and less popular than Spanish. In general, we’re very positive on the market for online language learning. Chinese lessons from italki teachers are very reasonably priced compared to the local prices in developed countries. We think the Chinese teaching market should also have lots of exciting growth in the near term and long term. China is increasingly important in global business and trade, and we expect the interest in Chinese to continue to grow.<\/p>\nQuestion 4:<\/strong> How many Chinese teachers and learners are currently active on Italki? Can you describe their activity levels?<\/p>\nKevin:<\/span><\/strong> We can’t say the exact figures, but there are hundreds of thousands of Chinese users, and hundreds of Chinese teachers. Our community is very broad, and there are people from everywhere in the world. We’ve found that the community is a little harder on Chinese users. Despite the growing interest in Chinese, the ratio of people who are interested in learning Chinese relative to people interested in learning English is very unbalanced.<\/p>\nQuestion 5:<\/strong> Is Skype the main teaching tool? How to measure the teaching quality? If there are disputes between teachers and students, how to monitor and solve?<\/p>\nKevin:<\/span><\/strong> Skype is the main communication tool. We’ve found that Skype offers the best sound and video quality globally, and at the right price! It’s already a widely known, accepted and used tool. We could build our own, but it would be hard to get to that level of quality and global coverage. After we do the screening, teaching quality is largely handled by feedback from the students. Students can leave honest feedback for teachers and a rating on their lessons. If there is a serious problem, the student or teacher can write to italki customer service to personally handle the problem. Since both sides care about their personal reputation, we’ve found that resolving disputes is generally not difficult.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n
Ok, don’t forget to get the 10USD of \u00a0italki promotion code<\/a> here.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"There are many websites that help students to connect with language teachers but italki is a learning platform with a difference. So what makes it so popular, and what are its limitations?\u00a0Today we will have a review of italki and to see how to learn language there. Italki Is \u201cAll In One\u201d! Plenty of pro\u2019s:…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":4205,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[93,6,88,90,5],"post_series":[],"class_list":["post-2093","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-learn-mandarin-online","tag-how-to-use","tag-interview","tag-online","tag-recommended-resources","tag-reviews","entry","has-media"],"yoast_head":"\n
Italki Review: Why Italki Is a Website with a Difference ($10 Credits Free)<\/title>\n
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