Proulex - 44100 Guadalajara

4.1/5 based on 8 reviews

PROULEX Centro de Idiomas · INGLÉS · FRANCÉS · ALEMÁN · CHINO MANDARÍN · COMPUTER GRAPHICS · - Proulex.com

Centro de Idiomas

PROULEX Centro de Idiomas · INGLÉS · FRANCÉS · ALEMÁN · CHINO MANDARÍN · COMPUTER GRAPHICS · - Proulex.com

Sistema Corporativo Proulex Comlex

Es una empresa de la Universidad de Guadalajara que provee y comercializa desde 1987 cursos de inglés, francés, alemán, chino mandarín y computación.

Contact Proulex

Address :

CUCSH, C. Guanajuato 1049, La Normal, 44100 Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico

Phone : 📞 +899
Website : http://www.proulex.com/
Categories :
City : Jal.

CUCSH, C. Guanajuato 1049, La Normal, 44100 Guadalajara, Jal., Mexico
M
Moises Garnica on Google

malisimo
lousy
A
Ancestros México on Google

El mejor lugar para aprender Inglés
The best place to learn English
D
Doriand J Lpz on Google

Buen lugar para estudiar lenguas ??
Good place to study languages ​​??
m
marcos enriquez on Google

Excelente escuela para el idioma inglés
Excellent school for the English language
a
alejandro temilotzin marquez weeks on Google

Los maestros son personas muy bien preparadas
The teachers are very well prepared people
G
Gestión Salud on Google

Los maestros son estandar, los administrativos son despotas y prepotentes apesar que estas pagando mucho dinero. Los mesabancos estan rotos o en muy malas condiciones. Los salones huelen mal, pero tiene aire acondicionado.
Teachers are standard, administrators are despotic and arrogant even though you are paying a lot of money. The tables are broken or in very bad condition. The rooms smell bad, but it has air conditioning.
A
Android Guadalajara on Google

Un lugar para estudiar completamente disfrutando de sus áreas verdes e instalaciones con diferentes módulos de edificios
A place to study fully enjoying its green areas and facilities with different building modules
A
Alexander Spring on Google

DO NOT TRUST THESE PEOPLE AS EMPLOYERS! I applied to work for the Proulex last year when I saw the ad attached — what sounded like a great job: Free housing, Free flights home, Transport, 200 pesos per hour to work at a prestigious university. I was told by the recruitment agent that I had to move to Guadalajara first, and so, I arranged this with my partner. When we arrived six months later, I was told the working conditions in fact would not include ANY of the above. So, no house. No flights. No transport. And the salary? They would be paying as little as 50 pesos per hour for some classes. Bear in mind that an hour of class also involves around an hour of prep, corrections, and evaluation, and you’re looking at 25 pesos per hour. That’s six times less than my wages at my former job at a tiny, unprestigious public university in Oaxaca. With little choice, as my partner had already started a new job here and we had now rented an apartment for the year, I waited for the beginning of term. A couple of times a week, I would call to check how things were with my work visa and would always be told things were coming along nicely. The week before term starts and I still haven’t received a single piece of paperwork from them. They admit on the phone that in fact they never began the work visa process and the academic manager forgot to send me the paperwork for the job, and it now may be too late… but they’ll let me know. Well, they didn’t let me know. When I went to Adrian (the Academic Officer)’s office, I was told to wait for him, then after twenty minutes told that he must have left via a back exit — like some comic book villain! Art (Head of Teacher Training) is equally untrustworthy, as well as having a particularly unpleasant and unprofessional manner towards colleagues, students and interviewees. His arrogance, as I’ve learnt from others, is the stuff of legend. There seem to be some friendly and well-intentioned staff here, but there is clearly something structurally wrong here. I find it deeply sad that the University of Guadalajara has privatised its language department, only to pay them to come in and provide tuition in the university itself. It has clearly created a loophole for exploitation of skilled teachers — nowhere else in the UdG would anyone be expected to teach forty class-hours a week. It is clear that a lot of money is being made through the Proulex (Adrian and Art are proud that it’s one of the UdG’s most profitable businesses), but little of that money filters down to the teachers. I find it difficult to imagine any decent English teacher wanting to work for their university program. There seems to be a total lack of competence on the part of senior members of staff and an impressive degree of arrogance. I guess this is just what happens when you hand over public education to people whose sole goal is to make a ton of money.

Write some of your reviews for the company Proulex

Your reviews will be very helpful to other customers in finding and evaluating information

Rating *
Your review *

(Minimum 30 characters)

Your name *