This book explores the emerging and under-researched phenomenon of
internationalised schooling in China. It focuses on a group of
"accidental" teachers who fell into teaching through happenstance or
necessity, a group of teachers increasingly seeking refuge in Chinese
Internationalised Schools. Chinese Internationalised Schools cater to an
affluent middle class in China, offering some form of international
curriculum which is taught by host country Chinese nationals and
expatriate teachers. Chapters focus on three dimensions of teachers'
lived experiences of working in these schools: the intercultural, which
explores teachers' negotiations of intercultural teacher identities; the
precarious, which highlights the struggles they might face at work; and
the resilient, which illustrates how teachers survive--and even
thrive--in the position. The author identifies a complex interplay
between surviving and thriving, giving rise to the concept of
"sur-thrival."