What the teacher learned

The exam results from my four classes are over.  I taught twelve hours a week and just finished the grades this week.   I try to stress that life is learning, and it is never over til it’s over.  We keep learning.  Movies were a big part of the language and culture lesins that I gave.  Famous expressions and movies showing different issues were discussed in the class.  We had four movies over the 18 weeks of classes.  These were: Moneyball, The Duchess, How to Train your Dragon, and Blues Brothers. The movies, ranked in popularty as follows:  How to Train your Dragon, The Duchess, Blues Brothers, and Moneyball.

I loved each of he the movies for different reasons and showed the students the issues behind the movies.  One of the big problems in an English Class with 18 to 20 year olds is that they haven’t had much life experience and they really don’t have much to talk about.  The movies allow us to raise issues of interest in solicit their opinions.

How to Train Your Dragon
This movie was about a weak boy who was the son of a strong village chief. He was nonconformist, teased, and his father was ashamed of him.  What a great theme.  How many sons have this problem, not measuring up to the community’s and father’s expectations?  Well the boy ended up a hero and won his father’s respect, only losing part off a leg in the process . . .

The Duchess
This was #2, but really might have been the favorite if it had been a cartoon like the dragon movie.  The 17 year old girl married a Duke, for money and power.  She hoped that he would love her, but no.  He only loved his dogs.  He talked tenderly to his dogs and treated his wife like property (like shit). The girls in the class hated him.  The “Duke” rhymed with “Duck” and half of the class referred to the Duke of Devonshire as “The Duck”.  I laughed so hard when they first mispronounced “Duke” that the classes called him “The Duck” from then on.  Well it was a true story, and the Duchess of Devonshire, Georgiana, was lovely and really quite wonderful. The movie was based on a true story. Georgiana was very politically active, unusual for the 1780’s in England and was really quite popular.  She couldn’t giver her husband a son for a long time and had an unhappy marriage. It was said in the movie that “The Duke was the only one in England that didn’t love Georgianna. It was a good movie to discuss the progress of women’s rights in the world.  Although we were talking about 17th century England, the same issues are valid around the world, today.

“The Blues Brothers” was a musical and was filled with slang, a lot of black slang.  Staring Dan Ackroyd and John Bleushi, this was a classic, with many car chases and funny situations.  It also made “bad boys” out to be like heroes, which as a following in the USA.  The boys that didn’t like English seemed to like this movie the best.

Finally, “Moneyball” was about baseball, and China knows nothing about baseball.  It taught about the great American passtime, but also it was a movie about business. Technology was changing baseball, a traditional  business, and people had to change to survive.  A good boss had to fire people who didn’t get along with the new system.  It was also about family, when Billy Bean gave up a big pay raise to stay near his daughter who lived with his exwife. I’m sure some people in class came from some broken homes and this movie taught a lot about the world, business, and what’s important in life.

Well it was a fun semester, and I”ve signed a new contract for another year here.  Hopefully, I”ll have the same students to followup next year teaching 19 to 21 year olds. So I think it is possible to teach English and “Life” at the same time.  It kinda makes the classes more relevant.

 

高考 “Gaokao” National University Entrance Examination

The National University Entrance Examination is in the books for another year.  I was watching “Crossover” on the English News (CCTV) Channel.  It seems that a boy left his test to help a girl that needed to go to a hospital.  He scored 290 on the exam and is precluded from going to a good university.  So the discussion is whether an exception should be made to allow a person of this integrity to go to a good university.

No.

The consensus is that it was not his responsibility to help this girl.  There were teachers  and parents, and a lot of other people that could have helped the girl.  He should have minded his own business and taken the test.  So it is clear that he won’t go to a top university, even though he may otherwise be qualified.  Nobody on the program suggested that he be allowed to take the test again.

China relies upon one test, on one day, to establish what quality of university a student can  attend.  That is a problem in China, and everybody knows it. There just isn’t an alternate solution on the horizon.

By the way, I actually enjoy watching the news over here, but my foreign friends are horrified at the lack of scandals. I find it somewhat refreshing.

Snowden

May 14 I posted a story about US the Justice Department getting records of journalists. That was before the whole Snowden affair.  Over here in China, many expats consider Snowden to be something of a hero.  I note that George Bush came to Obama’s defense by saying that he was responsible for the program, and that Snowden hurt the security of the US.  Bush wouldn’t label him a traitor though.

It is a hard subject for everybody.  Don’t we want young people to have ideals? When we tried the Nazis, they said that they were just following orders.  That wasn’t good enough to get them off the hook.  Your conscience is supposed to come into play somewhere along the line.  If Snowden believed that the US was breaking the law, what was he supposed to do? He was a subcontractor of a contractor. So perhaps the public doesn’t want to know the truth . . .

It is really hard to decide this one without knowing more, but it is a little troubling that the controversy is over Snowden, more than the charges he makes. It is clear that most Chinese are happy with him, but China didn’t want to help him.  China has too many relations with the US to risk that kind of a confrontation, that is what I am told.  Maybe there is a concern that young people in China might take Snowden to be a hero and emulate him over here.  Who knows what they were thinking.  Well maybe it is best to leave this one alone.

Let’s hope that this gets talked about within and between the countries.  Maybe we can avoid the kind of cyber-war that everybody is preparing for.

Classes are over

Another semester at the University is drawing to a close. I’m an English Teacher and   I’ve given the oral exams, along with a written test.  Student skill varies from high  enthusiasm to mild annoyance at being forced to come to the final exam.  Out of four classes I had several show up 25 minutes late for the exam, and four people showed up without pens. . .  Well, I guess that isn’t so bad out of a total of 140 students.

Soon it is off to the USA for a month in sunny Northern Michigan.  I’ve signed a new contract, so I will be teaching here in China for another year, God willing.

1984 is Here in China

I was watching Channel 141 of our Guizhou TV, and at a little before noon, the English language version of “1984” came on, complete with Chinese sub-captions. This is a movie made during the height of the cold war to justify the US hatred of communism. I watched the really terrifying movie starring Richard Burton and John Hurt about government mind control and the brainwashing that takes place when one party rules the country. It showed how the one party watches everybody and prosecutes people for thought crimes.  Well, go figure.  I can’t imagine such a propaganda film being shown in China, but it is. I just watched it.

It occurred to me that the two parties, Republican and Democratic,  have their own versions of mind control.  There is a war between the parties and all kinds of stories about the vile intent of the other. These stories are popular with party members. Both parties campaign against the politicians, who have the status of niggers prior to the civil war. I must say that politicians are not popular in China, but they are at least respected.

 

 

Always Present Danger

If you haven’t spent time in China, you don’t realize the simple things that trip you up every day.  Stairs are uneven, so when you think you are stepping up, you miss the step and trip. There are holes in the sidewalks and other obstacles.

This door has a 1.5 inch threshold.

In the older buildings, doorways often have a threshold that is an inch or two high to trip you.  After coming to China for 13 years, one would think that I would see these little stumbling blocks . . . NOT YESTERDAY.  Who would think in a new building . . .

More about the Detroit Recovery

I came to China from Michigan, where a circular and cumulative negative feedback loop has driven the Michigan economy down, with Michigan leading the nation. The reason I am optimistic about Michigan’s future is that the core institutions remain intact. Public, private, and philanthropic organizations have shown success in moving Michigan and Detroit in a positive direction.  The Flint/Detroit/Ann Arbor corridor remains one of the most highly industrialized areas of the world and Michigan universities remain some of the best in the world. The previously negative leverage seems to be gaining momentum in the opposite direction. The following opinion column has appeared in Michigan newspapers and online at bridge.com .

By the way, it’s a small world.  Last September Governor Snyder led a trade delegation of over 20 Michigan businesses to Guiyang and four other Chinese cities.

Philanthropic groups step up to lead Michigan’s urban revival

Phil’s Column— 23 April 2013

By Phil Power/Bridge Magazine

Phil Power is founder and chairman of the Center for Michigan.

Phil Power is founder and chairman of the Center for Michigan.

There’s no doubt that one of Michigan’s biggest stories this year is Gov. Rick Snyder’s decision to put Detroit under an emergency manager, and put attorney Keyvn Orr in that post.

But Detroit is far from the first or only city in the state to have an emergency manager. Though the original title was emergency financial manager, the moniker changed after new legislation took effect March 28. There are EMs in Flint and Benton Harbor.

Allen Park and Ecorse, two small downriver Detroit suburbs, are both being run by the same emergency manager, Joyce Parker.

There’s also been one for the past few years in Pontiac, who is preparing to turn the reins back over to an elected government.

Hamtramck and Highland Park also have had emergency managers, and Hamtramck may again.

Gov. Rick Snyder

Gov. Rick Snyder

Some have been troubled by the fact that while EMs now run cities with less than 10 percent of Michigan’s population, they include almost half the state’s African-American residents.

Undoubtedly, the appointment of emergency managers to take hold of the financial reins of cities in desperate financial trouble marks a dispiriting omen for proud towns around our state. They’ve triggered passionate criticism on the grounds that they dismantle locally elected democratic institutions.

But they’ve also been met with reluctant acceptance by those who realize that there’s simply no other way to cure cities where the Great Recession, incompetence, corruption, denial and half measures almost have destroyed the fabric of urban life.

Crisis brings new resources to the fore

There is, however, an important back story behind our concern for distressed Michigan cities. Perhaps it’s best told by Rip Rapson, president of the Kresge Foundation, which has invested almost $500 million in the Detroit tri-county region over the past 20 years:

Rip Rapson

Rip Rapson

“The emergency financial manager’s appointment is a single component in a larger suite of activities through which the city is accelerating its transformation. The manager’s efforts will stand alongside a robust and multifaceted machinery of investment and engagement that is expanding opportunities and supporting the continued emergence of a vibrant and essential Detroit unimaginable to some outside observers.”

Rapson cites significant progress in Detroit: A downtown renaissance, with young, educated professionals moving in, triggering an explosion of entrepreneurship and in the arts. A coming breakthrough in public transit, with light rail possible along Woodward Avenue. A more certain, healthy area-wide Regional Transit Authority fast bus system. And some of the most forward-thinking urban planning to be seen in America in decades.

The heavy involvement of Kresge, along with other Detroit-area groups such as the McGregor Fund, the Hudson-Webber Foundation, the Skillman Foundation and the New Economy Initiative, marks the entry in a serious way of the philanthropic community into the future of Michigan’s largest and most-challenged city. The business community and private citizens are stepping up, too, buying police cars and raising capital for the light rail line.

Richard Florida, the guy who brought the “creative class” to our attention, offered an interesting take on all this in The Financial Times: “The nascent turnaround (in Detroit) is driven by a coalition of profit-led entrepreneurs, philanthropic foundations and grassroots groups unhindered by city government. They offer a distinctive model of revival from which cities in the U.S. and beyond can learn.”

The story is much the same in Flint, where the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation has been the primary mover behind the city’s battle for survival. For example, the Genesee Regional Chamber of Commerce’s Area Focus Fund has received more than $22 million in Mott grants to boost the area’s economic profile.

Notice what’s really going on behind the curtain: Civic activities and programs, once entirely run by politician-led city governments, have, over the past decade, gradually been turned over to the philanthropic community and, to a lesser extent, the private sector.

The reasons for this are many. More and more urban areas are, to put it simply, too broke to do much, let alone think ahead. Some cities have allowed a political culture of corruption – “pay to play” – to take over, while others have tolerated inefficiency and incompetence.

There is a feeling that while emergency managers arrive partly as a punishment and politicians are necessarily self-serving,  philanthropic institutions have the freedom and ability to work for the long-term general good.

Given today’s environment of gloom and doom, somebody has had to step forward. That’s what the nonprofit sector, philanthropic foundations and the private sector have done. They’re not trying to replace duly elected city governance; they are trying to provide bridging assets designed to support pieces of progress.

They have the luxury not available to elected politicians to take the long-run view and make investments that cannot show results in less than a decade — and shouldn’t be expected to.

Michigan’s future depends to a very large degree in our ability to provide the tools urban areas need to grow and prosper. The great fortunes made in Michigan in years past — Kellogg, Kresge, Dow, Ford — have funded today’s great foundations. That they are stepping forward is reason for hope … and for congratulations.

Editor’s note: Former newspaper publisher and University of Michigan Regent Phil Power is a longtime observer of Michigan politics and economics. He is also the founder and chairman of the Center for Michigan, a nonprofit, bipartisan centrist think–and–do tank, designed to cure Michigan’s dysfunctional political culture; the Center also publishes Bridge Magazine. The opinions expressed here are Power’s own and do not represent the official views of the Center. He welcomes your comments via email.

Chinese Investors in Detroit

Chinese investors are fascinated by the property values in the City of Detroit. China is in love with the auto and Detroit is still known as the auto capital of the world. Further, property values have skyrocketed in China and the low cost homes of Detroit have caught the Chinese attention.

Fun on the Bus with Chris

Software Executive Chris Persson and I rode the bus to Huaxi yesterday for pizza at Brother John’s Restaurant, one of the best Pizza’s in China.  It was a lot of fun with all the other people.  It took almost an hour and two bus connections.  Altogether, it cost us both about 4.5 rmb (about 75 cents)  to get there. We came back in a taxi, at a cost 48 rmb (about $7.00)

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( The taxi was faster, but the bus was more fun. Chris contributes to this blog and is teaching me how to use WordPress.)