I had a chance to play Santa at a couple friends’ schoolsThis is Christine. She wanted a laptop, so I let her sit on my lap.
Here’s a few more pictures which are representative of venue.
My friend’s son wants to go to the USA and wants to learn English. He is teaching me some Chinese and I am teaching him some English. He doesn’t like math, but is pretty good at English. I told him that he needs to learn math, not just English. In the USA, there are a lot of people who know how to speak English. He needs to know more than just that. He needs math.
So here is the problem I gave him . . .
If you stand on the sideline of a soccer field what is the spot on that line that gives you the widest net to shoot at? You can test some sample values using sines and cosines to estimate that spot, but there is only one spot on that sideline that is the best. If you learn enough calculus to solve this problem, you will be strong. If you can’t do it, you will be weak.
Recent publications in China, as reported by BBC Monitoring suggests IELTS and TOEFL are becoming relatively more important:
6 November 2014, BBC [http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-29929122]
And finally, some papers are discussing the “credibility” of China’s national English test after top universities in Hong Kong recently refused to recognise the system.
According to the Southern Metropolis Daily and the Beijing News, University of Hong Kong and Chinese University of Hong Kong have announced that they will not accept the scores of the mainland’s College English Test (CET) for admissions.
Instead, they have asked applicants to submit scores of the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) and the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL).
Reflecting on the decision, an article in the Henan Business Dailycriticises the mainland English language education for its emphasis on memorising grammar rules and vocabulary, but not on practicality.
“Some students have obtained high marks in the test, but they are not able to communicate fluently and are ‘deaf’ (when it comes to listening skills)…,” it says.
BBC Monitoring reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. For more reports from BBC Monitoring,click here. You can follow BBC Monitoring on Twitter and Facebook.
Dorothy & Frank Kehl – A Life Connecting China,
Aug 2014 interview on Blue Ocean Network (BON), Beijing.
Topics: Volunteers from Hong Kong, the United States and Canada helping rural Chinese English teachers. Also, US-China relations since the 1970s.
Dorothy Kehl is an ESL teacher who retired from Brooklyn College. Frank Kehl is an anthropologist who retired from Baruch College, CUNY. Both have been active in promoting US-China educational exchanges, in recent years in summer educational programs in Guizhou, Shanxi and elsewhere.
Interview uploaded at: http://www.bon.tv/shows/level/2014-8-9/1407642956322.shtml
Frank Kehl can be contacted at: <fkehl@us-cx.com>; Dorothy Kehl at: <dorothykehl@hotmail.com>;
‘Happy’ in Guiyang 贵阳 -Hualin 贵阳华麟中学 Summer camp at Meijia 贵阳美加国际学校 Guiyang American-Canadian International School
“Happy” in Guiyang uploaded at “http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNzU2NjI1ODAw.html”
“Happy” is a 2013 song by American singer and producer Pharrell Williams from Despicable Me 2 . The original video spawned many cover videos on YouTube in which people from different cities throughout the world dance to the song. Those videos are usually called “Pharrell Williams – Happy – We Are from [name of the city]”. As of May 2014, more than 1,500 videos had been created. From Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happy_(Pharrell_Williams_song)
for versions of this song uploaded on Chinese website Youku see: http://www.soku.com/search_video/q_Happy%20pharrell
Other “Happy” videos in China:
Beijing –http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjk5NjIwOTU2.html , http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjc5MTQ1ODky.html ,
Shanghai –http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjc5MTEzMjA0.html
Nanjing – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNzEwNzU3NDMy.html
Guangzhou (Jinan Univ.) – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNzMwMTE4MDU2.html , (Zhongshan Univ.) http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjkzMDk0NjI4.html
Changsha – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNzI3MzA0OTMy.html
Wuxi – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNzQ5NDYzNDU2.html
Macao – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjg4MzI3NzI0.html
Hong Kong – http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XNjg3NjkxMzUy.html
Gao Kao – The Black June 7 & 8
I have been living here in Guiyang, China for nearly 7 years out of the last fourteen. I’ve been coming to Guiyang exclusively over that time as an English teacher. I’m now teaching at Guizhou Normal University of Guiyang. I still maintain a real estate appraisal business in Traverse City, using trusted friends to do most of the work. I am fascinated by this life and the lifestyle of my Chinese friends.
A couple weekends ago was the weekend for nationwide testing of college bound students. China has a history of national testing that dates back to 907 AD, with few interruptions. The current national testing began under Deng Xiao Ping in 1979 and is called the Gao Kao. The entire lives of children approximately age 18 have been directed toward a supreme effort to score well on this exam. It is the belief among many that these two days will determine the future of so many young people – See: http://www.businessinsider.com/24-stunning-photos-of-chinas-college-entrance-exams-2014-6
Good jobs are not plentiful in China and graduation from a credible university is deemed to be the key to getting a good job. The greatest single factor in getting into a credible university, often perhaps the only factor, is an excellent score on this exam. It is tough on children and parents alike, especially parents. In a land where one child per family is the law. Many believe that performance of a child on these two days determines success or failure . . . of the parents.
Perhaps it sounds tongue in cheek, or an exaggeration, but the above paragraph has been reviewed by many educators in China, and it’s not an exaggeration. I know a leader in the community, a person that was a director in local government and the headmaster of one of the best middle schools in Guiyang. In 2000 I knew her to be middle-aged and soon to be old. When I returned to China in 2010, after not seeing her for years, I ran into her. She was lovely and relaxed. She seemed ten years younger to me (not 10 years older). I told her so and asked what had happened to her. She said that when I knew her in 2000 her son was in the middle of taking the Gao Kao exam. She wasn’t sleeping well then and was very worried. Now, after success on that exam, and a successful college performance at a credible university, her son is a doctor.
I am writing this log entry a couple weeks after these two days and the internet is off, as the result of a reported equipment failure, off for nearly two weeks to my place. The campus internet is adversely impacted because the IT guys are concentrating on keeping good internet performance in the classrooms where the tests are graded. Good internet is essential for nationwide reporting of exam results. We just have to wait. After the grades are in, it is expected that the internet will be turned on again.
Last year I watched a TV talk show about this time of year. Every year it is discussed whether the one chance one test system is best for China. Every year they suggest changes be made, but it has been just too difficult to change. There is no second chance. One strike and you are out. I think this system dates back to when China had way too many students and not enough colleges. It was a numbers problem and the best way to weed out 70 to 80 percent of the students was with one bone-crusher test. Whether it was fair to all the different kinds of students was not the issue. It served its function well, weeding out the weaker students and promoting the strong. If you were sick that day or your mother had died, it was just too bad, no make-ups.
The TV talk show focused on a student that left the test to help a student beside him that had some health issue, seizure or something. He waited for somebody to help the student next to him and when that didn’t happen, he took her to the hospital. He never got the chance to complete the test and got a score of about 25%. After much hand-wringing the analysts decided that the student should have minded his own business and the system couldn’t make an exception for him no matter how extraordinary the circumstances. It was hoped that some university might find a use for somebody with humanitarian instincts, but little in terms of self preservation instincts. The lesson was clear . . . mind your own business first.
It’s hard to understate what a big deal the Gao Kao is here in China. Construction is stopped on that weekend to avoid distractions. Honking of horns is forbidden, and so on. Some parents can be extremely unreasonable, with people demanding that elevators in tall buildings be stopped for fear of distracting a studying student. Dancing by old people is common in public squares at night . . .big trouble. It is said that the two most unreasonable kinds of people in China are mothers of children taking the Gao Kao, and old men who insist on playing their music and dancing in public squares, no matter what . . .
During review of this article it has been pointed out that the altruistic student who left the exam room a year ago has been offered several opportunities by credible universities, who do indeed appreciate his humanitarian instinct. Further, this year I learned that there was an exception to the policy for a couple students who had been hospitalized due to injuries they sustained helping others. More revisions to the system appear to be coming, even though it has taken a long time.
A more user friendly system of testing may be on the horizon. The question of who is served by this system of public testing will be discussed, not unlike the issue of public education itself. Is the public education system set up for the benefit of the students and parents, or is it set up to benefit society as a whole? The students and parents may think that the system is there for their benefit, but that is probably not true. Increasing the public’s general education level is for the benefit of the society as a whole. Getting the best out of the available students is in the public’s interest. In the past, space in universities was scarce. Now, due to the one child policy and expanded university capacity, more good students are needed. The system designed to “weed out” 70 to 80 percent of the students may be discouraging some students, especially the “late bloomers”, those with unique or specialty interests, and those who happen to have had an unrelated crisis on the test day. As I see it, the question isn’t whether to change the system. It’s how do you tell the difference between a weed and a flower? A student’s enthusiasm is a terrible thing to waste.How to change the the world’s most massive uniform testing system?
Hello jack,
Guizhou library English corner, March 2014, with Akilu, medical student in Guiyang from Ghana. This English corner is held each Saturday 2:30-5:00, on the 4th floor foreign books collection of the Guizhou Provincial Library 贵州省图书馆, Beijing Road 北京路, across from the Guizhou Hotel.
AIDS in China 中国的艾滋病 – serious in Yunnan, next to Guizhou. About 30% of Guiyang’s gay men are HIV infected.
Movies of Autumn 2013
The following movies were shown to the Freshmen of the Guizhou Normal HND (Higher National Degree) program . The Freshmen are all about 19 or 20 years old, in the first year at the university.
1) Appolo 13
2) Rocky
3) Doctor Strangelove
4) The Duchess
5) Moneyball
6) How to Train your Dragon
7) Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter
8) Hunt for Red October
9) Enemy at the Gates
10) Casablanca
11) Rain Man
12) Startrek
13) The King’s Speech
14) The Way of the Peaceful Warrior
15) VanHelsink
16) Blues Brothers
17) Bee Movie
18) Midnight Run
I am an English teacher of Guizhou Normal, I have been directed to train students in oral English. I take to mean, teaching students to use the language in oral communication. I am also charged with teaching the students about western culture, which I take to mean, American culture. I say American culture because I am an American and probably am best qualified to teach American culture, rather than the culture of England or the culture of East India etc. Indeed English is a worldwide language.
Two problems which seem endemic in many Chinese students of English is that the language isn’t used for communication and it is taught primarily in Chinese, by Chinese teachers. Further, the culture of English speaking people is not well known in China. I have approximately six hours a week per Freshman student within which to handle this problem.
The above isn’t entirely true. Most generalizations aren’t. In fact, American culture is making extensive inroads in the Chinese youth. If you believe that the internet, rap music, basketball and computer games are all products of American culture, (as I do) then the youth of China are already well on the way to being indoctrinated, without any formal educational impetus. Young people of China are also heavy into watching videos, which they download from the internet, at no charge. Videos are a powerful educational tool. “Everybody loves Raymond” and “Friends” are quite popular, as well as war movies, vampire movies, and anything to do with zombies.
The big problem for an oral English teacher is getting students to talk in English. You can’t go very far before you realize that the available texts are not very interesting and young people don’t have a lot of life experience. If you only have a limited life experience, like many 19 and 20 year olds, what is there to talk about in class? That is why, in addition to drilling vocabulary through student composition of sentences, I use movies. English language movies, with Chinese sub-captions are purely oral English, and if the movie is interesting enough, students are happy to try to talk about them in English.
I have an A class and a B class, segregated by prior testing. I meet with each class twice a week, for two hours. That is four hours per student per week of oral English. I also require students to attend a Monday night movie. We talk about the movies in the classes during the week, and students are encouraged to use English during these discussions, but not required. If somebody has something interesting to contribute to the discussion, but their English isn’t strong enough, I ask them to speak Chinese, and then we spend significant class time translating what they say. This may sound weird, but it gives the better students some extra practice, and I am also trying to buck up student self esteem. What students think is important. Before students can learn to speak out, they must first learn to speak up. What they have to say, what they think, and how they feel are all important.
Well that describes a little more about what I am doing over in China. I will try to make another post for the cultural issues which have been discussed. With a few exceptions, these issues are pretty universal between cultures.