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Time for Mid Term exams

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

I’ve been busy with my teaching recently and next week is mid-term exams week. I’ve also been busy making some travel plans for a couple upcoming holidays and for the summer vacation. For summer vacation I’m planning on going to Japan for 3 weeks with the first 2 weeks being a guided tour with Intrepid Tours and then I’ll try doing the last week on my own. After Japan I think I’ll come back to China and do some traveling within China. Anyone want to come join me? For my winter break next year I’m thinking about going to Egypt.

I’m planning on staying here at Guangxi University for another year which will take me to July 2010. After that, I am hoping to become an IELTS Examiner. IELTS is an English exam for people that want to demonstrate their English proficiency and is used by many western universities as a factor in evaluating admission for foreign students. The work is mostly on weekends but apparently I can make as much money as I make now by working 3 weekends a month. That job would also give me much more flexibility regarding when I can take vacation time. I’d really like to be able to travel when not everyone else is traveling and this job would make that easier. Tentatively, my next visit to USA will be in summer or early fall of 2010.

Exiting News Flash! – I bought a toaster oven and now I can make toast and cook other things. It cost me about $80 U.S. I could have bought one cheaper but the clerk at Wal-mart (there are sales people readily available in every department at Wal-marts here to assist you) convinced me to buy the imported model instead of the Chinese made model. So recently, for the first time since I moved to China I purchased butter and salt and pepper. I started cooking a little bit but it’s just not worth the effort to do much cooking considering the poor kitchen facility (no hot water, I have to move the cooktop to use it, etc.). I was so excited the first time I made toast…..lol. One thing I cooked was spaghetti but the spaghetti sauce I bought at Wal-mart was really just tomato sauce with no seasoning.

Recently while grading some writing assignments I found that more than 10% of the students had plagiarized. One student was a student I caught twice last semester doing this. After the second time last semester I gave her a 0 for that assignment and made her write a paper titled “What is Plagiarism”. When I caught her this time, I told her I am reducing her score for the entire semester by 6 points. She came back to see me later with another student to help translate because she is not confident in her spoken English. She said she was only trying to improve her scores and how could she improve them because she was not happy with her final score the previous semester. I reminded her that her score on her previous writing assignment was 92 and that her writing is good so she just needs to quit trying to cheat! The assignment she plagiarized on was her journals which are not directly graded for writing quality. Sometimes Chinese thinking drives us crazy……lol.

I have posted some new pictures from trips to a couple parks and the zoo, and a picture of our students performing the play “High School Musical” (they did it in English and did a great job). They are in the folder GU (Guangxi University) under “Recent Pictures”. As a reminder, you can find the link for the pictures on the right hand side of the blog. Until next time….

Back home in Nanning

Monday, March 9th, 2009

I’ve been back in China now for about 4 weeks and we’re in week 3 of the spring semester. Upon my return to China, I retrieved my checked bag in Beijing and noticed that the lock was missing. I opened the bag and didn’t find anything missing. I’m assuming that the customs folks in China cut the lock to have a look inside to make sure I was bringing in any inappropriate items. I had several books inside so they probably made sure they were not on the banned list. The lock was a TSA (Transportation Security Administration – USA) approved lock that the Customs folks have a master key to but I guess the Chinese Customs folks don’t have a master key.

Speaking of locks, I got locked out of my apartment one day a couple weeks ago. I was out on the porch hanging laundry when a strong wind came and blew the door closed. My keys and phone were locked inside. As luck would have it, I was only wearing my boxers and a t-shirt as it was quite warm that day. So I had to go outside to go to some other teachers’ apartments hoping to find someone home that could call the office for me. Fortunately it was before 5:00 in the afternoon and we found the right guy and he understood my Chinese and came with a key within 15 minutes.

Of course I’m keeping up on the economic news from the U.S. and I don’t need to tell you how bad it is. It’s bad here too but not as bad as in the states. The government here is saying they think a recovery has already begun here but nobody believes that. Car sales here had been running over 20% higher than the previous year but in recent months have only been around 8% higher than the previous year. Total car sales here in December were more that total car sales in the USA. I know tons of people have lost their jobs in China but judging by the crowds at Wal-mart here on Sunday, things are not so bad. While there, I checked the price on a toaster as it would be nice to have one. They only had one model and price was equivalent to $55 U.S. I was shocked that it was so expensive. They had toaster ovens that you could buy for just a little bit more money.

A Chinese friend of mine that has been living in the states for about 30 years thought that some of my blog writings have been too negative about the Chinese. I will provide some balance by telling you about a conversation I had recently. I went to some friends’ home for dinner (a Swiss guy and his Chinese wife) and joining us there was another family. Both husband and wife are pretty high up in the police department. The husband was telling us about a trip he made to the U.S. and about his visit to a police force in New York. It was an educational trip to learn about police methods. He was disappointed that the people he met with in New York did not invite he and his colleagues to dinner and he felt they were not very hospitable. Perhaps he would have been treated differently someplace other than New York but I agreed with him that Chinese are more friendly and hospitable to visitors than Americans. Most of the people I have met here are very kind and generous and go out of their way to be friendly and hospitable.

Speaking of the police, I recently was politely asked to accompany some policemen to the local visa office without knowing why at the time. A fellow teacher (an American married to a Chinese lady) had asked me to join him for an English corner at his housing complex near campus for an hour one Saturday. An English corner normally is where people get together to informally practice their English. I agreed to go there as a couple times I and other teachers have been invited to that complex for parties. When I got there for the English corner it was actually an English lesson for the residents rather than a typical English corner. My colleagues wife had a book that she and I used to conduct a simple lesson for about 30 some residents of the complex. My colleague was in a different room giving a more advanced lesson. After we finished the lessons there were some police officers waiting for us and asked my colleague and I to go with them to their office. After we arrived there, they separated us and asked us questions about the lesson and if we were paid for it (we were not paid) and did we have an agreement with the complex to teach every week. They called the Dean from our school to come there too. It wasn’t until after they finished the questions and let us go that I discovered why we were there. The builder had used my colleague’s picture in a full page newspaper ad trying to sell apartments there, saying that among the amenities they offered free English lessons to the residents. They have to have a license to operate an English school and also, it is not allowed for us foreigners to have another job beside the one that was used for obtaining our visa. I’m still not sure why this was such a big deal that 4 policemen were working on their day off but I’m guessing that another builder with connections complained. I haven’t heard any more about it. If they found that we were working outside of our visa they technically could have revoked our visas. Obviously, I won’t be going there for any English corners or lessons in the future!

Spring Festival/Semester Break in USA

Friday, January 30th, 2009
I’m in Florida now enjoying the moderately warm weather. I spent about 10 days in Indiana visiting family, eating like a pig and mostly staying inside to avoid the cold weather outside. Then I ... [Continue reading this entry]

Happy Holidays 2008 from China!

Saturday, December 27th, 2008
Happy Holidays from China! I enjoyed a nice turkey dinner for Thanksgiving at restaurant with many other foreigners. I really stuffed myself. About a week after Thanksgiving I went to a nice restaurant ... [Continue reading this entry]

Working hard and a short trip to Yangshuo

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008
Wow, it’s been about 5 weeks since I have written anything. I’ve been so busy grading my students writing I haven’t had time to write in my blog. We had a 3 day weekend ... [Continue reading this entry]

Teaching and National Day holiday travels

Monday, October 6th, 2008
I just got back from spending a few days in Zhaoqing which is in Guangdong province not too far from Hong Kong and Wuzhou which is in Guangxi province near the border of Guangdong province. ... [Continue reading this entry]

Settling in at GU (Guangxi University)

Sunday, August 31st, 2008
On Monday, August 25, I moved into my apartment at the school. It’s an upgrade from my apartment in Kunming but not ideal. It’s in a good location overlooking a pond and close to ... [Continue reading this entry]

Island Life on Langkawi

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008
I spent 5 days in Langkawi, Malaysia mostly just relaxing, eating and reading. Langkawi is a pretty big island and it would take at least an hour to drive all the way around it. ... [Continue reading this entry]

Malaysia!

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008
I spent 3 days in Kuala Lampur (KL) which is the capital of Malaysia and the largest city with a population over 1.5 million. I visited the national museum and the national mosque (both not ... [Continue reading this entry]

Olympic Torch Relay……bringing it to the people?

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008
The Olympic Torch Relay…….bringing the Olympics to the people….OR NOT! The Olympic torch relay came to Kunming a couple weeks ago. As I have mentioned before, hosting the Olympics is a huge deal here ... [Continue reading this entry]