Sunday, September 23, 2012

Weeks of Sept 10-22/12


Thank you so much to each and every one who responded to my recent epistle telling of random adjustments to my life here in Nanjing.  Some of you asked about my work.  Now that I have been able to meet some of my basic needs, food in my belly and a roof over my head, I am now much more able to focus on my teaching. 

The British Columbia Academy is a grade 10-12 sub-school within Nanjing Foreign Language School (NFLS).  It is a private school, many say the best in Nanjing perhaps, some say, the best in Jiangsu Province.  Middle class and wealthy parents, or perhaps with help from the grandparents, have paid handsomely, 60,000 Rmb Yuan for a year’s tuitition(about $160 = 1000 Rmb Yuan), with the hope of going on to one of the best Chinese universities, or preferably, to a university in Canada or USA.  NFLS goes from grade 8-12 in the International Baccalaureate (IB) stream, or the English A-level stream, whereas BCA offers the British Columbia curricula.  Education is very important to Chinese people.  Apparently a good wage for a teacher might be about 80,000.  If both parents work, one salary would pay for the child’s education, and the other wage would pay for everything else. 

It seems these are three levels of admission at NFLS, depending upon how well students did on their entrance exams.  Perhaps the other programs are even more expensive.  My understanding is that the IB stream allows students the broadest scope of choices in the Western world, UK, Australia, New Zealand as well as the US and Canada, from which to choose.  IB is becoming very popular and fashionable around the world, including Canada, and is a very rigorous academic program.  Some choose to graduate only from BC, while others study non-stop to obtain both the Chinese and Canadian diplomas, thus able to attend a Chinese university in the event they are not successful in their applications to study abroad.  BCA has about 300 students, while the entire school is about 4000 students. 

The school fronts onto one of the city’s main drags, and at 7:30 in the morning and from 3:30-5:00 the mass of jostling parents, bicycles, e-bikes, taxis and private cars at the school gates is a milling throng of honking horns, people visiting, grandparents with young children in tow, wanting to be elsewhere. The high school kids are off to their dorms, huddled at tables in open spaces with study groups, or off to catch the bus or one of two Metro subway lines homeward bound.  Not a place you want to be at those times of the day.  Our staff usually goes out to dinner, and the younger ones party till dawn.  It is virtually impossible to get a cab on Friday or Saturday in the early evening.  Shift change happens between 3:00-7:00 so that the bounty of this high demand period is shared among the drivers whom it seems drive 12 hour shifts. 

As I mentioned, I teach grade 12 English to classes of not more than 20 students, one of 17 Canadian and 2 American colleagues.  Preparing for the Provincial Standards Exam is a huge focus.  I also teach “Graduation Transitions” a weekly 50 minute class that helps students think about their adult lives in the West in terms of maintaining physical health, achieving a level of community involvement and most importantly, where to apply to attend university.  About  five of my colleagues were here last year so there is some continuity.  The current grade 11 and 12 classes conducted in English have a maximum 20 students, while the pupil teacher ratio has been bumped up in grade 10 and 11 to 27.  The more kids there are in a class, the less teacher time they get, and the less actual student talk time students get.  I seriously doubt that tuition costs reflect the learning implications of that change.  Math classes run about 50 students.  They are taught by Canadians who happen to be fluently Mandarin.  Though they teach in English they do have the added advantage of being able to clarify in Mandarin.

The Principal is also a “new hire”, though he was in Beijing for three years preceding last year which he spent back home in St. Mary’s, Newfoundland.  His wife, originally from St. John’s,  is teaching the grade 10 English.  Six of us, Principal, Grade 10 English, Physics, Math and me with Gr 12 English are all retirees. We have four staff members who have been in China for a while.  One has been in China for six years, and this is his 4th at this school.  Oral Communication is taught by a 50 something from the US who is in her sixth year at the school.  She uses debating skills as a forum to help students gain the confidence to express their opinions and to speak out.  Her son is here too, teaching at one of the universities. The other two senior staff are here with their wives who are Chinese.  The former lives in the residence floors of one of the downtown malls, which he says is just to his liking as he loves to shop.  Go figure.  I’m happy where I am too, because I don’t like to shop.  The other fellow is very quiet, and old and wise enough to have become somewhat cynical about rhetoric vs practice.  I do believe that is part of the professional development of a teacher.  He just seems to prefer to keep to himself and that’s all good.  He has been here for 9 years and is in his 70’s.  The remainder range from new graduates in their first teaching position to about age 35.  Most are hard working, dedicated and all are adventurers. 

Three staff members speak Chinese so we have in house cultural informants, though one admits she only knows what her parents have told her.  Two of the young teachers came to Canada during the Hong Kong exodus, and are now learning first hand about China.  One is a really vivacious 30 something who teaches Biology and coordinates the many events, clubs and extra-curricular activities.  She’s a treasure, open minded, forthcoming, diplomatic, organized and of course, hard working.  Another is about 23, teaches Biology, fresh out of university, and a ball of fire.  She is so intense that, in her presence, I feel I should be running.  She talks REALLY fast but I’m sure she is barely keeping up with her own mind.  And finally, an early 40’s Chino-Canadian has returned after 10 years in Canada, to be nearer to his aging parents.  His wife has stayed back “home” in Montreal to help their two daughters make the transition from high school to University.  He has not mentioned her except in response to a direct question.  He misses her and I do  hope she will come to visit though she is staying behind now to help the girls with their life transitions. Two of the young fellas are here with their Chinese wives.  The Phys Ed guy, a Canadian who played pro basketball in the US and New Zealand, exchanges weekend commutes to Hong Zho (spelling) where his Chinese wife teaches at a private international school.  Another new graduate is an Indo-Canadian.  She works hard and I thought was quite quiet.  However, her voice was a little raspy last Monday morning, and she confessed to having gone to Karaoke with the group after Friday’s staff dinner and singing till  4:30 in the morning.  I’d be a little raspy too, I should think.  I look forward to the next Karaoke though I’m sure I won’t make it to that time of night!  This Friday, I did go out to dinner for Ladies’ Night out, then on to a house party, and from their to a club.  Home at 3:00 a.m., tired and tipsy.  I’m paying for it still in that I am less focused even than usual from sleep deprivation.  I woke up on Saturday at 7:00 a.m. and could not get back to sleep.  I really do have to get some ear plugs.  The megaphones and firecrackers go non-stop on weekends, adding to the occasional car horn blasts that reach my 16th floor. 

I was warned it would be difficult to get students to participate in classes.  Since I knew discipline would not likely be a problem, I set a relaxing tone from the outset rather than the hard line I would have adopted back home.   I showed some photos of my family, my home and my town, a couple of gardens, and main street Birtle with five vehicles in one direction down main street, and none facing west on the highway out of town.  My students could not imagine it!  I now find that the majority of students are happy to answer questions, and discussion groups are becoming more active by the day.   

Just before leaving Manitoba, I heard a program about the fashion of immigrants adopting English names, or anglicizing their given names, and the negative effect that has had on their perception of self and their self-esteem.  I’d often thought about that as a hangover from my days in Xuzhou where all the students had chosen English names for themselves “because their Chinese names were too hard for their English teachers to say”. Here too all the students have English first names, either selected or given to them by their teachers!   I always thought, “Here these kids are trying to learn to communicate in a whole new foreign language, and their teachers can’t learn to say their NAMES!”  So, I am trying my best to learn my students correct names. Chinese given names are two meaningful syllables carefully chosen by their parents as “life wishes”, or descriptions, Red Flower, Brave Leader, that sort of thing.  From my first effort, I could tell they appreciated the thought, if not the pronunciation.  On the other hand, once I got the tones marked on the Pinyin names, I did notice some positive body language suggesting I wasn’t doing so badly and that is encouraging.  I had to tell them not to laugh at my bad pronunciation, but rather to bear in mind that I am trying.  Noone has laughed since.  Now I am at the point where I am ready to seek their critique.  Nonetheless, surprisingly, when asked, about 50% of my students say they prefer to be called by their Chinese names.  Shamefully, I have to admit, that I too find it much easier to learn than their proper names.  The students say, that among the new recruits my pronunciation is the best.  They are either being characteristically too kind, or it is a shocking truth!

Though I am supposed to teach the BC curriculum, we do not have the materials.  BC, like Manitoba, has three English 12 courses, though they do not write a common exam.  I teach the mid-range course, English 12 which is supposed to include the texts Richard Wagamese’s Keeper ‘N Me, Ogawa’s Obasan, and Hosseini’s The Kite Runner by way of novel studies, as well as Hamlet and Miller’s Death of a Salesman.  We have one copy of Hamlet and the BBC CD.  We have a class set of Death (March-April) and the DVD.  We do not have the novels.  Instead, we will probably use Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird which the Oral Communication teacher uses as a primary research source for debates, and Keyes’ Flowers for Algernon.  I have the play so we will probably do a read-along of that text.  Students will write a comparison of the two forms.  I’m none too crazy about the novels because of the non-standard English used, the dialogue in Mockingbird or the spelling in Flowers. If any of my teacher buddies can offer some feedback about my thoughts on this topic, I would appreciate whatever advice or wisdom you might share.   We will give Hamlet short shrift (May-June) using the video and selected passages.  I think they would be so much better to use several novellas rather than these 250-300 page novels.  Afterall, these kids probably read at about 75-150 words a minute, so comprehension retention and attentionality will be problematic, let alone the language used. 

But I knew about the availability of resources from a conversation I had with the library records keeper.  I arranged to have a sample copy of an Oxford publication that gives comprehensive coverage of vocabulary, some grammar and a good focus to discussion, comprehension and writing as well as listening activities, 5 minute lecture excerpts and complementary contemporary music in 10 weekly lessons focused on developing academic informational text skills.  The lessons are based around a two page text on various recent new issues, Bloody Sunday, the Cold War, Apartheid, American race relations, etc.  In the meantime the Canadian representative and program coordinator, a semi-retired BC school division superintendant, will bring back sample copies of the remaining materials.  It takes about a year or more to have a novel approved by the Chinese Ministry of Education but I hope the novels on the curriculum may be approved.  They are certainly easier reads than those we are using though they are not short texts.  If any of you can suggest novellas that might be appropriate I would certainly appreciate the feedback.  I have thought of Steinbach’s Of Mice and Men or The Pearl but will have to do some research and reading to find others.

Unbelievably, two novels that were purchased by outgoing staff and approved appear nowhere in any curriculum I have come across.  One is Hamilton’s Water Rats of Wanchai, and the other is the Dust of 100 Dogs.   Water Rats is a mystery along the lines of Lars Steig’s The Girl Who series.  Whereas you may know that Steig’s novels are strong pieces with complex well developed characters, Water Rats is just ok with rather flat characters and predictable plot lines.  It did win a mystery writer’s prize and will make adequate vacation reading in February.  The reviews for 100 Dogs are inconsistent at best, and bad at worst.  It has many characters and ranges over thousands of years of human history and several continents.  Reviews say it is hard to follow.  This does not bode well for my EFL population and I hope the grade 11 teachers enjoy it.  I am working on getting Kite Runner, Obasan, and Keeper for next year.

I am contracted to teach 25 or fewer hours a week.  At this point I have 21 hours. My English classes are all double 50 minute classes, four per week with each of my two classes.  The Career Planning – Graduation Transitions course is a strange one.  It is a 4 credit course and I have 5 sections.  The morning classes are 50 minutes, but the afternoon three are 40 minutes long.  Two of those are from 4:20-5:00!  Those are two very long days.  My English classes alternate sections, but all start at 7:45 in the morning.  But we are also, as usual, expected to do some extracurricular work.  There are about 50 different school clubs organized by students and sponsored by a teacher liaison/supervisor.  I may do a debate club though that will be something new for me.  It is though something I am interested in.  As well, the Study Hall and Remediation Centre will soon resume services and I hope that will be the last part of my assignment.  It ran 4:30-6:00 last year, though the new schedule gives students many more breaks during the day than previously.  So perhaps this year it can run during the day. 

My English teacher colleague who teaches the other three sections is a new graduate and very well read and keen and insightful about literature.  She will be a big help with the haute culture aspects of the analysis, the part I was never too keen on.  And I hope she continues to be concerned about the language aspects of the courses.  That is my area of interest and expertise.  That and the research and writing skill development. 

September 10th was Teacher’s Day, a day set aside to honour teachers.  Teachers are given thank you’s, a special wish for the day, a card or a gift.  I was given a beautifully colourful silk scarf by one student and a lovely card from another.  NFLS gave us each a box of Moon Cakes in honour of the annual “Thanksgiving” harvest full moon.  Moon Cakes are little round cookies, 5-8 cm in diameter, with a thin pastry covering around a filling, usually of ground fruit and nuts.  They are reminiscent, for me, of fruit cake though the consistency is finer.  Those given by the school are delicious with a fruit flavoured jelly filling.  Individually they cost anywhere from 7 mau (1.5 cents) to a silk or satin lined box of 10 for 350 Yuan.  Needless to say, I have no idea what filling those might have – gold leaf perhaps? Anyway, the boxes are certainly beautiful. 

On a personal note, I like many things about my apartment.  The location is a little removed from the crowds, the noise, and the expensive foreigner’s shops of the downtown core.  It is close to the subway and not more than a km from the buses I use most.  Plus, I am on the verge of buying a bicycle to commute to work.  But the walls are in dire need of paint.  Washing them will help, but they are many marks and stains.  I have had the cushions on the rattan couch and chairs replaced and they are much more attractive.  But there is no mattress on my guest bed, which is quite unacceptable, and is, I hope, a problem I must resolve in anticipation of guests.  The bathroom vanity cupboard doors and drawers don’t align and don’t close properly as a result.  It’s probably not of “best quality” and is far from new.  The backing for the hooks on the drapes is sun damaged and ripped and the weights at the vertical edges have pulled away from whatever was supposed to hold them in place.  They don’t hang nicely.   The counter top of the vanity and the one in the kitchen is stained and in the case of the latter, has a crack in it.  I ground out whatever corrosion was in the shower massage nozzles and they now work.  And I miss my own cooking. I'm virtually living on fruit and nuts, coconut milk and yoghurt, coffee and tea, beer and now, alas, red wine.  
 I never imagined I’d be grateful to my mother for knowing how to render pork lard.  In a country where pork is the staple meat source, and everything is dripping with it, I find it impossible to communicate that I want to buy lard.  And I can’t identify it in the department stores though it must be there.  All the bread is sweet and I just want plain, plain, plain bread. And I want to make a pie so I will have to get out to buy a toaster oven soon.  Fry bread was delicious in desperation, but fat is fat.  So you see, I am now solidly in phase 2 of acculturation.  Missing home and family, foods and dogs, and “our” way.  But as Ron said, I will get over it.  End of conversation.
There is one little comical idiosyncrasy I must mention because it makes me smile every day.  I live on the 16th floor.  As I rise in the elevator I pass floors – 2, 3, 3a, 5 and on to 12, 12a, 12b, 15, except in the stairwells. There the floors are labelled numerically rather than sub-alphabetically.  I guess those who use stairs must be less suspicious by nature.  Four is an unlucky number for the Chinese, and 13 is unlucky for us.  But Che tells me many buildings in Winnipeg don’t have a 13th floor either.  There the floors go 11, 12 14, 15, etc. 
Enuf for now.  Time for my Chinese massage.  It will feel so good when it is over, but it hurts like the dickens while it is going on.  It’s like acupuncture with thumbs!  I hope you read with interest.  I was thrilled to receive your feedback after the last update and look forward to encouraging feedback again. 
If you do have any specific questions about my teaching experiences, please ask. 

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