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sharpe88
Joined: 21 Oct 2008 Posts: 226
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Posted: Tue Jul 28, 2009 2:22 am Post subject: |
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Red is more positive here than most countries. But red is universally "negative" on marking papers, not just china
"Go easy on the red markers. Red can have negative connotations in China when used to mark or write someone's name. " |
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evaforsure

Joined: 26 Jun 2004 Posts: 1217
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Posted: Tue Jul 28, 2009 5:50 am Post subject: |
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Chinese teachers refuse to allow short sighted students to sit at the front of the class. The seating arrangment in any Chinese state school classroom is dictated from on high at the beginning of the semester and cannot be altered by a teacher whatever the needs of the students. Predictably this causes some students to simply give up. |
I have always noticed a changing roster to enable all to have a forward seat at some time...
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evaforsure wrote:
Many parents refuse to allow the use of glasses by their children. Often the child will buy the glasses on the sly and even keep them at another students house to avoid detection....
You can't be serious... |
I am serious; could be that they think there will be no improvement in vision if glasses are used....a idea tht was common in the US in the early 60's.. |
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theincredibleegg
Joined: 01 Jul 2008 Posts: 224
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Posted: Tue Jul 28, 2009 4:21 pm Post subject: |
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bnej wrote: |
I'm really not sure this message board is the place you'll find a meaningful answer - have you tried talking to the parents? |
I didn't intend to solve the problem here. Just making comparisons.
I usually write something about it in progress reports. |
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dialogger
Joined: 14 Mar 2005 Posts: 419 Location: China
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Posted: Tue Jul 28, 2009 7:52 pm Post subject: |
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This thread has been valuable as although I have seen students with papers a few inches from their face I have thought 'forgotten glasses today'.
My own resources are in 12 point Ariel. I might increase this by a click or two. |
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dialogger
Joined: 14 Mar 2005 Posts: 419 Location: China
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Posted: Thu Jul 30, 2009 12:43 am Post subject: |
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WOW Dagmar!
Re names:
The worst FT I came across in PRC was a Brit woman.
She marched into a class of Y3 (uni) students (English majors) and announced 'I don't like the names you have chosen and I'm going to give you new ones'.
These kids had had their English names since middle school or earlier!
'Oscar - you're now Donald' The boy got the message "Donald Duck".
'Why? because you look like a Donald'.
'Helen - you're now Pauline'
'Why? Because you remind me of my friend Pauline'
...and so on.
I had taught these students the semester before and I had a stream of them coming to me to complain. Out of professional courtesy I didn't book her to the FAO but I should have!
It's not only young children who are cruel and unfeeling. |
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Dagmar
Joined: 08 Mar 2009 Posts: 44 Location: Sheffield UK
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Posted: Sat Aug 01, 2009 9:14 am Post subject: disappeared |
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MOD EDIT
I tie up a lot of facts as such, about teaching which have finally come together at my great age and much experience all over the place, so if you want to know what I really think do email me.
All I can say is to repeat what I said earlier..
Why not translate the students' names into english or learn their chinese names. They are generally simple enough..and we are supposed to be teachers after all. We quickly learn to count in chinese and any amount of small passable chinese language ..so maybe some of us deserve the students' opinions on whites showing no intelligence at all. My students found great amusement in the way I pronounced their names, and it always started each class off with a laugh.
The chinese called me Miss Hei, which translates from my name exactly.
Sadly I have been told time and again, and yet again just now, not to bother to be pro - chinese, as they will back we Brits everytime rather than someone like you/me, honest and caring.'' This is true from their government but not the people and students/teaching staff, who are wonderfully supportive of any one who cares about them...That is the secret of teaching out there, it is not just about YOU- IT IS ABOUT THEM TOO...(corrupt english lab messing world wide etc-- I quote them: ''we get no opposition from over there- government- to using their students and lecturers'')
The Chinese have seen these things before as have we from the East They know to keep their heads down and get on with the everyday of life. It is the 'stupidity of the moment' the English are indulging in, as indeed I think the westernisation of China is, but it gives us jobs, so we have to take it as it comes.
Write to me directly if you want to know more... |
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Long ai gu
Joined: 22 Oct 2004 Posts: 135
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Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 5:50 pm Post subject: |
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I think the eye problem has something to do with the chinese characters they learn which I understand takes approx. 10 years. The complex makeup of some of these characters are hard to see and extremely difficult on the eyes. Our alphabet is very easy to make out in comparison. There is a lot of reading and coping of these characters and i believe this may effect the vision of the person right from the beginning as a child. I would like to know if the illiterate peasants of the countryside have the same percentage of eye problems as the literates do. Another strange fact is that many of them won't eat carrots or other foods and veggies that are orange or red in colour. The beta-carotene which helps develop vision also will turn their skin into a darker orangey colour than the white skin in which they crave. One of my students was a part-time model and she told me that carrots were bad for her skin--A few theories for y'all. |
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IT2006
Joined: 17 Jan 2009 Posts: 91 Location: Wichita, KS, and westward.
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Posted: Mon Aug 10, 2009 7:51 pm Post subject: |
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In my experience, I've noticed that female students refuse to wear eyeglasses for reasons of vanity. In most of the classes that I taught in China, 80% of the girls wore glasses. Some admitted that they didn't wear their glasses because they didn't want to be another four-eyes.
Others wouldn't wear their glasses "just because."
I learned that one of my students needed glasses while we crossed a street together. I asked her why she did not wear glasses. She was squinting at the traffic whizzing by. I asked her if she had trouble seeing the vehicles on the street.
Her reply: If they're big enough I can see them coming, so buses and trucks don't scare me too much. |
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mondrian

Joined: 20 Mar 2005 Posts: 658 Location: "was that beautiful coastal city in the NE of China"
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Posted: Wed Aug 12, 2009 11:26 am Post subject: Re: disappeared |
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Dagmar wrote: |
Why not translate the students' names into english or learn their chinese names. They are generally simple enough..and we are supposed to be teachers after all. We quickly learn to count in chinese and any amount of small passable chinese language ..so maybe some of us deserve the students' opinions on whites showing no intelligence at all. My students found great amusement in the way I pronounced their names, and it always started each class off with a laugh.
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I have found teaching schoolchildren here that a Western nickname is almost mandatory. But when you teach Uni/College students then your suggestion is very helpful.
Actually using their Chinese names when you address them (eg calling the register) helps them to listen to their names with a western pronunciation. It can be a great icebreaker in the first few minutes of a class. Unfortunately it confuses them when they actually go to the West and have their names in reverse order!! |
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englishgibson
Joined: 09 Mar 2005 Posts: 4345
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Posted: Thu Aug 13, 2009 5:55 am Post subject: |
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That's a really good point. Students going abroad have got to benefit from our pronunciation of their "real" names. However, I am often worried I mispronounce the hell out of their names. Once, in Guangzhou, I had a student with a name Xiao, or something like that. Apparently, if you say the name in a wrong way, it may come out as "f*ck". So, and yes, we had a fun with it later as he replied; "ciao you too"...or, something like that
In any case and to oppose this idea of "keeping their own names", our attempts may throw our classes off...if not raise eyebrows of our students.
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someone wrote:
WOW Dagmar! |
i'd say WOW Dagmar too! She/he has quite some way of approaching discussions really.
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Why not translate the students' names into english or learn their chinese names. They are generally simple enough..and we are supposed to be teachers after all. |
You've been telling us that you're a teacher in UK. Is that correct? From that quote and sorry I dare to read in between the lines there, it makes me feel (to me) as if you were a Chinese teacher of English. Again, forgive me if I am wrong, but I've been in China for more than 8 years, have a Chinese wife, and I can tell you that their names are really difficult to pronounce.
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I am also an experienced China teacher and encountered this problem, surprisingly with top University kids as well as the College kids, but I also come up against this problem over here - not infrequently |
Dagrmar, sorry to take this out of your context, but is it that there're as many students with glasses in UK as on Mainland Or, is it that you're refering to some other issues beyond the thread's topic
On topic of students with glasses here, I have found the LIGHTS or insufficient lights either in classrooms, offices or in students dormitories to be a real issue. Some lights that are the "energy saving ones" keep rooms relatively dark to read/study. Then, students in schools' dormitories have all kinda cheap light there. Mind you all that in primary or secondary schools in China students in dormitories have only until a certain time to use the lights. One of my former private students (a middle school girl) was thrown out of her school's dormitory coz she used lights (to study) after 10 pm. She broke the school's rules.
Cheers and beers to glasses in the party offices where they not only need it for reading  |
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