The First Week of Teaching

It has been a fascinating experience to work with the teachers and to get to know them as individuals. They are generally competent in reading and writing but some were initially hesitant in speaking English because they haven’t had much experience of conversation with natural English speakers.

Because of a new national education policy of starting English language learning in the third year of schooling many English language teachers have been needed in a hurry. Many people found themselves assigned this task without much preparation. The Amity Summer English Project is a great opportunity for reinforcing and extending teachers’ English language skills. The Amity Foundation has many grassroots service and ministry projects besides this English language training program that enable Chinese Christians – and their international partners – to make a difference in Chinese society.

The English teachers we are working with are wonderful people, and it is amazing to see what a difference there is in our relationship since first meeting at the formal opening ceremony. In our classroom sessions we have found many opportunities for learning about each other and our countries, and there has been much laughter as preconceived notions are revealed and discussed. We look forward to what we will yet learn together in the coming days.

Posted by Gordon Timbers and Anne Saunders

The First Weekend, July 14-15

Last Friday evening we were warmly welcomed by our hosts at the Baotou airport and then driven to our hotel where we are comfortably accommodated. Our rooms are air-conditioned and there is a computer and a flat screen TV in each of them. Unfortunately the internet connection is not always working, but we now have access to the school’s computer lab, equipped with about 75 desktop computers.

Last weekend we settled into our “home” for the next three weeks, went for walks on Saturday to orient ourselves and on Sunday morning we attended a one hour Chinese church service – along with perhaps 1000 other people! The first hymn was the familiar sound of “Praise Him, Praise Him.” We felt warmly welcomed as other worshippers gave us Chinese hymn books, opened to the Chinese words and showing the music in the tonic sol-fa format, and afterwards a choir member who spoke some English talked with us.

On Sunday afternoon in the school’s large auditorium, the opening ceremony was held for the 2012 Baotou Amity Summer English Program. After this we went to our classrooms and interviewed the 100 Chinese teachers to assess language ability and to divide them into four classes. Finally we were in the school and meeting the people we would be working closely with for three weeks!

On Sunday evening our hosts organized a visit to a Mongolian cultural theme park . We saw deer as we drove into this grassland area, and then yurts in which people were dining, and male and female hosts in Mongolian traditional dress. We walked around the area which included a small lake, an archery range, a horse corral, two camels, views of fields of grassland with the cityscape of highrises in the distance, and a memorial to the Mongolians. When we sat down to dine there were 14 of us including two school personnel who could speak English and translate. We were entertained by Mongolian singers and dancers and enjoyed a delicious Mongolian banquet with many toasts to each other!

Orientation

We are in Nanjing participating with 40 other volunteer English teachers in Amity’s orientation for its 2012 Summer English Program.We arrived in Shanghai early Saturday morning. This gave us the day for sightseeing.

View from hotel in Shanghai

 

 View across the Huangpu River from The Bund

Vendors on Nanjing Road

 

Shoppers on Nanjing Road pedestrian mall

 

Cooling down in the fountain at the People’s Park

On Sunday we travelled from Shanghai to Nanjing very comfortably by high speed train. This gave us a glimpse of the dense and ongoing urban and industrial development with some scenes of canals and paddy fields. As we approached Nanjing hills appeared on the landscape, and then Purple Mountain that overlooks the city.

 View of urban development between Shanghai and Nanjing

Nanjing is a beautiful and historic city and our hotel is located in a very scenic part, next to Xuanwu Lake and park. However, there is little time for sightseeing for we have much to learn at this orientation. This year’s theme is “Conversations” based on the Chinese saying,

“A conversation with a good teacher is better than ten years of study.”

We have participated in workshops not only about teaching in China, but also on such topics as The Church in China, Survival Chinese, Social Expectations towards Women in China, and 400 Years of Christianity in Nanjing; and we have had trips around the city to see some of Amity’s other programs like its Printing Company, Senior Care Center, and Bakery.

The gate to Xuanwu Lake by our hotel in Nanjing

 

  Liu Wei from Nanjing Union Theological Seminary

The one sightseeing trip we have done is an afternoon visit to the Memorial to the Nanjing Massacre, which was a very moving experience informing us about the 1937 Japanese invasion of Nanjing when it is believed that 300,000 people were brutally killed.

 A statue at the Memorial to the Nanjing Massacre

 

View of Nanjing from an expressway

Tomorrow we leave Nanjing for our teaching assignments. Our team will spend the day travelling; we fly to Baotou with a stop of several hours in the Beijing airport.

Gordon Timbers and Anne Saunders