Monday, 14 December 2015

13 December 2015

Gentlefolk,

This post is about the Nobel Prize and inventors.

Tu You You


There was great excitement in China in October 2015 when Tu You You was announced as the recipient of the 2015 Nobel Prize for Medicine. 



Although the Nobel Prize website shows that eight mainland-born Chinese have received Nobel Prizes, the Government only recognises the last two as “real Chinese”. 

The first three (for Physics) became US citizens, the fourth (for Literature) became French and the fifth (also Physics) was British.  

The sixth was Liu Xiao Bo.  He got the Peace Prize in 2010 but he was a dissident and the Chinese Government said it was awarded for propaganda purposes; Liu still languishes in jail.

The seventh recipient was Mo Yan for Literature in 2012.    He attained 'national hero' status with his Prize.

And now Tu You You.

The Award Ceremony is held in Stockholm every year on 10 December (the day Alfred Nobel died in 1896).

Her award has generated a lot of interest and discussion in China.

Tu You You receiving the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, 10 December 2015.



In congratulating her, the BBC noted that she may be the world's most confusing person to whom to sing "happy birthday"!

One thing that puzzles me is the long delay.  Tu You You made the discovery in 1972.  Why has it taken 43 years for her extraordinary achievement to be recognised?   If you know the answer, please explain in the "comments" section of the blog.  

Background  


Tu You You 屠呦呦 was born in 1930 in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province.  She studied pharmacy at the Peking Medical Institute (1951-55) and then worked in research institutes. 

She married Li Ting Zhao 李廷. He was a classmate in Ningbo; they have two daughters.

Mao was a strong supporter of North Vietnam during the Vietnam War.  Malaria was endemic which greatly affected the fighting capability of the Northern troops. Mao wanted a cure found and Tu’s team was assigned to work on that project.

1972 she discovered Artemisinin 青蒿素 .  Apparently her discovery was aided by a clue she found in an ancient medical text – the Chinese media claims this confirms the relevance and importance of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).  

Tu You You is known for her ‘3 Noes’: no PhD; no overseas experience; and no membership of an Academy of Science.  A most unusual background for a Chinese researcher who has now, suddenly, shot to national and international fame.

Alfred Nobel


Alfred Nobel (1833 – 96) was a famous Swedish inventor and industrialist.  He had 350 patents – his most famous invention was dynamite in 1867.  He founded an industrial empire built largely on explosives and armaments.

In 1888 he read an obituary titled ‘Merchant of death is dead’. The journalist got the wrong man – his brother had died.  But Alfred was shocked at how he was portrayed and decided to use his fortune to create the Nobel Prizes, as a positive legacy to mankind.

Nobel Prize


Swedish Academy of Science administers the Nobel Prize. Five prizes are awarded annually to living persons for remarkable achievement in Physics; Chemistry; Medicine; Economics; and Peace.  ‘Nobel Laureates’ receive a gold medal and a lot of money.

Since 1901,  870 individuals and 23 organisations have received the Nobel Prize. There have been 49 women laureates.  The first woman recipient was Marie Curie in 1903 (physics) and again in 1911 (chemistry).

By ‘country of birth’, Americans represent 30% of recipients, followed by British with 9% and Germans 7%.  But actually many scientists do their PhDs and then work in the USA (and take up American citizenship) so by ‘citizenship’ the US would be over 40%.

Asians are under-represented.  By ‘country of birth’ 23 Japanese have received Nobel Prizes, 7 Indians, and 8 Chinese. No Indonesians.


Why have so few Chinese received the Nobel Prize? 


I put that question to my Oral English classes; this topic produced very animated discussions.  Here are some possible reasons they came up with:

Society: Chinese nationality and language
Some students thought that there may be a bias against Chinese because the judges were Europeans. They may not like Asians (and especially Chinese) and may not understand Chinese language.

A student wondered if, perhaps, there is something inherent in the Chinese language (tonal, character-based) which might not be conducive to scientific research?

Education system.
Traditionally, Chinese education focused on literary subjects (literature, poetry, calligraphy, etc). Science/change was frowned upon.

Students, even today, are not encouraged to question teachers or ask “why”?

Most learning is by rote.  You memorise the answers.

Students have many classes – they get most of their ‘learning’ straight from teachers rather than research it themselves.

Many parents choose their child's major at university, with the result that students often study subjects in which they are not really interested.  To devote yourself to scientific research takes passion, and you can't be passionate about a subject you don't like.

Stage of development
Chinese scientists focus on ‘applied science’.  They (and their employers) want to create useful things which can used and hopefully sold for a profit.

Very few universities or companies in China have the financial strength (or will) to support pure scientific research.  Pure research is a luxury which China could ill afford.

Some students pointed out that until relatively recently China was predominantly an agricultural economy (in 1950, 84% of the population still lived "in the countryside", today it is about 45%).  They said that Chinese are resourceful, but their interest and focus was on agriculture and there have been several important inventions related to agriculture over the centuries.

Society
There is a ‘fear of failure’ in Chinese society.  People basically want a good job and a comfortable life.  They can’t imagine pursuing goals which may take years or decades to produce a result.

There is a lack of creativity. People are satisfied with the status quo.

Chinese people as a whole are not inquisitive.  There is an attitude of "leave science to the scientists".

Political system
A student questioned if China’s political system stifles creativity?  The Communist Party (CPC) is present in all spheres of life and work.  It’s best to follow rules and not rock the boat.

It is alleged that Professors get promotion and research funds based on their CPC membership rather than their scholarship.  This stifles academic endeavour.

History; Lost generations
Some students pointed to the overall chaos in China in the last 150 years or more as not conducive to economic development and scientific research. 

Firstly, the Qing Emperors had a closed door policy – they had little interest in modern changes or the Industrial Revolution.  It was a society based on feudalism, and very traditional in its thinking.

The Republic of China was established in 1912. Quickly fell into disarray, and was followed closely by the ‘Warlord era’ of the 1920s.  Then Japanese invasions 1931-45. 

The 1945-49 Civil War ended with the Communist victory. But the disruptions didn’t end there.  The 1950s saw disastrous policies (such as collectivisation and  Great Leap Forward) which resulted in years of severe famine and starvation.  Finally, Mao’s Cultural Revolution (1966-76) turned the country on its head.

So for at least the last century Chinese people have been much more concerned with the ‘here & now’ of putting food on the table each day rather than thinking about scientific discovery.

These students argued that China's modern history is really less than 50 years old.   It is only in that time that China has really joined the ‘community of nations’. 

They contend that, despite its 5,000 year history, in terms of modern science China is really a very, very young country, only a few decades old.


It was a good, lively discussion.  These are bright students.

Overall, the students were confident that many more Chinese scientists will receive Nobel Prizes in coming years.

...

Prolific Inventors


On Wikipedia I found a website titled “List of Prolific Inventors”.  There are 55 inventors with more than 500 worldwide utility patent families. For a long time Thomas Edison was regarded as the greatest inventor in history, but he is now 7th in terms of number of patents.  The top seven are:

      K. Silverbrook  (Australia) 4,728
      S. Yamazuki  (Japan) 4,229
      P. Lapstun (Australia) 1,278
      G. Sandhu (India) 1,191
      L. Wood (USA) 1,185
      J. Koyama (Japan) 1,130
      T. Edison (USA) 1,084

The top three ‘countries of origin’ of the 55  most prolific inventors are:

     USA (37)                      67%
      Japan (5)                        9%
     Australia (3)                    6%

There is one Chinese in the top 55. He is Fan Shou Shan (696 utility patent families), a physics professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing.

But who has heard of Silverbrook or Yamazuki?  They may have lots of patents, but did they invent anything nearly as significant as the electric light bulb or phonograph or movie camera?

Edison is still "The Man" for me!

...

That's it for this post.

Keep well, and keep smiling.

Alex & Vera Olah
English teachers at the China University of Petroleum, Qingdao
www.upc.edu.cn
Sunday 13 December 2015.



























Sunday, 6 December 2015

6 December 2015

Gentlefolk,

This post contains the News Summary for November 2015.

As you know, I compile a monthly summary of news items, with a focus on news on China.  

There is so much competition for space within Western media outlets that usually only the unusual, sensational, or bizarre gets a mention. Hopefully this summary will give you a better idea of some of the things happening in China.

The events/items included are not necessarily the headlines, but rather things which caught my eye.

The second list shows international events reported in China.  There are so many things happening around the world (information overload!), that I find it useful to have such a list to look back at. 

These news items were sourced from the China Daily newspaper 1 – 30 November 2015. 

Actual events usually occurred a day or two before they appeared in the China Daily newspaper. 

Currency shown is US$, and the exchange rate used this month is US$1 = Yuan 6.3.

Remember: the China Daily is a government newspaper whose main purpose in life is to make the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the Chinese Government look good.  But if you strip away the propaganda, there is still quite a lot of interesting stuff in the paper. 


Events which made the news in China in November 2015

(a) Domestic (in China) events and news

1 Nov
China’s population policy: 1970 population passed 800 million; 1980 One Child policy introduced; 1984 relaxed for rural areas – couples could have a second child if the first was a girl; 2010 couples could have 2 children if both were from single child families; 2013 couples could have 2 children if one was a single child; 2015 all couples can have 2 children.

Estimated that 550,000 couples in Beijing are eligible for a second child under the relaxed regulations, but so far only 55,000 have applied.


Xu Xiang, 37, head of Zexi Investments arrested for ‘insider trading and market manipulation’. Other ‘tigers’ arrested this month for alleged corruption: Zhang Yun, President of Agricultural Bank of China (ABC), and Yao Gang, Vice Chair of the Securities Regulatory Commission.

4
Govt says that annual GDP growth of 6.5% over the next 5 years will enable it to achieve its aim of $12,000 per capita by 2020.


The Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) will remove an estimated 500,000 land mines on the border with Vietnam.


China’s retail wine market is estimated at $12 billion pa; imports account for 33%; there are approx 38 million wine drinkers; China’s per person wine consumption is 5.8 liters pa.

5
In the first 9 months of 2015, profits of private industrial companies rose by 7% but profits of State Owned Industrial Enterprises fell by 24%. Many SOEs are unprofitable and only survive with govt subsidies (so called “Zombie companies”). Govt has vowed to reform these companies.


China has 137 million people aged over 65 (10% of population); and about 212 m over 60.

6
In 2014 China imported fresh fruit valued at $4.3 billion; 16% of imports came from Vietnam.

7
First snowfall of the winter in Beijing. Central heating turned on a week early.

10
Severe smog / pollution covered NE China. The PM2.5 level in Shenyang exceeded 1,000 micrograms per cm and in Changchun reached 860.


200 bullet trains are introducing wifi for passengers.  Also on China Eastern planes.

11
A gang based in Indonesia and Cambodia running internet telecom fraud was busted and 254 Chinese repatriated to China for sentencing.

12
“Singles Day” online shopping bonanza yesterday netted $2.3 billion in 24 hours. 70% of orders were placed via smart phones and tablets. Alibaba and JD most popular sources.

More than 6,500 autos were bought online yesterday, including a Porsche worth $790,000.

12
Video website iQiyi has reached 150 million daily users. Its locally-produced series are very popular: The Journey of the Flower has attracted 7 billion viewers, and The Lost Tomb 3 billion.

13
New Y100 note issued. Y100 ($16) is still the largest note available in China.


Property market blues: for the first 10 months of 2015 new construction is down by 14%, and floor area of unsold apartments is now 50% higher than two years ago.


Lenovo, the world’s largest personal computer maker, posted its first quarterly loss in 6 years - $714 million.  Revenue was up 16%, but huge restructuring costs.


ABB’s China operation had revenue of $5.8 billion in 2014.  It has 19,000 employees. The R & D centre is in Beijing.

14
Heavy smog in Beijing triggered Yellow Alert. Visibility down to 500 metres.


The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges raised/doubled deposit requirements for margin trading.

16
Sinopec’s Fuling field is producing 10 million cubic metres of shale gas per day.


Sales of Passenger Motor Vehicles in first 10 months of 2015 totalled 19.3 million units, 41% of which were Chinese brands. October sales up 12%, helped by the halving of sales tax on vehicles of less than 1.6 litre engines.


The Ministry of Transport received 6,832 submissions on its draft regulations for the car-hailing industry.

17
When Pfizer’s Viagra patent expired in May 2014 several Chinese firms started producing similar products.  Baiyunshan Pharma brand is Jin’ge (“Golden Spear’) which sells for 40% less than Viagra; its sales in the 12 months to October 2015 totalled $109 million.

18
Actor Yin Xiang Jie was arrested on drug charges.  The Govt prohibits the screening of films by actors caught with drugs or prostitutes, so his acting career is likely finished.


Health specialists are concerned that over-use by hospitals of antibiotic drips is creating resistance to drugs. In 2016 hospitals in Jiangsu Province will only allow such drips for in-patients.

19
The four most influential businesswomen in China: Dong Ming Zhu, President of Greer Electrical Appliances; Chen Chun Hua, Co-Chair of New Hope Liuhe; Wang Feng Ying, President of Great Wall Motors; Sun Ya Fang, Chair of Huawei Technologies.

25
Xiaomi launched new Redmi Note 3 smart phone. with fingerprint scanner and 5.5 inch screen. Also MiPad2 based on Microsoft and using Windows 10.

26
91 suspects in corruption cases totalling $122 million were repatriated to China in last 12 months to face trial here.


The 2014 National Fitness Survey showed increasing incidence of myopia: Primary School students 46%; Middle School 74%; High School 83%; College 86%. Of Primary School students in urban areas, 18% of boys and 10% of girls were obese.


The incidence of indoor smoking in Beijing has fallen from 11% to 4% since the tough smoking restrictions were introduced in June 2015.

30
The Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China delivered its first domestically-produced regional jet (ARJ21) to Chengdu Airlines. It can carry 90 passengers and has a range of 3000 km. Production will now ramp up.


(b) International events

1 Nov
China-Japan-South Korea leaders meeting in Seoul.

3
Visit to China by French President, Francoise Hollande.


Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced the abolition of knighthoods as “not appropriate in the modern age”.


Visit by Henry Kissinger to promote the Chinese translation of his latest book “World Order”.

A new biography of Kissinger titled “Henry Kissinger The Idealist, 1923 – 68”. He grew up in Fuerth, Bavaria; family moved to New York in 1938; served in the US Army, then attended Harvard (sponsored by the GI Bill).


Visit by Admiral Harry Harris, Commander of the US Pacific Fleet.

First joint US-China naval exercise announced, in Atlantic.


Turkey’s ruling AKP Party won a majority (316 of 550 seats) just five months after forming a minority govt.


United Nations estimated that last month (October 2015), 218,000 ‘migrants’ entered Europe (mainly from Syria and Iraq). This was roughly the same figure as for all of 2014.  The total for the first 10 months of 2015 was 744,000.

 4
The Kansas City Royals beat the New York Mets to win Baseball’s 111th World Series (the Royals last won in 1985).


Apple sold 230 million iPhones worldwide in the twelve months to 30 September 2015 (up 37%).


LeBron James (30 years and 307 days) became the youngest NBA player to reach 25,000 points in regular season. Kobe was 13 months older when he reached that total.

The four highest regular season point scorers in NBA history are: Abdul Kareem 38,387; Karl Malone 36,938; Kobe Bryant (still playing) 32,534; Michael Jordan 32,292.

5
President Xi Jin Ping started official visit to Vietnam.

6
China replaced Canada as the US’s top trading partner.  First 9 months of 2015 China-US two-way trade totalled $442 billion; Canada-US $438 billion.


Amazon opened its first “bricks & mortar” bookshop, in Seattle.

7
Nicaragua approved plan by a Hong Kong-based group to build a “bigger Panama Canal”; total length 276 km (of which 105km on Lake Nicaragua); estimated cost $50 billion.


Xi Jin Ping official visit to Singapore.

While in Singapore Xi met with Ying Yeou, President of Taiwan (first top level meeting since founding of PRC in 1949).

11
Chinese collector Liu Yi Qian paid $170 million for Modigliani’s “Reclining Nude”. It will be housed in his Long Museum in Shanghai.


Visit to China by Mongolian President Tsakhia Elbegdory.


China General Nuclear Power Corporation won contract to build two nuclear reactors in Romania ($7.7 billion).

China National Nuclear Corp won a $4.7 b contract to build Argentina’s 5th reactor.


President of the University of Missouri, Tim Wolfe, resigned following criticism for “indifference to racial tensions”.


Anbang Insurance paid $1.6 billion for US Fidelity Life Co.


WADA report recommended Russia be suspended from international track & field for “systematic cheating”.

12
Death of former German Chancellor (1974-82) Helmut Schmidt, 96.


Myanmar’s main opposition party, the National League for Democracy, appears to have won a massive victory in last weekend’s election.


People of Chinese ethnicity make up 21% of San Francisco City’s population of 805,000.

13
Migrant crisis continues: Austria announced plans to build a fence along its border with Slovenia; Sweden imposed border controls. EU leaders met in Malta.


World nations agreed, in the UN’s International Telecommunications Union, to use satellites to track aircraft flights. Currently ground radar is used.  Don’t want a repeat of the disappearance of flight MH370 in March 2014.

14
President Xi attended the G20 meeting in Antalya, Turkey.


China (70%) and Laos (30%) joint venture will build a 418 km railway between Kunming and Vientiane. Estimated cost $6.3 billion.


In the last quarter Carlsberg suffered a loss of $650 million, mainly from its Russian and China subsidiaries. Announced cuts of 2,000 staff and some closures.

17
Marriott International will buy Starwood Hotels (Sheraton, Westin, W, St Regis) for $12.2 billion. Marriott will have 5,500 properties with 1.1 million rooms.


The 2015 Open Doors Report by US Institute of International Education estimated total 975,000 foreign students are studying  in the USA; of which 304,000 (31%) are   from Mainland China; 133,000 from India; 64,000 from South Korea; 60,000 from Saudi Arabia.


Peyton Manning, Denver Broncos quarterback, passed Brett Favre’s passing record (71,871 yards) and equalled his wins (186).

18
President Xi arrived in Manila to attend the 2015 APEC Leaders meeting.
Premier Li Ke Qiang represented China at ASEAN meetings in Kuala Lumpur. He will then make an official visit to Malaysia. Chinese companies are interested in bidding for the proposed High-speed railway between KL and Singapore (90 min).

19
Famous New Zealand rugby player, Jonah Lomu, died of kidney disease aged 40. He scored 37 tries in 63 test matches between 1994 and 2002.

Voting started in New Zealand on a new national flag.

23
Guangzhou Evergrande beat Al Ahli to win the 2015 Asia Football Championship.

25
Turkish fighters shot down a Russian jet on the Syrian border for alleged “airspace violations”. Russia imposed economic sanctions on Turkey.


Meeting in Suzhou between China and leaders of 16 Central & Eastern Europe countries. 

China to build High-speed railway linking Belgrade and Budapest (3 hours).

26
SF Warriors beat LA Lakers 111-77 for their 16th win – new NBA record for best start to season.

30
President Xi attended the Climate Change meeting in Paris, with leaders of about 150 countries.


Britain’s Tyson Fury beat Wladimir Klitschko to become the new World Heavyweight champion.


...

Another month has passed.  Tomorrow is the start of Week 14 of this semester, so only 3 weeks of lectures to go and then the final exams. In about five weeks we'll head south for the winter break, first to Hong Kong and then to the Land Down Under.

We’ll return to Qingdao at the end of February 2016 for the start of the second semester of this academic year – and our last semester teaching in China.

Warning: only 18 shopping days left till Xmas!

 ...

Best wishes to you all, keep well and keep smiling.

Alex & Vera Olah
English teachers at the China University of Petroleum, Qingdao

Sunday 6 December 2015 (Saint Nicholas Day)

Qingdao TV program featuring two foreign teachers. Click HERE for YouTube. It goes for about 25 minutes and alternates between Rai and me. In Chinese, but quite a lot of spoken English.

Thursday, 3 December 2015

3 December 2015

Gentlefolk,

This post is about an activity we did with my English Major students.  Also the school schedule of a Middle School student.

Is English crazy?


The web is full of interesting stuff.  Recently I found a couple of odd things relating to English, which I discussed with my two English Major classes.

The first was titled “Who could have invented the English language?”

The author cleverly highlights the inconsistencies in English, over 43-almost-rhyming lines.
Here are some extracts:

There is no egg in eggplant or ham in hamburger; Neither apple nor pine in pineapple

Quicksand works slowly; boxing rings are square; and a guinea pig isn’t from Guinea or a pig

In what other language do people recite at a play and play at a recital?

We have noses that run and feet that smell

We park in a driveway and drive on a parkway

And how can a slim chance and a fat chance be the same; While a wise man and a wise guy are opposite?

If one fowl is a goose, and two are called geese; Why isn't the plural of moose, meese?

If the plural of mouse is mice; The plural of house should be hice.

If the plural of man is men; Shouldn’t the plural of pan be pen?

If teachers taught, why don’t preachers praught?

If vegetarians eat vegetables, what does a humanitarian eat?

...

Yes, on the evidence, English is a crazy language!

Clever stuff.  Makes me want to know more about linguistics and how English developed into the language it is today … maybe one day …

English has had many external influences: from the Celts, to the Vikings, the Saxons, and of course the Normans.  French was the language of the ruling class for several hundred years following the successful Norman invasion in 1066.

My colleague, Gautier Plassais, says that more than 25% of English words come from French.

I have often wondered about English spelling.  Wonder no more: according to Gautier the reason why the English spell 'metre' with an 're' instead of 'meter' (which is much closer to the actual pronunciation) is that it comes from French.  Similarly words like 'centre' and 'theatre'.

And why is a 'q' always (and often 'o') followed by 'u'?  The 'u' seems quite superfluous.  Again, the villain is French.

Personally, I'd like to see spelling simplified.  The purists won't agree, but don't you think American spelling makes more sense? meter, center, color, behavior, neighbor, humor, favorite, etc.

At this stage I'm glad that I don't have to teach English grammar - I just focus on oral and reading English, and Western Culture.  I am happy to leave English grammar with all its nuances and paradoxes (two more French words) to real experts!

...

The other article was titled “The amazing little word UP

Here’s a good Trivial Pursuit question: Which two-letter word has the most meanings?

The answer is UP.  Apparently it can be an adverb, a preposition, an adjective, a noun, and a verb.

UP sure is mixed-UP!

We usually think of UP as “move higher” but why do we wake UP from sleep? We lock UP the house; fix UP the car; stir Up trouble; line UP for tickets; work UP an appetite; think Up excuses.
A drain must be opened UP because it’s blocked UP.

We open UP a shop in the morning and close it UP at night.

The sky clouds UP and then it clears UP.

My time is UP, so I’ll wrap it UP, and shut Up.

...

We had some fun discussing the oddities of English which these students will study for the next 4 years.

At the end I challenged the students to compose a sentence (maximum 20 words) using UP as often as possible. Here are some of their contributions, produced the following week:

Name
Sentence of maximum 20 words, using UP as often as possible

Selected students from EM1502 and EM1503, December 2015

Leighton
I got up, freshened up, cleaned up the room and then met up with my friends.

Sylvia
I woke up but it was too cold to get up so I gave up and went back to sleep.

Ivana
I get up, eat up my breakfast, wash up, and clean up my room.

Sabrina
I woke up, got up, made up some breakfast, ate it all up, then dressed up to go up the street.

Carol
I woke up, got up, cleaned up, and met up with my boyfriend who I look up to.

Iris
When he showed up, she went up to him and told him that she would always look up to him.

Violet
He came up with the idea of setting up special schools for kids to pick up knowledge.

Sally
Keep moving up and never give up standing up for your principles.

Sunny
I woke up, got up, tidied up, ordered up some food, and locked up.

Claire
She told him she would make up if he cleaned up the floor and fixed up the walls.

Ink
I told her to catch up, warm up, cheer up, and never give up.

Heidi
She got up, ordered up some food, ate it up, dressed up, then called up her friends to meet up.


Not a bad effort for Freshman students, don’t you think?

...

Middle School schedule



Every Saturday morning, from 8.45 to 9.45am, Vera meets with a young girl who wants to practice her oral English. Actually, she is the daughter of Professor Liu Bao (Electrical Engineering Department of UPC), and it might be more accurate to say that her parents are keen for her to take advantage of Vera’s offer to chat with their daughter.

Her name is Liu Si Qi (English name Scarlett).  She is in 3rd year of Middle School (also called Junior High School). Next June she will sit the Zhong Kao exam which will determine her progression to Senior High School (Grades 10, 11 & 12).

Vera and Scarlett Liu Si Qi, December 2015.


Vera asked her to describe a typical school day.  This was what she outlined for Tuesdays:

Time
Scarlett’s Tuesdays @ school

7.05am
Arrive at school

7.15
Chinese

8.10
Chinese (cont.)

9.00
Physics

Break
All students run around the oval twice

10.10
Chemistry

11.10
Lunch

11.40
Supervised self-study

12.35pm
Rest/sleep

1.15
Govt / Politics / Marxism

2.10
English

Break
All students run around the oval 3 times

3.30
Math

4.25
Supervised homework or class

5.25
Go home; home, sweet home


Lessons are 45 minutes long and there is a short break between classes, when they go to the bathroom, etc.

She said that after dinner she normally does two or three hours of homework, and goes to bed around 10pm.

Long day, isn’t it, for a 14 year-old?

School days were shorter last year, but now she is in the final year of Middle School with an important exam next June, so study is much busier.

We asked her what she does on weekends.

Saturdays: Scarlett starts the day at 8.45am, chatting with Vera.  Then she goes to a private school for special tutoring in physics (10 - 12noon) and maths (1 - 3pm). In the late afternoon and evening  she'll do homework and maybe watch some TV.

Sundays: mornings Scarlett will do homework and review last week's classes.  Afternoons she normally meets up with school friends and they go shopping or take in a movie.  She used to take Latin Dance lessons on Sundays, but stopped in August so that she can focus on her studies.

Scarlett is smart and is regularly in the top 10% of her class.  But her parents think that's not good enough - they want her in the top 5%!  China is a super-competitive society ... how different are the lives of our grandsons back in Australia.

No wonder Chinese students do so well academically when they go abroad – they are often at the top of their college classes.  From an early age they get used to putting in long hours, and just work much harder than most Western students.

...

That's it for this post.

Remember, only 20 shopping days left till Xmas!!!

Best wishes, keep well and keep smiling.

Alex & Vera Olah
English teachers at the China University of Petroleum, Qingdao
www.upc.edu.cn
Qingdao, Thursday 3 December 2015

Last year Qingdao TV made a series on foreigners working and living in Qingdao.  One of the programs featured two university teachers: Laxmisha Rai and myself.  The program can be seen on on YouTube and Youku (search both "Alex Olah").  For YouTube click HERE.  The program is in Chinese but with quite a bit of English,