Saturday, August 23, 2008

Site Visit: Viva la Vida




I’ve decided to make Coldplay’s latest song “Viva la Vida” the theme song of my PST (pre-service training), if not my whole PC experience. If you haven’t heard it yet, I highly recommend going to iTunes and downloading it immediately.

Chongqing – a new home for the next two years. A metropolis. The city is huge and there are people everywhere! If you can manage to find your way to the downtown part of the city, surrounded by giant skyscrapers and major department stores, you could easily imagine yourself in any major Western city – Chicago, New York, whatever!

Chongqing is sometimes called the mountain city, as it is surrounded by hills and mountains. The city streets are also very hilly, which makes for some pretty intense taxi rides (really any experience in a car in China is one where I have murmured many a prayer). The university I will be teaching at (Chongqing Technology and Business University) is about a 15 minute taxi ride from the city center and is nestled in the hills below one of the mountains. The campus is beautiful and definitely takes advantage of their great location. There are hiking trails up the mountain that lead to teahouses and scenic overlooks that help you really envision the vastness of the city.

I was met at the train station by one of the members of the Foreign Language Department and was taken back to the campus. I was shown my apartment that I’ll be living in for the next two years (pictures still to come). The apartment is very spacious and welcoming (and there is a Western toilet!). There is a kitchen, bathroom, a balcony area to do laundry, a living area (and the university was kind enough to provide a TV and DVD player), and two bedrooms. That means plenty of space for all the visitors I expect to see (just let me know when you want to come, so I can make sure to be ready for you!)

I met with several members of the faculty I will be working with including the dean of the Foreign Language department, my teaching counterpart (a host country national who will be teaching courses similar to mine), and some deputies of the Foreign Lang. Dept. Everyone was incredibly welcoming and helpful. I am extremely excited to start the school year! There are actually about 10 foreign teachers at CTBU (only 2 of us are PCVs and the rest are all paid and from all over the world) and we all teach a couple sections of Oral English to English majors (I get to teach the freshman!) and then we all take classes of upperclassmen students who are non-English majors. Apparently every university requires that every student (regardless of their major) must pass a certain English exam in order to graduate. I think they might be able to graduate without the test, but it sounds like every employer in China asks for the results of the test, so if they don’t take it, they will have a difficult time finding a job. I have 2 sections of Oral English from the School of Economics/Business and 2 from the school of Mechanical Engineering. So 7 classes total, and each of them only meets once a week. There rest of the week I will office hours, English corner (an informal setting where essentially anyone who is interested can come converse with a native speaker), and whatever I decide to do for my secondary project.

Because everyone was away for their summer vacation, the university was pretty empty. I am looking forward to returning at the beginning of September and meeting my students and all the other teachers. It was all very exciting, and although I am excited to be back in Chengdu with my host family and the other trainees, I am anxious to get started teaching and I think it is going to be difficult to focus during these last two weeks of PST. We have our language proficiency interview coming up this week and I am terrified. We must manage 30 minutes of conversation with a native Chinese speaker and I am really concerned about my abilities. If we don’t pass this week, we have to get a tutor at our site and then try again in January during IST (in-service training). Wish me luck!

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

08-08-08



Friday is the first day of the Olympics, and the anticipation is about as heavy as the humidity. (I know that was lame, but adjusting to the tropical climate has probably been one of the more extreme parts of my culture shock.) Seriously though, the build up and excitement for the Olympics surprised me at first, but as I get know more about the Chinese people and their culture, I understand they are very proud and patriotic. The games are a source of great honor for the Chinese. There have been special TV programs featuring ceremony after ceremony all in regard to the Olympics and the pride of China.

The torch just came through Chengdu yesterday in the mid morning. There was relay throughout the downtown, and T-shirts and flags everywhere. We didn't go because of our scheduled training, but we watched a little on TV. Many of the people chosen to carry the torch were those who assisted with the earthquake relief. The earthquake greatly affected this entire area, and it is very common for our students to discuss bring it up in class. There have been several aftershocks since we've been here. Yesterday afternoon there was one that lasted several minutes. And a few weeks ago there was one that registered around 5.0 on the scale. That was in the middle of the night and I awoke as my bed was shaking. It was a little scary.

Other than the Olympics, there is not much else to share. Of course, there are everyday things that are new -- last week we figured out how to eat in the campus cafeteria, which is a pretty busy scene around noon time, and none of the staff speaks English. Nonetheless, I found my new favorite food -- jidanbei. Basically an egg pancake with green onions. Very tasty. And cheap (about 20 cents).

From what I can gather, I am relatively sure my host sister is taking me to her hometown this weekend. It is called Zigong, and is roughly 2 hours SE of Chengdu. Whenever I tell anyone (like my students)I am going there, they inevitably tell me about the dinosaur museum. So my next post will more than likely be all about that.
Hope everyone is well! Zaijian!