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Sunday, October 12, 2014

Teaching English

This is the building we taught in.

One of mom's classes, it is winter and you never take off your coat.  No heat in the classrooms.

One of my classes, you can see the screen and the powerpoint lesson.


Teaching English

After our week long trip to southern China, we started to get serious about learning how to teach English to PhD. Students.  We each had 6 classes each week.  The classes were 2 hours long.  I was quite nervous and wondered if I would be able to really teach and make a difference.  We had the lessons of several teachers that had taught at Nankai for the last few years and so with the help of some outlines, we started making our power point lessons.  We started out with words of the day.  For example, the word tear: to pull apart, or tear: a drop of water that rolls down your cheek when you are crying.  We were trying to teach them that there are a lot or words in English where you need to know the context in order to know how to pronounce the words.  We would then have a sentence for each pronunciation of the similar words and each student would have to read one of the sentences aloud when his or her name was called at the beginning of class.  Example: Do not tear pages out of your English textbook, or a tear ran down his cheek when he heard the news of his grandmother’s death.  Then we would have the family presentation. We divided the class into families on the first day and this was a cute novelty for most of them because they  did not have a brother or a sister and the thought of having brothers or sisters was interesting.  We chose a mother or father for the family and then this group of students would have a presentation that they would give every third or fourth week.  The subject of the presentation would be assigned at the end of each lesson for the following week.  We would then discuss idioms, maybe ten each week. Example: “Pull your own weight” meaning to do your full share of the work.  Everyone in the family should pull their own weight.  We then would teach them how to make certain sounds.  What they needed to do with their tongue and how to shape their mouth.  Example:  the “th” sound is not used in Chinese and they have no experience in how to make this sound correctly.  In order to make the “th” sound, you need to stick your tongue out of your mouth and rest your upper teeth lightly on your tongue and then blow a little air out of your mouth.  This takes a lot of practice and so we would have them practice saying a lot of words containing “th”.  We would then have our thought of the day. Example:  “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others.”  Marcus T. Cicero c. 106-43 BC, Great Roman Orator, Politician.   We would then listen to a segment of the radio broadcast from Public Radio call “This I Believe”.  While they were listening, we would also have it on the screen so they could read it.  Then we would have each person read a sentence.  Then we would discuss what it meant.  This was in to help them get ideas, because part of their final would be to give a talk to the class about what they believe.  We would then have a listening segment, where we would play a song with pictures and subtitles.  This part of the lesson took the longest to make, sometimes more than 10 hours.  Thankfully, we had about 20 songs that other teachers had made and left for us.  I think I made maybe 4 songs in 2 years and the rest we borrowed from others.  We would then make an assignment for their homework and the family presentation for the next week.  Following this post, is a song that goes with the power point presentation of a lesson that we used in China.  Play the song when you get to the song in the power point and you can change the slides to show the words of the song and see the pictures that go with the words. This is one of the songs that I did.

Thanks to you song in lesson 5



When you get to the song in the power point in the last post you can play this song and change the slides in the presentation to show the pictures that go with the words of the song.  Just click on the link below.

http://yourlisten.com/Nepomuceno.Abel/thanks-to-you#

Test of Power Point lesson

Monday, September 8, 2014

Haungguoshu Falls and the Stone Forest near Kunming






Haungguoshu Falls and the Stone Forest near  Kunming

The last two things we did were we visited Hunagguoshu falls and the stone forest near Kunming city.  Both were interesting and fun to visit.  We came away from this trip realizing that these attractions were visited by a lot of Chinese people and that there were a lot of people that traveled and visited places of interest throughout China.  Everywhere we went there were long lines and restaurants and hotels were packed.  Tourists were everywhere.  We were glad to get back to Tianjin after a week of traveling through southern China.

Above the falls was a beautiful garden of bonzi plants and rocks.



Haungguoshu  falls.
 Haungguoshu  falls.
 
We are on our way to walk behind the falls.

You can see all the people walking on the trail behind the falls.

The people on the trail to the falls.

From behind the falls.
 
 From behind the falls.
From behind the falls.
The trail and a rainbow.

The other side of the falls.

From the restaurant where we had lunch after walking behind the falls.

The Stone Forest.

The Stone Forest.

The Stone Forest.

The Stone Forest.
  The Stone Forest.
The Stone Forest.

The Stone Forest.

The Stone Forest.

Instructions at the beginning of our walk through The Stone Forest.
Our entertainment on the bus after our walk through the stone forest.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Anshun Southern China












Anshun, Southern China

On this trip we also visited 2 Naxi villages.  The Naxi build all there building out of stone as opposed to the wood framed villages of the Miao. We would get on a bus for a few hours and then visit a village and then get back on the bus and drive to another one.  We would end back at the hotel in Anshun because the villages were way too small to have big hotels. One night while walking around we found a group of people had divided off a large part of a square and were dancing.  Mom was asked by a Chinese man if she wanted to dance.  She of course took him up on his offer.  She really enjoyed the evening. We also visited a cave that had a Buddhist temple in it and another cave that had a river coming out of it.  We hiked almost to the top of a mountain to visit another Buddhist temple.

One of the Two Naxi villages we visited.

Naxi village.
  Mom trying out to be a game show model.

 
  One of the small ally ways in the Naxi village.

Naxi village.
 
  The Ground Opera

The Ground Opera.
All the kids were very cute.

Naxi village.

Carol Larson and a girl selling vegies on the street.

He was also selling food on the street.

The entrance to a Buddhist temple that was half way up the mountain.

Some of the roofs of the Buddhist temple on the mountain.
 
  The roof top of the temple on the mountain.
View from the temple.

Mom stepping out on me. (dancing in the street at night, the tango)

Some kurst mountains.

This man was blind but could still smile.

A Buddhist temple inside a cave.

All the kids made us think of our grandkids.
  This was a kind of scary bus ride.
Boat ride into a cave.

From the cave looking out.

If you didn't want to climb you could hire two men to carry you up the mountain.

She enjoyed the ride.

We stayed at the same hotel as this wedding. Can you find me in the picture?

Mom and Carol and Merlene in Anshun.

The other Naxi village we visited.

Naxi village. Stone house but satellite dish on roof.

Is she cute enough?

Naxi village.

Naxi village.  This was a much poorer village.

This picture reminded me of  women in South America.
Little kids learning how to roller blade. This is late at night.