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Monthly Archives: March 2012

“They are good and beneficial times, but I will say we sleep really well when night time comes.”'”


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Warmer weather has come to Jingzhou!

I know that should bring no alarm to those back in America, but you’ve had warm weather for quite a long time, it seems. We still have some ‘up and down’ temperature changes but spring-like weather is appearing occasionally. The word the students always use to describe the weather: changeable.

I remember at MTSU many years ago that the warm sunshine meant young female students missing that week of classes and spending a lot of time on top of the dorm buildings beginning their sun-worship, in anticipation of spring break.

Our sophomore students are studying diligently for the TEM4 test, a national big-time exam for English major students. It is a big deal to them, and they put forth a mighty effort to pass, though some are taking it as juniors, since they failed last year.

Because of their dedication, our Saturday Life group has not been able to meet, after getting over 65 different students here during a three-week period, some of them for the first time at a sit-down discussion of Important Things. We planted some seed, and we cannot ever take it personally, because the schedules often change with little or no warning.

We also know that a lot of May will be spent in speech competitions, and we will be asked to judge many of them.

The other side of the coin? We had over 75 of TJ’s students here for a ‘come and visit” hour the weekend we realized the sophs were no longer going to be available. Hoping our contacts now will bear fruit when they come to our campus next fall.

We had a great Friday discussion group with three first-time students. (Two were unable to come, but three new ones). They are so perceptive, with wonderful questions about faith and the difficulty we all face with struggles in the world with The One over all…why does the suffering occur, etc.?

One of our students, who has been part of our groups for many, many weeks, also brought TJ two porcelain dolls, and another student gave  Terry two sleeve protectors, which are part of the Chinese winter wear that protects their coats.

We watched four of our students involved in badminton competition…two advanced to the second round before losing.

One conversation was especially revealing: when asked why she had not yet played, she said “my partner has not yet come..she is in another dormitory.” I was confused by the word ‘partner,’ since it was singles activity. She replied honestly, “I do not want to use the word opponent, so I say she is my partner.”

I hit a few minutes with two of the students, helping them warm-up, and saw my first roller-blades on our campus…the youngster was just learning but doing very well getting his balance and maneuvering across the court.

Have enjoyed listening to March Madness via the radio…since the games are not free on the internet for the initial time. I am leading the Pilgrim League pick ‘em contest and in the top 96 percentile of the nation. Missouri messed my bracket up, since I had them in the final four, but no other major disappointments… Duke losing in the first round was a surprise but not upsetting to many of us, except for my brother, Bo, of course.

I do not expect the Lady Vols to get past Baylor in their bracket, though I know some Waco, Texas relatives are enjoying the games more than ever this year 🙂

With the warmer weather, more and more folks of all ages are outside on the weekends, enjoying their neighbors and taking part in many different kind of activities.

We had some 75+ of TJ’s students in our apartment for about an hour this weekend, and, according to them, the freshmen English major students will stay on the West campus when they become sophomores. That will mean we are not close to them for two (and maybe more) years, and it limits the amount of time we will have with them for Important Things. We will wait and see what happens for the next school year…if they are here, we will want to move to the West campus, though there are many things not so convenient there.

Some of the classes come bearings gifts of fruit or flowers, which we try to share with others so they will not go bad.

I just returned from taking some of the flowers to Dean Catherine, the head of our English department and also our upstairs neighbor. She commented on how “pretty the singing was Sunday morning…I might want to attend one of your meetings.” We had three Family members from the East campus (oral English teachers) so the singing was especially good…people are listening.

I asked her about the ‘rumors’ about the English department moving to the West campus next semester…she said it is something being considered but “no formal discussions are being held right now and no decision has been made.” I shared with her that Terry and I wanted to be where the students were, and she agreed to share that if/when formal discussions commenced.

When we were ready to use Skype the other night, there were 31.5 million users online…wow! I know we would not be here unless we had access to see and hear our children and grandsons!

Greetings from Terry: It has been so cold I have not even considered sweeping our apartment stairs lately. I had just been noticing that they were really dirty the other morning and planned on tackling the job this week. That same afternoon a large group of student volunteers from our campus converged on our building and not only swept all of the stairs but washed them with buckets of water and dusted the hand rails. It looks so very nice. Some of them were our students so I sent a text to them with a sincere “Thank you” and told them I would do my part to help keep them clean.

My daughter, Tonia, mentioned the different names some of my students have chosen as their English names. She commented that it must be hard to keep a straight face when I call on “Sheep” or “Kaleidoscope” in class. Since they see it as a temporary label some of them really do choose odd ones. But really the unique ones make it easier for me to remember them so it is a big help, even when it brings a smile to my heart.

This morning we were up early to go to the vegetable market. Then Gary went to represent us as he cheered on our students at the badminton competition on our campus. One of my students on the West Campus had called and said she had many doubts and confusion about life and it seems too heavy. I invited her over to talk and have lunch with us. She was grateful and came for a good visit but had to decline the lunch. I found out her cousin knows where our strength comes from and has shared our favorite book with her. This is a happy discovery for me. We were able to share some passages and even talk to Him. So she left feeling much encouraged and I too felt refreshed.

She desires to become a teacher for a few years, then travel around China getting to know the people and be a leader. She is a young woman of compassion and understanding. I am blessed to be here at this time and get to encourage her.

After lunch we had two different groups of my new students in for visitations. Tomorrow, Sunday, we have two more visitation groups coming in the afternoon…a total of some 80+ students They are good and beneficial times, but I will say we sleep really well when night time comes.

More to come, but in several larger Vitiligro spots, the pigmentation is now definitely coming back on my neck. Thanks for your prayers on my behalf! – Love, Terry

China News — Cost of education can ruin parents. A recent audit at Dickinson State University in the United States will have made uncomfortable reading for parents in China.

Over the last four years, according to the audit, the college in North Dakota had issued diplomas to 400 foreign students despite their failure to complete the required coursework. Roughly 95 percent of these students were Chinese.

It was just one of several controls “waived or intentionally overridden or ignored” by DSU, according to the audit, which has again cast a spotlight on the risks families face in paying out huge sums to have their children educated overseas. Such investments often create what sociologists call “the new urban poor”.

“Parents are surrendering their last resources to wager them on a child’s future by sending them abroad,” said Lao Kaisheng, an education policy researcher at Capital Normal University. “If these children don’t get the decent jobs and the salary that is expected, their parents will naturally be sucked into poverty.”

Ministry of Education data show that more than 330,000 people nationwide went abroad for study in 2011, making China the largest supplier of students to Western schools.

The desire to send offspring to schools overseas has existed for decades, although today it is largely fueled by the belief that it gives youngsters an advantage in the tough domestic employment market.

However, not many Chinese families have enough saved in the bank to cover the tuition fees and accommodation and living expenses involved in overseas study potentially hundreds of thousands of yuan. Instead, many are choosing to take on massive debt at a critical time in their own life. It is a gamble, experts say, and the stakes are high.

A freshman student in Nanjing decided to donate her body to her school for medical research after dying of melanoma, the Nanjing Daily reported.

Li Juan, 21, was a nursing major at Nanjing Medical University. She was diagnosed with melanoma in December after feeling unwell in her throat. Li Juan died on Feb 28.

Li Juan was from a poor family where her mother was unable to work after brain surgery and her father and younger brother had to support the whole family. The university organized a charity donation of more than 38,700 yuan for Li after her illness was diagnosed.

Li requested in her last days for her body to be donated to the school for melanoma research.

“She might hope to continue to live her medical dream by contributing her body,” the paper said, quoting the class director Lu Xi.

Minister of Commerce Chen Deming said  Sunday that China, now the world’s second largest importer, will become the biggest in a few years.

China not only provides the world with high-quality products at low costs, but also buys high-end goods supplied by global brands, Chen said at the China Development Forum 2012.

The growth rate of China’s retail sales stayed between 16 percent and 18 percent over recent years, higher than its GDP growth, indicating the country’s huge purchasing potential, the minister said.

Chen said many Western politicians blamed China for global trade imbalance, but they seldom mentioned that China, with its population only accounting for 19 percent of the world total, is also the world’s second largest importer.

Trade remedy measures adopted by some developed countries are undesirable, because they are neither fair to other economies, nor just to domestic citizens and enterprises, Chen added.

China’s trade surplus narrowed 14.5 percent year-on-year to $155.14 billion in 2011, with imports up 24.9 percent to $1.74 trillion, customs data showed.

The Chinese capital was blanketed by spring snow on Sunday morning, after a day of heavy fog that has grounded hundreds of flights in the country’s north.

Rain began to hit Beijing Saturday evening and later turned into snow. As of 6 am Sunday, snow has accumulated to as deep as eight centimeters in parts of the city.

 
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Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Jingzhou

 

This is so much fun. The fields are white unto harvest…new ones keep coming


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We often have simple conversations with the students, asking straight-forward questions and getting quick answers, and find out later that we have completely miscommunicated. We ask about a common exam they are concerned over, and get different answers about who can take it and what it is supposed to accomplish. Similar issues have also arisen with our closest teachers friends, though Howard is usually the one who can make it clear, eventually. Words do get in the way, sometimes 🙂

  • It is our understanding that it is against the law here to have ultra-sounds to determine the sex of an unborn child.
  • Young adults have to have a birth-permit in order to have a child, and you must be married and 25-years old. The penalty in both cases is a hefty fine.
  • A public marriage is a major event here, but the marriage itself actually takes place in a government office, where they fill out papers and register as a married couple in the province. Sometimes a couple is married for 2-3 weeks before the ceremony.
  • It is  our understanding that there are now some 4,500 buildings under construction in Wuhan, the capital of our province. This is the place we figure Eric and the family will be closer to, since they have many hundreds of universities (the number is still unclear to me, due to those ‘words’ getting in the way.
  • Rumors on a college campus is normal, even in the United States…so there are several here. Last semester the rumor was that our entire University was moving to Wuhan, 3 hours east by van…the graduate school did move. This semester, we are all moving from the Central campus to the West campus..the small economics department did move. We will watch and see, since the rumor persists that we will all eventually be moved to the West campus, 8-10 miles away.

We have just celebrated Girl’s Day and Woman’s Day, back-to-back days that honor the place of these two groups. They celebrated on campus with class parties and Terry received some greetings from some students, wishing her peace and happiness.

We went from a near cancellation at the last minute due to schedule conflicts to one of our best teacher’s discussions of the semester, with one new member and two others here for only the second time.

This is my favorite group: more mature, have some history with the Important Things, and they are very-y-y interested in giving of their time….we’re meeting on Thursday p.m. now instead of Sunday a.m. at their request in spite of having classes during the day and a two-hour faculty meeting from 4-6 p.m.

We had a great surprise for lunch…our initial study group, from English Corner over one year ago, invited us to eat lunch with them and we also ate birthday cake to honor Sophie’s 21st birthday…a nice time with some of our oldest friends here. They are in the second semester of their junior year, so we do not get to have special time with them as often…this time next year they will be in many other places.

We had one of Terry’s classes over for a ‘get to know you’ time and Daisy sent this on QQ: “Today we had a happy day in your home…it’s warm seeing that you are living a happy life which I’m always dreaming of…I think I learned something from you two. Thank you.“

We had a great Assembly and studied Ephesians 2, about a household, building, and temple. When we told of our grandson’s New Birth in America, one of the sisters said plainly and quietly, “the building is growing.”

Vicky and Qin Ju Sen took me to a local supply store for some art brushes and some paper to send to my brother, Terry Alan, who is also an artist and wants to experiment on ‘the real thing.’ Qin Ju Sen is the senior art student who did my two paintings back in December.

We have had over 65 students here for a first-time Saturday night Life Lesson but the TEM4 exam is taking them away after three weeks…it is a BIG exam they must pass as English majors and every waking moment is filled with studying. I am glad we have a solid group of teachers interested to fill the void for 3-4 weeks.

Greetings from Terry: As in other semesters the students choose interesting temporary English names when they are in our classes. Some of the unique ones from this semester are: Sheep, Leaves, Shadow, Kaleidescope, Pain and Mint.

I am pleased to discover good moral quotes and topics in one of my new text books which open up good discussions. Today I had made some “American Culture” statements about how I was raised and how I live. After class the last student to leave told me that she believes in Him, too (only she used his name). She said her parents do not believe but that her Aunt and Uncle had taught her. I invited her to our Saturday discussion. We did not get to talk any more specifically at that time. I had already noticed her sweet spirit seeming to reach out to me. It makes me very happy to know and I look forward to getting to know her.

English Corner has started once a week again. It is on Wednesday nights this semester. This time we met in an assigned room which is much warmer. Everyone listened and participated which made it more enjoyable and easier to hear and be heard.

Today was rich. My Thursday 8:00 a.m. class are thinkers and they are not afraid to communicate. Our last two units were on success and heroes. Cookie said “develop your inner spirit”. Jessie said, “Success is like the up and downs of waves.” “Success is not the end of work.” Allison said, “Success can be solving a math problem if math is hard for you.” Ivan cannot yet look at me when she speaks but she said, “Attitude makes success.” Jimmy said he thinks Americans and Chinese have much in common. Abraham Lincoln is his hero because he cared and helped people of color. He asked me if I new what ABC was. He said A is for America, C is for China and B is blood that connects them. Sila quoted Kennedy and also said something about success is having order in your life. Jacki said, “Success is opportunity to everyone.”

Tonight as we were getting ready for our discussion with the teacher group in our apartment we found out one more wants to come for important learning. She has just returned from six months of studying abroad in Iowa. She has begun the journey of following the most important book and is so excited to find a group of people with the same interests.

This is so much fun. The fields are white unto harvest. — Terry

“History shows women have made great strides in the fight for equality, including the right to vote, and major inroads in equal opportunities at home, in the workplace and in education. Though today gender bias continues to create barriers for some, Chinese women are playing a more important role in today’s society. As the saying goes, they hold up half the sky.

“International Women’s Day this year gives us an opportunity to review what Chinese women have achieved so far, both in family and in workplace, and what they are striving for amid changing attitudes towards gender equality, virginity, family and work.”

I recommend a very interesting website here in the China Daily site: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-03/08/content_14742395.htm. It speaks of the Road to Equality” of women in this country and has a full discussion of virginity, etc.

When explaining the necessity to amend the law to a plenary meeting during the annual session of the 11th National People’s Congress (NPC), Wang Zhaoguo, vice-chairman of the NPC Standing Committee said that (photo above) amending the law is to strengthen punishment of crimes and protection of the people.

It is also necessary to revise the law to strengthen and make innovations in social administration and maintain social harmony and stability, and deepen judicial system reform, Wang added. The draft amendment to Criminal Procedure Law was submitted to the NPC Standing Committee for first reading in August 2011 and for second reading in December 2011. China’s current Criminal Procedure Law was enacted in 1979 and amended in 1996.

Adding the article of protecting human rights to the Criminal Procedure Law will help judicial organs observe and implement this constitutional principle in criminal proceedings, Wang said.

Employment challenges are growing due to an unbalanced job market and a large number of people seeking work, a top labor official said on Wednesday.  “Cities and towns will see 25 million more people join the workforce this year, over half of whom will be university and college graduates, while another 9 to 10 million will be surplus rural laborers,” Yin Weimin, minister of human resources and social security, said at a news conference.

Graduates are finding it difficult to get jobs and many enterprises are facing problems in recruiting workers and technicians, revealing structural problems in the work market, he said.

China aims to create more than 9 million jobs this year and keep the registered unemployment rate below 4.6 percent, according to the government’s work report released on Monday.

Some analysts believe that slowing economic growth will see enterprises reduce their intake of new workers, exacerbating the employment situation.  China is aiming for GDP growth of 7.5 percent this year, much lower than 2011’s 9.2 percent. Yin Weimin said the government would introduce a package of measures, such as more training and more efficient public services, to help expand the job market.

To help with the employment of graduates, Yin said that the government will encourage them to find grassroots-level jobs in central and western regions and would encourage graduates to start their own businesses.

China News: History shows women have made great strides in the fight for equality, including the right to vote, and major inroads in equal opportunities at home, in the workplace and in education. Though today gender bias continues to create barriers for some, Chinese women are playing a more important role in today’s society. As the saying goes, they hold up half the sky.

“International Women’s Day this year gives us an opportunity to review what Chinese women have achieved so far, both in family and in workplace, and what they are striving for amid changing attitudes towards gender equality, virginity, family and work.”

I recommend a very interesting website here in the China Daily site: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-03/08/content_14742395.htm. It speaks of the Road to Equality” of women in this country and has a full discussion of virginity, etc.

When explaining the necessity to amend the law to a plenary meeting during the annual session of the 11th National People’s Congress (NPC), Wang Zhaoguo, vice-chairman of the NPC Standing Committee said that (photo above) amending the law is to strengthen punishment of crimes and protection of the people.

It is also necessary to revise the law to strengthen and make innovations in social administration and maintain social harmony and stability, and deepen judicial system reform, Wang added. The draft amendment to Criminal Procedure Law was submitted to the NPC Standing Committee for first reading in August 2011 and for second reading in December 2011. China’s current Criminal Procedure Law was enacted in 1979 and amended in 1996.

Adding the article of protecting human rights to the Criminal Procedure Law will help judicial organs observe and implement this constitutional principle in criminal proceedings, Wang said.

Employment challenges are growing due to an unbalanced job market and a large number of people seeking work, a top labor official said on Wednesday.  “Cities and towns will see 25 million more people join the workforce this year, over half of whom will be university and college graduates, while another 9 to 10 million will be surplus rural laborers,” Yin Weimin, minister of human resources and social security, said at a news conference.

Graduates are finding it difficult to get jobs and many enterprises are facing problems in recruiting workers and technicians, revealing structural problems in the work market, he said.

China aims to create more than 9 million jobs this year and keep the registered unemployment rate below 4.6 percent, according to the government’s work report released on Monday.

Some analysts believe that slowing economic growth will see enterprises reduce their intake of new workers, exacerbating the employment situation.  China is aiming for GDP growth of 7.5 percent this year, much lower than 2011’s 9.2 percent. Yin Weimin said the government would introduce a package of measures, such as more training and more efficient public services, to help expand the job market.

To help with the employment of graduates, Yin said that the government will encourage them to find grassroots-level jobs in central and western regions and would encourage graduates to start their own businesses.

 
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Posted by on March 11, 2012 in Jingzhou

 

We have time each day to cuddle up under two layers of clothes or get under four layers of cover on the bed…and read for a while


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I am very grateful for many things: 392 students who are willing to let me teach them for 90-minutes per week in eight classes Tuesday-Friday; a group of teachers (7) and two groups of students (we had 30 one night) who care about Important Things, and some Family (5-10) who are a joy to know and special Friends when we gather around The Supper.

We discovered a display that sells good, lean portions of pork in the back-gate market…and after Terry cooked it in the crock-pot, it was simply the best! Wow! It was such a surprise and so-o-o convenient!

It seems like we are tired much of the time right now, but we have time to rest before the next day’s events. We are eating the same 5-8 things weekly…and loving it…and thus are maintaining the healthiest lifestyle we’ve ever had. We might grow tired of those same things, but, for now, it is very-y-y good.

I have discovered something again about the time to read here in China: because there is no television to watch or children to take care of, and it’s too cold to even go to parts of our own apartment, much less go outside, we have time every day to cuddle up under two layers of clothes or get under four layers of cover on the bed…and read for a while.

While we were on our ‘road trip during April-December, 2010, and here in 2011, I have enjoyed the opportunity to read many, many books…I am very-y-y-y grateful for the time and our Kindles daily 🙂

(Terry says “me too” to most of the above…she cooks and washes and take care of me, so she has less time, though I help her in every way possible. She teases me that sometimes she needs to work alone so she can get it done faster, but also so she can get warm again on these cold days when half of our apartment is around 58 degrees in the morning hours, even with a floor heater running full-speed ahead 🙂

We are handling the cold by taking one day at a time, and with classroom temps around 40 degrees, it will be nice to see some warmer weather in a few more days.

Two of our Sunday Assembly Family are expecting in July. We know their travel will lighten as those due dates grow closer, and we will miss their joyful dispositions and great interest and questions!

We have a new deputy director of the Foreign Affairs Office, and are waiting to see if it changes anything about our tasks here. It seemed like a sudden event…and this is the office that is ‘in charge’ of the foreign teachers. Change is never simple here, but it also seems to occur quickly, with little or no warning…we will keep you in touch. I know we have already waited over five days for a response to a question and it usually comes within minutes, so it might also have involved the staff, as well.

We received a long email that informed us that a Japanese foreign teacher had a break-in at his apartment, and received a long email warning with advise from Dean Catherine about what we should do to insure more safety (of course, we were already doing most of what they suggested).

China Daily News: Let’s include South China in heating, says adviser — The heating program in northern China should be expanded to include the south, a political adviser said, Nanfang Daily reported.

Winters in recent years have been particularly cold in southern provinces such as Guangdong and Guizhou, where winters are usually mild compared to the north. Coupled with the humidity, it feels even colder in the south than the north, said the adviser, Zhang Xiaomei. Currently, the heating program is limited to areas north of the Qinling Mountain-Huaihe River line.

BEIJING – China has made the first annual reduction in its holdings of US Treasury bonds in a decade. Experts are viewing the move as a sign that the country is accelerating the move away from dollar assets in search of more diversified investment channels.

According to the latest monthly figures from the US Treasury Department, China’s holdings of US Treasury bonds dropped for a fifth consecutive month in Dec to $1.15 trillion.

The number was an update of a figure released in February, after the US department adjusted its method of collecting data on foreign holdings of US government bonds, a move aimed at obtaining more information about the use of proxies buying and holding US securities.

As a result, China’s June holdings of US Treasury securities have been amended to $1.31 trillion instead of $1.17 trillion. The figure at the end of 2011 was $51 billion higher than the previous calculation.

According to the revised data, China cut its holdings of US debt by $8.2 billion in 2011 compared with the previous year. It was the first time that the country had reduced its yearly holdings since 2001.

BEIJING –  China’s defense spending will see a double-digit increase again in 2012, as strong economic growth continues to fuel rapid military expansion, the country’s legislature spokesman said Sunday. Li Zhaoxing said defense spending would increase by 11.2 percent over actual spending last year to hit 670.2 billion yuan ($106.4 billion) in 2012, an increase of about 67 billion yuan.

China’s official defense spending is the largest in the world after the United States, but actual spending, according to foreign defense experts, may be 50 percent higher, as China excludes outlays for its nuclear missile force and other programs.

Li, speaking at a news conference a day before the opening of the annual session of the National People’s Congress, said China’s military spending was small as a percentage of gross domestic product compared to other countries, especially the United States.

“China is committed to the path of peaceful development and follows a national defense policy that is defensive in nature,” Li said. “You see, China has 1.3 billion people, a large territory and long coastline, but our defense spending is relatively low compared with other major countries.”

Last year’s military spending amounted to 1.28 percent of China’s economy, Li said. By contrast, the ratio stood at 4.8 percent for the U.S. in 2010, according to the World Bank.

 
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Posted by on March 5, 2012 in Jingzhou