26 April 2009

Home

I'm back in Massachusetts, awake at an early hour due to a flipped internal clock, and staring at a mountain of laundry. Good times.

Thanks for all of the comments and questions during the trip- it was a great way to stay connected to home. I'll try to post some more pictures here as soon as I get them uploaded.

25 April 2009

Fw:one last post

We're at the airport getting ready to leave. The last souveniers are bought, the bags are checked. Some on the trip bought a lot more than me. I'm returning with the same number of bags I left with, and my carryon is actually lighter.

Yesterday at the Great Wall was amazing. It's taken some time to process how cool it was and almost hard to put into words, just standing there where warriors once watched for invaders. It was crowded but not overly crammed and we walked a good way along it.

After was some final shopping and a Peking Duck dinner. Then one last cultural experience- a hair washing that was really more massage. It lasted and hour and cost only a little more than seven dollars.

23 April 2009

not much news

Today was our last day at Dandelion. The kids there were really great and there was a little show to demonstrate what they'd learned. I have letters for my students from them. It's all rainy outside so I'm bundled up warm and dry at the hotel starting to pack for home.

22 April 2009

Buddha

After Dandelion today, we went to a special needs school here in Beijing for a tour. Then I abandoned the tour for the second day in a row to go off and do more sightseeing instead of shopping. Yesterday we went up this park with five pagodas leading to the top, which had great views of the Forbidden City from above. Then we rode up to the Olympic site and saw the Birds Nest and the Water Cube, which were completely awesome.

Today we went to the Lama Temple-- it's a lamasery. I love that word. They had a giant Buddha statue that's carved from one piece of sandlewood. Look it up-- I couldn't take pictures-- it's 55 ft tall! We saw one we thought was the big Buddha, but no, behind it, there was a hall with an even bigger one. Then we tried to go to the Confucian Temple, but it closed before we got there. We peeked through the cracks in the door to take a picture of the statue of Confucius. We had lunch in some Chinese version of an AuBon Pain. I had sweet potato fries- yum!

Hope everyone back home is well. I love reading you comments, and sharing them with others on the tour. Two more days and then we have to go home. It's gone by so fast!

21 April 2009

students

These are some of my students here in Beijing. They are all eager to learn. I want to send them a video of my kids from home. Here they write down every English word that they can find. I'm amazed how good their English is.

Students board at the school and eat all of their meals in their classroom. They serve each other and all help clean up. They are up doing work until 11 at night and rise at 5:30 in the morning.

food on a stick

I did not eat these, but see if you can ID the stuff of a stick sold on 'flavor street'.

20 April 2009

teaching in china

Today was our first day teaching at the Dandelion School in Beijing. It's a school for the children of migrant workers, so they come from all over China and most board at the school. We are all teaching grade 8.

I was really exhausted for the morning ~ I fell asleep before the lights were even out last night~ so I was really worried while we were touring the school. We had some time to prepare and then met the teachers we were working with. Mine spoke no English. Eep. We first met our students at lunch and it was really fun. They asked what kids ate for lunch in America and revealed that they had never had pizza. Can you believe it? I think that should have been our class gift. Wow.

Teaching went so much better than I had expected. The kids were engaged and talkative.

One huge difference between school here and in the US is that school here is a competition. Scores are posted and it is a place of honor to be the best student. Everyone knows how everyone else is doing and it motivates students to work hard. They aren't afraid to tell students that some might have to work harder than others to be successful. Everyone has to keep up to the top of the class.

19 April 2009

forbidden city and tienamen square

We didn't get to see too much of this. I'm not going to talk about that now to avoid ranting in anger. Here's a picture.

train

our accommodations for the night.

18 April 2009

other blog

I almost forgot: check out chinastudytour-april2009.blogspot.com for the official trip blog.

Beijing

Just got into Beijing this morning. We took an overnight train from Xi'an. It was a fun experience but we're all just very tired. It's been raining, but that doesn't stop the tour from traipsing us around in the wet, so everyone's a little damp and sleepy.

Yesterday we went to visit an art school where kids were learning the ancient calligraphy. It's an extracurricular here, like kids take music lessons at home. We also had some more time in the markets, but I didn't buy anything except a wonderfully delicious medium fry at McDonalds. Yes, I gave in. It was worth it. We also went to the Xi'an History museum, which had stuff from the dynastic periods in Chinese history. Oddly, the museums are the least interesting to me because we have all of that stuff at home.

Today we're going to Tienamen Square and the Forbidden City. It's exciting, but I can barely keep my eyes open, and the idea of going back out into the wet is not very appealing.

17 April 2009

new people and experiences

Lots to write about today, so it may take a while to get this all in and uploaded. Yesterday we visited a primary school out in the village. We were treated like dignitaries when we arrived. The kids were all out front, and a band. Many of the townspeople came to meet us. We had welcome speeches from the principal and the village president. I was amazed that even this tiny school in the middle of nowhere had a ceiling lcd projector. After the speeches there was an assembly and student songs and dance. I've got videos when I get home.

We taught a lesson to a 4th grade class, looking at rocks with magnifying lenses. The kids loved it. They were so adorable and having so much fun introducing thrmselves to us in English. The school was really basic and some of the classrooms were being repaired from the earthquake last year, even this far north.

Our lunch was interesting. We split into 2 groups and went to local houses. The meal was like Chinese fajitas. I tried lotus root. Yum. Crunchy.

We went to the Wild Goose Pagoda yesterday, which was fantastic. It was the fisrt strong sign of Buddhism that I'd seen here. They had the 3 Buddhas: happy, lucky, and traditional.

Our final activity was to have dinner with a local woman. She took Mark and I to dinner, and then to the grocery store when we loved the lily root in one of the dishes. She bought us each a bag of dried lily root to take home. We ended up back at her house to meet her husband and son. Her son is 14, very tall, and loved basketball. He likes LeBron James the best, and the rockets. We taught them to say Celtics the right way. Next time I'd bring NBA stuff. Their apartment was really modern, which surprised me.

16 April 2009

Terra Cotta Soldiers part 2

It's just after 3 and we're on the bus again after a great lunch at a very touristy restaurant near the terra cotta soldiers. They had these 'belt noodles' that were flat and wide and served plain with scallions and they had sweet and sour chicken, not deep fried. They also has sweet potatoes but they were really just potatoes with a candy glaze on them. ~ ate them even though I'm not crazy about potatoes. Mom, you should be proud.

Before that we spent hours at the terra cotta soldier museum. It was fascinating. There are 3 pits they are excavating. One was damaged by a peasant revolt thousands of years ago. One was damaged when the roof caved in. The other was slowly being dug out. Most of the statues you see have been damaged or put back together. Only five were found in tact. At night archaeologists are still working on it but it is slow going.m There is a very strong belief in China that you are not to disturb the tombs of the dead which is why they don't excavate more even though they know it's there. There are over 600 pits and only 30 have been investigated. The tomb itself has not been touched at all.

terra cotta soldiers

so very cool.

15 April 2009

long day

ugh. got up @ 4 to go to the airport to fly to Xi'an. got there- no plane. and fog. so we sat on the floor from 6 until 11 waiting not even able to check in. we finally got in and went through security, which was very strict. then we waited at the gate until almost 1. it was a miserable wait: crowded, sitting on the floor, and loud. then the plane was even worse. the flight was so turbulent that I thought we were going to start barrel rolling.

The best part of the day by far was a stop at the tomb of the 4th Han emperor. unlike Egypt, Chinese tombs are not excavated. they are only digging in the trenches around the burial mound. each trench is a "room": garden, kitchen, etc.

14 April 2009

school

visited a school today. high school. kids attend from 8-4. they have to take 13 subject exams to graduate. makes mcas seem easy. they combine arts and sciences. this pic is a drum playing robot some kids designed and built.

13 April 2009

The height of luxury

I promise that post about fashion is coming, but I'm going to put it off until after we visit a high school today.

Last night we went for the ultimate luxury: a foot massage. If you're thinking of an American pedicure, think again. This massage starts with your neck (which okay, I think I'm a little bruised from that, ow), then travels to your arms, and finally your legs and feet. FOR AN HOUR. That's right, an hour long foot massage, working away the stress of the day. They bring you green tea and a warm compress for your shoulders as it occurs, and you sit in a recliner with your legs propped up on a soft ottoman. The room is almost dark, with quiet music and nature sounds, the drip of a fountain too. It's heavenly. I admit, I fell asleep, and almost feel bad about missing the luxury of it.

After dinner we decided that we were all sick of Chinese food so we went to a Middle Easter restaurant. Hummus and tomato soup served in a bread bowl that would make Panera jealous. It was delicious.

Cabs here are incredibly cheap. They all start at 11 RMB and we rode for almost half an hour the other night and it only went up to 20 RMB. That's under $4. One US dollar is worth about 6.8 RMB (Yuan). Everything's really cheap here. We were talking to the restaurant owner, a guy from Israel, and he said that he has considered opening a branch of his restaurant in Europe or back home but when he looks at the numbers the cost would eliminate his profits. He also said he's benefitting from the economy because people aren't going to really fancy restaurants anymore, they're coming to mid-range places like his.

talking with students

we met with some students today. i talked with a 18 year old student from Shanghai. he told me there is no Mexican food in china. Kelan wanted to know that. He is in hotel management at university. Another person said people in China love Obama. they don't vote here but love their president because he's good for the economy. To learn English they go to American restaurants- KFC, Dunkin Donuts, PapaJohns. Kids here spend most of their time alone so they love the idea that kids in America go to sports, etc, after school. Kids spend too much time alone with video games here. They also thought we looked like American movie stars.

12 April 2009

Using computers in China is difficult。

Hi! Using computers in China is difficult。 The thing does weird stuff to spacing and keeps turning off my Arabic letters in favor of Chinese characters。  And my dad’s complaining about a grammatical error。  Sheesh。

Yesterday was a great day。 After touring the gorgeous gardens in the morning, we went to lunch at a restaruant。 All of the meals here are ‘family style’ where they bring out a bunch of dishes and put them on a big lazy suzanne spinner in the middle of the table。 It then spins around and you help yourself to whatever you want。 They have meat, lots of seafood, vegetables, and they finish wish soup and then dessert。 So far my favorite has been these spicy clear noodles in a sweet potato sauce。  Yum! 

After lunch we went to the museum for a famous writer from the early 1900s named LuXun。  We heard a talk from an expert on him, and then toured the museum。 After, we walked through an area called the Japanese Concession to his final residence in the city。 The walk was great- we saw the street meat vendors and people selling everything from hangers to fruit from the back of their bicycles。 The house was not that interesting, except to see the tight quarters people lived in。

After the house, we walked back to the museum which was in a huge park。 We had some free time there。 It‘s not like parks in America。 First, it’s really noisy。 It‘s beautiful, but there’s music everywhere, from organized group-sings to a random guy with an instrument。 There were even karaoke stations set up all over the park。  There were people playing badmitton and doing Tai Chi,and even a giant bouncy playground that made me wish Iwas a kid。 Some Chinese guy thought we were really funny taking pictures so he took pictures of us。 I‘m glad Iwas amusing to some one。  After, we came back to the hotel。

I went to church last night, since it was Easter, and that was really interesting。 The whole service was inChinese, so I didn’t get much except for a few songs that Irecognized (Thine is the Glory, Jesus Christ is Risen Today, and that one that goes “and all these things will be given unto you, alelu, aleluia”) which was so cool to be able to quietly sing along in English while everyone else was in Chinese。 I heard one word over and over again in the sermon, and our guide said it was “we“ or ”us“ but it sounds like ”woman“。 Anyway, it was surprisingly full and most of the people there were Chinese。 I guess the rules about religion have relaxed considerably in recent years。  Still, every building aruond the church was lit up but the church wasn‘t, and there was no collection plate passed。

Dinner last night was great。  We went to a restaurant called the Crystal Jade。  And okay, I think one of my pieces of chicken was raw and spent a few minutes panicking about salmonella, but really, the food has been better than I expected。 I’m a lot more cautious than a lot of people, not drinking anything with ice or eating raw fruit, but I‘m living by the lessons of Peru and hoping to survive the trip without any gastrointestinal issues。

So Isuppose that’s all。 We’ve got an extra half hour today because the didn‘t do a wake up call, but I’ve been waking up early every morning anyway。 Someone remind me tomorrow to talk about fashion here in China- it‘s definitely an amusing experience。

11 April 2009

gardens

chinese gardens are gorgeous. lots of balance- rock and tree, rooms is separate pavillions. it's hazy but warm and beautiful. dragons on the roof protect from fire.