For a semester in Hangzhou, every Wednesday afternoon I donned a skirt and stockings( wow, China has really changed me, you say) and (illegally - part time work is prohibited for students) took the title of Lao shi (teacher) at a ( not very local) high school. It went like this: first a 40 min bike ride to the train station, 45 minutes on the gao tie (high speed train), followed by a 20 minute (hair- raising) taxi ride to Yuyao middle school. I would teach two 40 minute classes, inconveniently separated by a 70 minute dinner break. And then this 2+ hour commute would be played out in reverse. My pay was 180RMB (~ 50NZD) per class, and (net) transport pay 170RMB. To my Chinese friends this is more than they could dream of (my poor friend in Xi’an had a weekend job trying to sell ( of all things!) Zespri Kiwifruit at a fruit stall, each day she would earn 100RMB...) , but for foreign teachers, especially for one teaching TOEFL english under the above circumstances, I think its considered a
Chinese uni students will tell you that that uni years are so ‘relaxing’. Come to NZ (where one goes to school to eat his lunch), and you’ll know the definition of ‘ relaxing', I think, as I watch them rush between class and the library, scoff their food at the canteen, be back in their 4 person dorms by 11pm and study till after midnight. Its only after my glimpse into the life of a high school student that I begin to understand.
So instead of parties, I showed them pics of my travels and tried to set interesting essay topics. One was 'Is it better for parents to spend time with their child or buy them things?' For me, the 'right' answer was obvious, but to my dismay, two out of three supported the latter. OK, it wasn't really a statistically sound survey. But was it a reflection of Chinese students' experience?
Make no mistakes, I'm not a cheerleader for NZ's education. And I'm not completely naiive to the rat race of Chinese society. But no matter how many maths whizzes a system like this may produce, if students lose sight of what's 'right', I'm just think somethings wrong. .