Teaching Award!

16 Apr

Award

Life has been a little bit crazy recently; although I kind of feel like I am always saying that.  The university has put on a program where ever teacher goes through strict evaluation. The first round had students evaluating their teachers. The second round, each teacher visit five other teachers twice and evaluates them both times. So we are all judged 10 times. Plus, our bosses are evaluating us twice each. 

Plus, the mid-term exam for my students was re-scheduled a week earlier, right after two weeks of holidays – meaning, I suddenly went from 2 more weeks of classes to my last class overnight.

It’s all been a wee bit insane 🙂

However, one awesome thing happened this week! I was chosen as one of 76 professors to give a sample lecture in front of the Provincial experts as part of the school’s evaluation. The 76 professors were judged accordingly, and the top teachers receive a bonus. And I was chosen as one of the top 5 in my group!  

My first year, and I’ve already gotten an award!

It was really exciting! 🙂

International earrings!

15 Apr

Lol, my best friend in the US gave me the blue earrings a few years ago. I just found the silver pair on the street last night. Cross-cultural earrings!  

February 2015 Bar Results – Week 2

11 Apr

At the end of week 2 the following states have released their bar results:

**Statistics are compared against February 2014

For other bar exam release dates, check my Bar Results page.  Or go here for past and present statistics.  If you have news about other states, please let me know!

GOOD LUCK!

Too Funny

9 Apr

“Phone Call” by Torakun14

Happy Easter!

6 Apr

 Birthday party with a friend, playing pool with mom and friends, hiking all over the woods with other friends, celebrating sunrise service. Best Life Ever! 

               

February 2015 Bar Results – Week 1

6 Apr

At the end of week 1, the following states have released their bar results:

For other bar exam release dates, check my Bar Results page.  Or go here for past and present statistics.  If you have news about other states, please let me know!

GOOD LUCK!

Happy Easter!

5 Apr

 

 “The angel said to the women, ‘do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here; He is risen, just as he said.” Happy Easter! 

Also, for those of you in China, hope you went and did a good job sweeping the tombs today! It always good to honor and respect those who came before us. Because of their hard work, our lives are blessed. Today is the Tomb Sweeping Holiday, a good day to be respectful to those who are important to us.

Art I Love: A Coloring Book for Adults

3 Apr

“A Coloring Book For Adults, Because Everyone Deserves To Unleash Their Inner Creative”

by Priscilla Frank via “Huffington Post

There are few art forms as meditative, nostalgic and all-around blissful as the coloring book.

There’s just something magical about the ability to transform black-and-white pages into full blown works of art, without ever once undergoing a creative meltdown in the process. The process is intuitive, carefree — the artistic equivalent of a low-stakes game of freeze tag.

twig

Yes, we’re waxing poetic about our third grade creative outlet of choice, the unassuming booklet of canvases that turns even the most reticent of artists into budding creative spirits. And although most practitioners of this enchanting art form haven’t yet hit puberty, there are ways for adults to participate in the glorious art of the coloring book. Enter Johanna Basford, the intrepid soul behind two adult coloring books, Secret Garden and Enchanted Forest, spreading the gospel of the coloring book to aspiring artists of a certain age.

Basford, a commercial illustrator based in the UK, modeled her first book The Secret Garden after the Brodick Castle Gardens on the Isle of Arran, on the West Coast of Scotland. “My grandfather was the head gardener there so we spent every summer and Christmas there,” she wrote to The Huffington Post. “The formal rose gardens of the castle, the Bavarian summer house and lily studded ponds were wonderful places to play as a child; a great place to cultivate a wild imagination!”

wil d

Dubbing herself an “inky illustrator,” Basford uses monochromatic lines to create wild naturescapes waiting to be filled with vitality. “The artwork is all super intricate with lots of hidden little details such as rogue butterflies and curious squirrels to find in the pages. There’s a list of things to find at the front of the book making it an inky treasure hunt of sorts!”

Judging by Basford’s success, we’d say adults are hungry for a creative outlet like this. The artist has sold over one million copies of Secret Garden worldwide, which has been translated into over 14 different languages. There’s something undeniably accessible about the semi-blank pages of a coloring book that provides the training wheels so many budding artists crave. “I think everyone has a creative spark, they just need the opportunity to let it flourish. A blank sheet of paper can be daunting, but a coloring book has the outlines already there, making it easier to pick up a pencil and begin making your mark. I think of the coloring books as collaborations, I create the artwork and the owner of the book brings the color.” . . . .

READ MORE

ESL Teacher Scams ~ High-Paying “Mission Work”

2 Apr

I recently did a post on scams that ESL teachers pull on their employers abroad.  I thought that was an end to it, but after a discussion with some local teachers I’m furious anew.  As a Christian, I’m even more furious right now.

It’s a known fact that ESL is the choice profession of religious missionaries around the world.  A license to teach English will get you a VISA and traveling permission to many countries that might otherwise have rejected your application.  Not to mention the fact that these jobs are always available, you have a steady income, and lots of benefits come with.  Really, it’s a pretty brilliant idea. 

A less know fact is that missionaries are frequently less that truthful with the folks back home about how many perks they are really getting from these jobs.  Contrary to the jobs of most primary school teachers back home, ESL teachers who are willing to teach children are often some of the highest paid middle class workers in the area.  

The perks are amazing.  Teachers of children (especially 2-5 year olds) can make thousands of dollars a month.  Since I’ve been here substituting, I’ve already been offered several jobs that paid 19000-20000+RMB a month, plus a personal driver, a house, and anything else I wanted.  As far as I can tell, the standard is a minimum of 12,000-15,000. Considering the average local person is making about 3,000 RMB, that makes you pretty high up the food chain!  College teachers make significantly less money (as a PhD holder, I make approximately 6500+ RMB a month), but it is still twice as much as anyone else in town I know. Well, maybe not the school president or city mayor, but really.  

Insurance and hospital allowances are included (often by law). Most jobs come with transportation and housing allowances (if housing isn’t provided) that cover your expenses, so you don’t have those costs. A lot of them also include money to cover the bills, and you frequently get paid for vacation and holidays.  The school is usually responsible for VISA and passport fees, and if you pay for your own flight you might want to bargain harder.  

THE SCAM

I listen to these teachers all but bragging about the fact that they still get money off the people back home (for support), and it makes me furious.

They go back home and quote people the dollar amount they are making and they leave out the perks. For example, I do pretty well for myself in China, but in US terms, I’m only making $900 a month. Many teachers are making closer to $700 at my school.  

With that money, I’ve gone on a trip to Korea, several trips through Henan, paid off a hospital bill (2 X-rays, 1 MRI, copies of all of them, and 3 kinds of massively expensive medications), fully decorated my room, eaten what I want, gone out with friends to ktv and fun parties or events, bought a couple fashion items, and basically lived better than I have in a long while. 

Now, I’m no economist, but even I know that American prices are high right now. I lived there until 2014, and I could barely make ends meet.  $900 would have barely paid my gas and food bill. Let alone anything else.  

We aren’t in America. That kind of money goes a long, long way in China.  

Yet these ‘missionary” teachers don’t admit that. They leave the sweet church ladies thinking that they are destitute, living from day to day on “only $700” a month. ONLY??? !!!

REAL LIFE EXAMPLE

This past winter, the teachers were given a 2 month holiday, much longer than normal. And a whole group went down and toured all of South Asia. Bali, Heinan, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, India, etc. They did a whole big several countries tour. 

It sounded really awesome and I was so proud of them. 

Until some of them were talking in the dining hall this past week about how they had to go back home for a week and “find support” from the area churches. They were discussing how they were forced to go back and “reconnect” with the people and put on a “stupid PPT” if they wanted them to keep sending money. One of them was upset because his churches had dropped back ad only sent $1500 that month.  

O_o $1500! That’s massive! That’s like a gold mine here.  You have no bills, no food costs, your home is already furnished, there are no transportation fees, and you just took a huge trip around Asia. And you are being a snot about how the people in America, who actually are struggling, only sent you a buttload of money and not two buttloads of money? 

That is despicable.

 

 

 

Email in China

1 Apr

Over time, it gets harder and harder to use Google and Outlook products here in China. This is a particularly large issue for the wonderful world of email.  Gmail and Outlook mail are no longer working properly even with a VPN.  

The largest problem I’m confronting right now is that Chinese services are blocking “Received” messages from Gmail or Outlook accounts.  For example, QQ (which my students all use), is completely rejecting anything from GMail or Outlook.  

So what can you use?

Well, here are a couple alternatives:

  • QQ – This is what most of the students are using. Basically, you register and download QQ International, and one of the options available to you with an account is QQMail.They have unlimited space and you can add large attachments. The downside is remembering your totally random QQ# email address (e.g. 123456789@qq.com).
  • Foxmail – Doesn’t work with a VPN on.  Offers you an email system that’s pretty good
  • 163.com – Download with Google Chrome browser so you can translate the system into English while you set up your account. Pretty good, a lot of students use it.  

I’ll try to do a comparison on them later. Right now, I use QQ, and I like it a lot. I do get tired of not being able to send an email to very many people and you keep having to enter confirmation codes. But it works!