Apr 30, 2007

Two trees in the ocean




Koh Payam Island, Thailand

Mr. Gao and his son in the longboat.

Thai tree

Mark



Mark, selling books enthusiastically at the English Market. This is an activity which allows students to practice their English and buy newspapers in English, or other used English books. Mark always greets me with a big grin and a "Hello Miss Mikayla! How are you a doing?"

Apr 23, 2007

Stella



Today I saw Stella compete at the school ping-pong tournament. She didn't win, but she had a good time. Stella is characterized by her pig tails, an incessant giggle and a flair for the dramatic. At one moment she is like a little girl, and the next she is a serious student, trying to grasp a concept or word and make it her own.

I met Stella in class and had the privilege of naming her. She wanted to be named Steve, but after a peek at her purple shoes, I thought we should go with Stella. Stella always makes me laugh. Her Chinese name sounds similar to "Wrong Way" and she likes to joke about it. She also has frequent hilarious dreams which she describes in detail.

Today was a pretty hard China day, but was good to see Stella in the middle of it and have her be so excited to see me. I took this picture while she was trying to run away from the camera, and I think it captures some of who Stella is.... (When she saw it she said, "Monster!" and pretended like she didn't like it, but I'm pretty sure she did.)

Apr 20, 2007

Pollution



Here are a few interesting news items I read lately:

China: Yangtze is Irreversibly Polluted (April 13, 2007, AFP)

China's massive Yangtze river, a lifeline for tens of millions of people, is seriously polluted and the damage is almost irreversible, a state-run newspaper said Monday. More than 370 miles of the river are in critical condition and almost 30 percent of its major tributaries are seriously polluted, the China Daily said, citing a report by the Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The pollution, along with damming and heavy use of boats, has caused a sharp decline in aquatic life along the Yangtze. The report said the annual harvest of aquatic products from the river has dropped from 427,000 tons in the 1950s to about 100,000 tons in the 1990s. It also showed that the huge reservoir created by the Three Gorges Dam, the world's biggest hydropower project, was seriously polluted by pesticides, fertilizers and sewage from passenger boats.

China About to Become Biggest CO-2 Emitter: IEA (April 18, 2007, Reuters)

China will overtake the United States as the world's biggest emitter of heat-trapping carbon dioxide (CO2) either this year or next, the International Energy Agency said on Wednesday. The estimate is much firmer than the IEA's previous forecast, last November, that on current trends China would overtake the United States before 2010. China is set to become the world's top carbon emitter just as serious talks start to extend the U.N.-sponsored Kyoto Protocol on global warming beyond 2012, potentially heaping pressure on Beijing to take more action on climate change. A copy of a so-far unpublished Chinese government global warming report, seen by Reuters, rejects binding caps on carbon emissions until the country's modernization, by the middle of this century, opting instead to brake emissions growth.

The students are aware of these issues. In class this week we discussed global problems. I asked the students to brainstorm amongst themselves and then write their answers on the board. Most of the words written revolved around these two topics.

Apr 10, 2007




There were no chocolate bunnies, or rabbits or fancy eggs. There are no sparkly grasses in baskets or special performance. It was a pretty raw Easter. Just accapella voices and simple conversations about what Easter is. Not much hype. A cultural lesson in class. I got a few text messages, "Happy Easter Day Miss Mikayla!". I called my parents. There was not much of the earthquaking, tomb raising, curtain ripping events this year. But, they were remembered. They were remembered and with them is the hope and promise of new life. New life for our weak lives now, and for after our fragile lives on earth. This year we have seeds and the mystery that comes with things that are invisible, but growing.