Shell in China

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Santa Claus is coming to China?

It is about time to start thinking of Christmas! I am bummed to not be home and going shopping on the weekends with everyone else and their dog! I love C

hristmas shopping, tree shopping, decorating the tree, wrapping gifts, etc…

I have had a few people ask about Christmas gifts, so I put together a list that I will post here on my

blog. I know Mom and Dad have already sent a package this way, but hopefully this will supply some ideas if anyone else is thinking of sending something.

*Shoes- size 9 from Payless usually fits well (something kinda’ sporty that I could wear with jeans or slacks)

*Jeans- size 8L from New York and Co. (I like the darker colored jeans best—they are kind of expensive regular price, but go on sale for pretty cheap on a regular basis)

*Capris- size 8 from NY&Co. These may not even be in season right now…anything except jean material would be great.

*Sweater/Cardigan- Medium

*Shirts that can be worn to class and on the weekends...I need things that are multi-functional!! Usually a medium is best.

*Tank tops (the kind with the thick straps at the top that I can wear under stuff…longer ones that can tuck in…)

*Earrings…some small studs that I can use to replace the ones I’ve had in since I left the States

*Good smelling lotion/body spray

*The normal goodies—Poptarts, cereal, hot chocolate mix, candy canes, etc…

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Thanksgiving in China= Chicken!

Turkey Day!!
For the big day we went to Lanzhou. LZ is the capital of Gansu, the province that we live in. It is about 8 hours away by bus. We went up there this last weekend to celebrate Thanksgiving with the other Peace Corps volunteers in the area. We left here Friday after our classes and got in up there just before 10PM! It wasn’t a bad trip, other than the fact that the bus didn’t have heat! Okay- it was freezing!! Horribly! My toes felt like ice cubes by the time we got off the bus. Many of you know how little I like the cold to begin with, and this was just miserable. Once we got to town though, it was great to see everyone again.

Dinner was going to be Saturday evening, so we had Saturday morning to do some DVD shopping and hanging out with friends. When we got up in the morning, it
was snowing, which was a good start to a nice comfy holiday.
There was a small pick-up football game, until the campus police decided that we were having too much fun! They kicked us off the courtyard, but it was okay because we were freezing by that point anyway. I don’t think that it got above 30 degrees up there all weekend long. We had a fabulous Thanksgiving dinner that night. It was as close to America as we could get in China. Lots of families from home contributed to the dinner by sending food in the mail. We had ranch dressing made from a packet, we had Velveeta shells and cheese, we had Parmesan cheese, and even some homemade biscuits.

That was the first Thanksgiving I had ever spent away from my family. (Can you believe it? 27 years old and this is the first time I have not been with my parents for the holiday!) It wasn’t exactly the same as home, but the other Peace Corps volunteers have become like my family here, so it was good.

After a fabulous dinner, I was initiated into the game of beer pong. It is a dorky game that consists of throwing ping-pong balls into cups of beer and the other team has to drink anything that you get a ball in. This was great, except for the fact that I don’t drink at all! My poor partner, Simon, was drinking for two on Saturday night! I had a good time though!

On Sunday we had to come back here to Chengxian, so we took the bus back to town. It was great, expect that the second bus did not have heat, again! I am not going to be a fan of winters in China unless I figure out how to get the bus that has heat on it!








Picture 1- Thomas, Si
mon and I playing a Chinese card game called "Fight the Landlord."


Picture 2- Thanksgiving would not have been possible without the loving contributions by family of Lanzhou volunteers. They even sent fall-themed decorations for the party!


Picture 3- 2 turkeys??

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

What Will We Make From Our Feet Next Week?

Thanksgiving is almost upon us in China. Not as exciting here as it is at home, since it doesn’t exist here, but I decided to incorporate it into my lessons as a cultural activity anyway. At least then I can feel “Thanksgiving-y” for a few days. In my Oral English classes we talked about things we are thankful for and then I had them make the American elementary school staple—the hand turkey!!! We traced our hands on papers and made them into turkeys, complete with feathers bearing lists of things for which we are thankful. I then had the students hang these on their classroom walls. Not only was it a good lesson with lots of English speaking, but we also succeeded in decorating their classrooms, which can be rather sparse to say the least!




After the end of the lesson in one class, I asked them if they had enjoyed making the hand-turkeys and they all responded with the usual “yes!” Then I had a girl raise her hand and ask, in all seriousness, what we were going to make out of our feet next week! I guess I will have to think on that one! I am not sure I want fifty kids with their shoes off, tracing their feet in my classroom. That could more than a little stinky!!!!!

In my Teaching Methodology class the students are just beginning their individual lessons to the class. They chose a topic out of a bag and have to present a 15-20 minute lesson on that topic to the class. They have to come prepared with a lesson plan and a focus on one of Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences. Today my first two students presented. I have put pictures of them here for you to see. The girl is Amanda (her lesson was on sports) and the boy is Euan (his lesson was on animals).






Saturday, November 18, 2006

Still no heat...



Still no heat...the newest rumor is "tomorrow," but I will believe it when I feel it! Until then, wrapped in a blanket is how I will spend my evenings.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Terra-cotta Warriors

Last weekend Thad and I had the chance to go to Xi'An to see the world-famous Terra-cotta Warriors. It was an awesome sight and one that I can't wait to visit again when family comes to China.

(Click on the link above to find more information and pictures of the warriors.)

This last weekend I think I saw more laowai (foreigners) than I have since we left San Francisco in June. There were so many Westerners there! There were also a whole lot of people selling souveniers and other randon stuff. As we were leaving the warriors, a woman walked up to us and said, "Hello beef noodle!" I think she was trying to get us to come eat beef noodles at her restaurant, but only succeeded in calling us beef noodles! Oh well...

Besides seeing the warriors, we also visited the Muslim area of town. There was a lot of fun shopping and bargaining to be done there. I rea
lly enjoyed just walking around and looking at all the sights. This part of town is great at night. There are lots of cool lights and interesting things to see/do. We attended a short shadow-puppet show. Shadow puppets are an ancient art here and amazing to see. The show itself was just average, but the puppets themselves are really intricately crafted and quite impressive. There was also a guy in the courtyard who had a gigantic telescope that we used to look at the moon! It seemed so close as we looked. I could see the craters and an amazing amount of detail on it. Very cool to come to China to see the moon! The guy showed us how to take pictures of it through the lens.


Since Xi'An is a very tourist-y place, there is a lot of Chinglish to be found. Niffy ordered the spaghetti with jam and cheese for dinner one night. That same menu had puberty dove on it. No one was brave enough to get that one!

We stayed at a hostel. That was my first-ever hostel experience and overall it was okay. It is not the same as a hotel, but it worked out alright. It definately fit my PC budget more than a hotel would have! Since there were five of us (John and Erin, Niffy and Thad and me) we were able to get a room for just us, which made it a little more comfortable. I am not sure I would have liked bunking with people I didn't know. There was a community bathroom, but it was clean and had hot water for showers.


(This cute kitty lived at the hostel and like to try to come into our room every chance he got. He also was the menu protector at the bar. He is one of the most normal cats I've seen in China. He looked healthy and was not on a string!)


We were only able to take weekend leave, so we left site late on Friday and had to return home on Sunday night. It made for a really short trip, but one that we enjoyed not only for the sites to see, but also the chance to hang out with other PCVs. Coming home on Sunday, we were not able to get a train, as the only one with seats available didn't leave Xi'An until 6:00 PM, which would have meant we couldn't have gotten back to Chengxian that night, so instead we took the bus. It was a nine hour bus ride, but at least it was a bigger bus and Thad and I had a bit of leg room! (That is always an issue on bus rides here!)



So, we are here for the next two weeks, but I think our next travel adventure will be the weekend right after Thanksgiving. The plan is to take weekend leave and go to Lanzhou to celebrate the holiday with the PCVs there. There is a football game in the works, as well as a dinner and a whole lot of hanging out with everyone.




(PS- Notice the terra-cotta colored font! I am sticking with the theme thank you very much!!)

Monday, November 06, 2006

Weekend of Hikes...

Last week turned out to be kind of crazy. On Monday we had the normal English Corner with our students in the evening, and then we went out to dinner with Rachel and Tomas. Tuesday was just classes as normal and then Wednesday we were told that there would be no more classes for the week. The students had to take some type of written English test on Thursday and I don’t really know why Friday was cancelled. Wishing we had known ahead of time that classes were going to be cancelled so we could maybe take weekend leave and go somewhere, we decided to make the best of our long weekend here in Chengxian. Well, either make the best of it our try to kill ourselves…one or the other!

On Thursday, after having a nice lazy morning around the house, we met Rachel and Tomas to go for a bike ride/hike. We rode through town and got to see some parts that we haven’t seen before. That was pretty neat. About 15 minutes from the school, by bike, we got to the base of a mountain. We parked the bikes at the bottom and headed up. The hike up was about half an hour and not too tiring, looking back now. I was a bit tired at the time, but now it seems like nothing! About ¾ of the way up the mountain is a small temple that we stopped and rested at and looked around. We also met up with some second-year English students, so after coming back down the mountain, we decided to take them to dinner with us. We all (I think there were probably ten of us) went to a countryside restaurant and sat in the sun while we waited for our dinner. It is incredible to think that it was so warm on an early November afternoon. I had just a light jacket on and was comfortable. (The hike up and down the mountain may have played into that as well.)


While we waited for our food, basking in the sun, the girls told us a bit about their living situation. They are all roommates. Six girls to a room! (I did that for a year and a half at BYU and I know how tough it can be with six girls in one apartment, let alone a single room!!) The roommates that they start with as freshman are the ones that they stay with for all three years of school. They were telling us that for the most part they get along fine, although sometimes they have “different ideas” about things. I think that is the nice way of saying sometimes they argue!

Friday morning we got a phone call saying there would be an English department dinner that evening and that we were to be at the school gate at 5PM. Dinner was okay. It was nice to have so many English teachers in one room, but there was surprisingly little English spoken! Most of the teachers seem to be really wary of using their English with the foreign teachers. The food itself was just average. I have been to banquets with better food, but at least I didn’t have to spend too much time pushing food around my plate, pretending like I was eating it! (That is a talent I perfected in the States that has carried over to China quite well. Now, I just push food around with a chopstick instead of a fork.)

Saturday was the big planned hike. With the help of Ren Laoshi (a teacher in the Chinese department who speaks pretty good English) we headed up the highest mountain around Chengxian.


The hike started at the base of the mountain at 10AM and concluded at the same spot at 5PM. The in-between seven hours were filled with a lot of steep paths, muddy walkways and constant heart palpitations on my part! Going up was pretty tough in some spots. Ren Laoshi was really worried that we would get sick,

so when not too far up the moutain, all of the foreign teachers were down to just t-shirts, he was really worried that we were going to get the flu. He also didn’t like that we all found the shady spots during the rests. He told us it is Chinese custom to rest in the sun. We said that we appreciated his concern, but we were sticking to the shade!!

At the top of the mountain (something like 1500 meters) there was a series of temples that we were able to explore and we took lots of pictures. The view of the valley below was just amazing from that height. When we started off on the hike in the morning, it was a bit over

cast, but by the time we got to the top, just after 1PM, the clouds had burnt off and we could see forever! It was really amazing.


The hike back down the moun

tain was less painful, but still a bit tricky in places since parts of the pathway were muddy and slick. I ended up on my butt 1 ½ times coming down. (One full butt-slide and one where I caught myself…Don’t worry Mom, I wasn’t hurt either time!) Once we were at the bottom, we saw the cab waiting for us! That was a nice sight, as we were all pretty tired. Ren Laoshi had arranged for the cab to come back at 4:30, but I guess he decided to wait, even though we didn’t get back until 5PM. (Not too bad of an estimate for such a long hike.)

After coming back into town, we went to dinner with Tomas and Rachel and then dragged ourselves home. My six flights of stairs, to which I am pretty used to now, looked awfully daunting, but we hauled ourselves up and just kind of crashed on the couches for awhile.

Overall, that hike was really interesting and amazing, but on Sunday, my legs and knees didn’t think is was so great! Thad and I were both feeling the day-after affects of the hike!

That was our exciting weekend. Within three days I did more hiking that I have ever done in my life. I can’t really say I enjoy the hiking, but the views were spectacular.






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Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Wan (4th tone) sheng (4th tone) jie(1st tone) ...otherwise known as Halloween!

Halloween was a couple of days ago, and despite being on the other side of the world, I still had to celebrate it! (Halloween has to be my least favorite holiday ever...things in costumes creep me out!)

Our school's Oral English Association threw a Halloween party on Tuesday night and all five of the foreign teachers were invited. We were also the only five in costumes! haha...Many of the students had created masks, but we were the only ones in actual costumes. Luckily we are used to standing out and it wasn't a big deal.

The party started with the viewing of The Corpse Bride, which I think the kids liked. I had never seen it before and thought it was a cute movie. Then, there were some strange games. One was a crazy version of tug-o-war where two people are tied to a rope and one wins by popping all of the ballons on their side of the room. The winner got a candy and the loser not only lost, but then he had to drink some pepper-water concoction! Ewww!! We (as foreign teachers) put on a little scary story. Sarah read it in the dark while Tomas, Rachel, Thad and I roamed around the room scaring kids and adding sound effects. I am not sure the kids understood anything of the story, but they were creeped out by us! I guess that was the point.

Finally, when we thought we were done for the night, all of the sudden dance music came on! They had a short dance at the end. (They call it a "disco." These kids have been raised with textbooks that use British English, so I am learning all sorts of new names for things!) Luckily, the dance consisted of only three songs, but we did have to go dance. Dancing entailed jumping up and down or running in circles...I felt like I was back at the MMS Halloween dance!


Oh- I don't want to end without saying a huge "CONGRATULATIONS" to the MHS football team. They are headed to Orofino this weekend to play in the state playoff games! Good luck guys!!!



This is from the Halloween party. The kids used oranges to hold the candles. Pretty creative if you ask me.


Dancing at the end of the party. I think the spots are dust in the air. On my left in Sarah, she is from the VSO and next to her is Rachel from Amity.



Look! It's Sporty Spice! hehe...This is actually Thad's uniform from when he was playing on the school team.



Pictures, finally!

Thad finally got the pictures to load on my page. (He said I HAD to mention that he was the one that fixed it, so there is my mandatory disclaimer.)

This post is mostly going to be pictures to update you on stuff in China. I will write a real one later.


This is from last weekend when we went to Tianshui to meet Ben and Kristen. There were some damsels in distress (their badmitton birdie was stuck in a tree) and Ben decided to be their white knight and save them. Sir Ben threw his water bottle at the tree to knock the birdie down, which worked by the way, but when the bottle his the ground it shattered on the bottom and created a nice water-works display. I think the girls were more thrilled with his water mess than getting their game back on track!



This is the school cafeteria (canteen as the kids say) that we eat in each day at lunch. It is chaos on a daily basis! You basically grab a tray, shove your way to the front and try to be the next one to pass your tray to the lunch server guy. Then, it is off to get chopsticks and find a seat. If there is not an open table, which is often, we sit with some Chinese students, who usually get really embarrassed and giggle a lot and then don't really talk to us!




Here I am with another cute puppy! These are a dime a dozen, but I never see them bigger...hmm....This little guy was licking my fingers because I had just finished some cotton candy and I guess they tasted good. The problem was, as a puppy, he did more chewing than licking! So cute!!


Niffy and I at Pizza Mira. When we went to Lanzhou for our flu shots, Thomas and Kari helped me put together a little 30th birthday party for Thad. We were a few weeks early, but I knew it was the only chance to get together with all of them. We look like we are having a really important conversation about something, but the topic was more likely along the lines of "So, today I taught my students what it means to 'pinky swear,' what did you teach?"




Thad and Kari at his birthday party. The hat came free with the cake!





Hehe! These have to be the most frightening mannequins I have ever seen in my life! They were outside a store in Tianshui. Do these make you want to buy anything? NO!! They make you want to run the other way and gouge your eyes out with chopsticks!!




This is Angie's apartment from last time we went to Lanzhou. (That was the flu shot trip.) I'm just hanging out, killing time, waiting for everyone to show up so we can go to Thad's birthday party.





Just for Matt: The One!

Blog of a Peace Corps China volunteer serving as a TEFL teacher in Cheng Xian, Gansu, China.

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Name: Michelle Ross
Location: Chengxian, Gansu, CN

In America, I teach 8th grade English and reading and really enjoy spending time with middle school students. Some people think I am crazy for it, but Marsing has a great group of kids and I love being a part of their lives as they grow up! Right now I live in China and teach English and teaching methods to students who want to be teachers. I am here through Peace Corps, which I think is a fabulous experience and something that more people should look into doing! The application process can be a bit of a pain, but it is well worth the time and effort. Check out Peace Corps and give something back to the world that has given you so much!! Teaching runs in the family, as just about everyone is involved in education in one way or another. My dad is retired, but he was a teacher, counselor and principal for 30+ years, my mom is an elementary counselor, my sister and husband are both teachers and my brother will finish his teaching degree this next spring! "Those who can, do; those who can do magic, teach!"

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