These faculty members from the Foreign Language Institute were my first “students” at
Administrators here—like university administrators everywhere--are very practical: their undergraduate students are not ready to take a college-level discipline-specific course in English. And yet, due primarily to the tireless efforts of Yongsheng, whose former classmates and colleagues now occupy positions of authority within the college administration, Shi Da decided to have me teach a series of seminars on American history to their junior faculty during their “short semester,” August 6 through September 7, with seminars also continuing throughout the long semester, from September to January.
The next question was: what would my topic be. Mrs. Wu Yunna wanted know exactly what I'd be speaking on, and I told her that the first day would be an introduction. But apparently Ms. Wu Haiyan, the Vice Dean of the Foreign Languages Institute, wanted something more specific. She came over and I met with her in Mrs. Wu Yunna's office. I told her that I'd like to introduce myself and ask the junior faculty what they were interested in learning. She suggested that, rather than asking them, that I discuss and provide a list of topics on American history from which they could choose topics of interest. So that was the plan.
By this time, I'd been in Mrs. Wu Yunna's office for close to two hours on a day that must have been in the mid 90s. With no air conditioning, I was beginning to wilt. The previous night (and days) had been really, really hot, and I was having a problem cooling off. Our south-facing fourth-floor flat was 90 degrees (no air conditioning or fans, although later we would get fans). I had woken up the night before soaked in sweat. I gave myself two sponge baths, but still couldn’t cool off. That day was even worse. After my meeting with Mrs. Wu Yunna and Ms. Wu Haiyan, I had only two hours to prepare my first class, but spent most of it taking cold showers and holding a frozen water bottle on my head in an effort to cool down. I took three iboprofen, and still felt like I was burning, although I didn't have a fever.
At 2:00pm I went to meet Mrs. Wu Yunna who walked me to my first class at Shi Da. When I walked in the classroom, there were about 25 students (instructors, actually) waiting for me. Mrs. Wu Yunna and Ms. Wu Haiyan, the Vice Deans, seated themselves in the front row. I was introduced by Ms. Nar, the chair of the department, and there I was, giving my first American history class at
To tell the truth, it was the first time I'd felt truly comfortable since I'd been in
I introduced myself and discussed my list of topics in American history. It took about forty-five minutes and then I asked if anyone had suggestions for what they would like to learn (drawn from the topics) and what we might cover in class the next week. No one spoke. Finally, the departmental chair, Ms. Nar, spoke up and suggested that we begin with Native Americans. “Good, are there any other suggestions,” I asked. After another long pause, another brave instructor suggested that she would like to learn about American Christianity, starting with the Puritans. I had my first two lecture topics: Native Americans and the origins of Christianity in
Over the next five weeks, I taught weekly “seminars” to junior faculty in the Foreign Language Institute and the
Every “seminar” followed a similar trajectory. I lectured for about an hour and then we had a question and answer session where, sometimes, I elicited some discussion. In the first two weeks, though, there was often just applause followed by a respectful silence.
Playing the “sage on the stage” is okay as long as you receive non-verbal cues from the audience that your points, your jokes, your ironies, are taking hold. All it takes sometimes is an extremely attentive student to let you know if your message is breaking through or bouncing off. In my classes with the foreign-language faculty, for instance, the British educated Vice Dean, Wu Haiyan sat in the front row and nodded and smiled. After the first weeks, her enthusiasm seemed to rub off on the other faculty members, who began to ply me with questions at the end of my lectures. Later Wu Haiyan would tell me in an email that she “had not expected that the teachers could be so active in the A & Q session, as most of our teachers are normally very quiet in such academic seminars. I think the reason why they were so engaged is because of your excellent presentation[s] and your rich knowledge on American history.”
Her compliment was well-received, but it didn’t assuage my concern that the seminars were not particularly useful or desirable. The junior faculty, I feared, were attending my lessons only because they were told to do so. I was receiving positive feedback all the time, but everyone is so polite here that I doubted they would really tell me how they felt (not really a problem when dealing with American faculty, who are so outspoken and egotistical you can’t get a word in edgewise).
-- On the first day in all my seminars I asked everyone to come next time with written questions about American history. Out of fifty teachers, three actually did this.
--In my first lecture on Native Americans, Ms. Nar, who was operating the powerpoint for me, single-mindedly clicked through the slides at her own brisk pace, ensuring that my lecture was quite succinct. I finished what should have been an hour-long lecture in about forty-five minutes.
-- Before my only lecture to another group of English teachers from the new campus (who teach English to non-English majors), I ate a large plate of noodles from the small store behind our apartment and then had milk tea and mutton meat pie from a Mongolian restaurant up the street. At the beginning of my lecture, I began to feel dizzy. I started to have meat-pie hallucinations and milk tea burps. I thought I was going to faint. I had to stop a few times as they watched me with quiet concern. I told them about the milk-tea burps. They laughed, but laughs in Chinese classrooms sometimes conceal embarrassment. Was I funny or embarrassing? Not really sure. But I struggled through it and it went well in the end.
Now I’m teaching undergraduates English, which is an entirely new and different experience for me. But I’m also expecting to continue teaching seminars to faculty on either American history or teaching methods in
Dave
Below I’ve listed some questions that the junior faculty asked me over the course of the American history seminars (I’ll spare you my answers!):
Q: Do traditional Native American names have given and sur names, and if so, do the sur names relate to the person’s clan or family?
Q: Are Mongolian peoples and Native Americans connected with each other genetically, linguistically, and culturally?
Q: The first Europeans benefited from Native American generosity: why then, did they subsequently support the massacre of Native peoples?
Q: Was the Assimilation Policy (Native Americans) really “Progress”?
Q: Why did Quakers and Puritans wear hats--what does it mean?
Q: Someone told me that 'You cannot understand American history and society without understanding the Puritans'--what do you think?"
Q: How are the Old and New Testaments connected?
Q: If Christianity was originally the religion of Jews, how could it happen that while the Jews were universally persecuted, their religious beliefs, like the Old Testament, were universally read and accepted?
Q: Do Americans actually read the bible?
Q: Is the younger generation of Americans still joining the Christian church?
Q: Why do American people always change their jobs? Is it not accepted to stay in one place all the time? Is there any job discrimination?
Q: What is a typical American hero?
Q: What do Americans think about the Vietnam War?
Q: Why haven't Americans learned from history?
5 comments:
I want to hear your answer to why Americans haven't learned from history!!!!
.....and what IS up with those hats?????????
"not really a problem when dealing with American faculty, who are so outspoken and egotistical you can’t get a word in edgewise"
If I didn't know the great esteem in which I am held in our division, I'd think you meant me with that comment.
I'm curious to see how this will affect your teaching of Intercultural Studies when you get back.
Rob
What great questions your students are asking! I agree that I'd like to hear YOUR answers to them. Do you often run down "rabbit trails" as you teach or do you pretty much stick to the planned lesson for the day? Please let Arienne, Samuel and Grace know that we're thinking about them.
John
Curious that they were so interested in religion (maybe not so curious, but it is to me). Also, no questions about slavery and race relations, what do you make of that?
Then again, even if three of them showed up to class with written questions, you're still beating the hell out of me in terms of student participation!
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