What's in the News

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1170 on: October 22, 2009, 05:55:26 PM »
Interesting article.  I wonder how far the investigations will go.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091021/ap_on_re_as/as_china_gangs
Be kind to dragons for thou are crunchy when roasted and taste good with brie.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1171 on: October 24, 2009, 02:37:22 PM »
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 02:58:23 PM by Mister Barfly »

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Stil

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1172 on: October 31, 2009, 03:54:27 PM »
Hahahahahahahahah riiiiight

South Korea and Japan consider history textbook with China

http://ow.ly/xNu4

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1173 on: October 31, 2009, 08:22:37 PM »

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1174 on: November 01, 2009, 03:52:16 PM »
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/31/nyregion/31kidnap.html?pagewanted=2&sq=international%20kidnapping&st=cse&scp=1

Unbelievable. An FT in China kidnaps his daughter from her mother and the child ends up abandoned in a Chinese orphanage. What a sack of  asasasasas.

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1175 on: November 01, 2009, 04:19:41 PM »
The bloke clearly loves his daughter - NOT!  Nasty fella, into power plays for control.  I hated custody battles back in OZ when I was working with Families.  It usually ended up not being about the child but about who had the most power, who could hurt the other person most.  Interviewing people in these cases was horrible.  Trying to make recommendations for the court given the web of lies proffered was hard.  But.. this one should be a no-brainer for the US welfare authorities to recommend to the courts that he never be allowed unsupervised access to his child again.  US courts do have parental, care worker, GP/Dr etc interviews before making any form of custody order, don't they?  My knowledge of US custody stuff is limited to Kramer vs Kramer!!

Poor little girl - she must have been so frightened in a Chinese orphanage - those places are NOT filled with light and loving care!!  Pleased mum got her back.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2009, 05:30:17 PM by Lotus Eater »

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Stil

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1176 on: November 01, 2009, 04:56:46 PM »

39 year old singer Chen Lin 陈琳 committed suicide last night in Beijing by jumping from her apartment.

http://j.mp/2q5iSj (Chinese)

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1177 on: November 01, 2009, 07:09:34 PM »
Stil

Won't open here  llllllllll
Be kind to dragons for thou are crunchy when roasted and taste good with brie.

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Stil

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1178 on: November 03, 2009, 02:35:28 AM »
Middle school kidnapping plot busted in Jilin
from Danwei

City Evening News
November 2, 2009
Two teenage girls from rural Siping in Jilin Province conspired with a 19-year-old high school dropout who was working in a bar, to sell local middle school girls into prostitution.

Zhao and Dong, both fourteen years old, tricked five middle-school students into coming with them to the city of Gongzhuling, where they held them for 68 hours before they were discovered by police.

Zhao and Zou, the 19-year-old, hatched the unsuccessful moneymaking scheme online. "I wanted to take them off to be working girls. They'd sell their bodies and we'd make money," Zou later confessed to police.

Here's how things went down, according to a report in the City Evening News:

On October 15, Zhao called up Zou and arranged for him to rent a car to pick up a few girls from Gujiazi. She and Dong would meet him there. At 10 am on the 16th, Zou rented a Songhuajiang mini-van and arrived at the gate to Middle School #2 in the Liaohe rural administration district. When classes let out at 11, Zhao had five of her classmates get in the car by telling them that it was her birthday and she was taking them to lunch. She first said that they were going to eat in Lishu, but when they got there she said they would go on to the city of Gongzhuling. Zou lied to a friend, saying that his girlfriend was in town but had no place to stay. He borrowed a key and took them to his friend's place. At 6 that evening, Zou went out to ask around but was unable to find any place to "take in" the girls, so he returned after buying some things to eat.

After supper on the 16th, one girl said that she wanted to go home, and the other girls began to agitate for hiring a cab home. The suspects placated them by saying they'd be sent home the following day. After the argument, Zhao dragged the girl who first suggested going home into the next room and beat her with a belt.

The article goes on to describe more beatings at the hands of Zhao and Dong over the next two days. Zou was apparently prepared to take the girls back home on the morning of the 17th after he was unable to sell them into prostitution.

Parents of the missing girls notified police on the afternoon of the 17th, and the girls were rescued at 7 am on the 19th after a 39-hour investigation.

The happy conclusion:

On the morning of the 19th, parents of the five kidnapped girls came to the police station bearing two banners. Practically every parent called out through tears, "If the police hadn't rescued them in time, who knows what would have happened to our kids. At the critical moment, the people's police came through!" As they were taking their children home, the parents tried to press a stack of cash on the officers in charge of the case, but the police politely declined.

A more banal threat to secondary education appeared in the sidebar of today's paper: the eight "unwritten rules" that govern elementary and middle schools. The article, cribbed from a CCTV report, pairs a rule enacted to make education more fair or to reduce student stress with circumstances that actually exist in many parts of the country:

No matriculation tests; parents compete for spots in schools
Entrance exams may be prohibited, but there are lots of other ways to jockey for access to the best schools;
School selection fees have disappeared in name only; parents make "voluntary" donations;
Mathematics Olympiad stopped; "Hope Cup" takes its place
Zhejiang's Department of Education put a stop to the extracurricular, competition-focused math program in primary schools, but the drive to gain awards has kept supplemental math classes alive;
No promotion-based rankings; schools still compete for top honors
Schools aren't supposed to compare advancement rates;
"Key classes" prohibited; "innovative classes" keep cropping up
According to Ministry of Education rules, compulsory grade levels are not supposed to be divided into ordinary classes and "experimental classes," "accelerated classes," "innovative classes," and so forth. Many schools continue to divide up their student body, but they're more circumspect about the terminology used;
No make-up classes on holidays; Classes are still made-up, but in a separate location;
Teachers may not conduct paid tutoring; Swap classes and teach
Teachers tutor but aren't often called out on it. They're only catering to market demand;
No full-time test prep classes; Entire classes change locations.
Links and Sources
City Evening News (Chinese): Two 14-year-old girls kidnap 5 junior high girls, Eight unwritten rules for primary and secondary schools

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old34

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1179 on: November 03, 2009, 03:44:30 AM »
France may be hiring native English speaking teachers soon?

http://is.gd/4L2hh
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit; wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad. - B. O'Driscoll.
TIC is knowing that, in China, your fruit salad WILL come with cherry tomatoes AND all slathered in mayo. - old34.

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George

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1180 on: November 03, 2009, 11:58:32 AM »
Quote
"The legacy of cultural protectionism is one factor, and the way foreign languages are taught in school is another. Students pass language exams only to discover they can't really speak [the language]."
Sounds like China!
The higher they fly, the fewer!    http://neilson.aminus3.com/

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Eagle

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1181 on: November 03, 2009, 01:57:14 PM »
Is it any different in any country taking a second language in a public school?  I know that in the USA and Canada, learning a second language is noted as a score on report cards, not in real ability to function in that language in the countries where that language is spoken.
“… whatever reality may be, it will to some extent be shaped by the lens
through which we see it.” (James Hollis)

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Schnerby

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1182 on: November 04, 2009, 01:25:34 AM »
"China Dismisses Minister of Education"


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/03/world/asia/03china.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=china%20education&st=cse


Did someone say corruption?

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1183 on: November 04, 2009, 04:00:30 AM »
Certainly not a lot there that is news to most of us. Neither the systemic abuse nor the scapegoating should surprise any of us. Q now is, is the new minister just another fall-guy, or is he a real minister, someone who is interested in grabbing the reins and controlling the horses? <shakes head> Next!

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1184 on: November 04, 2009, 06:33:12 AM »
The last dozen posts demonstrate perfectly why this is close to my favourite thread.
And there is no liar like the indignant man... -Nietszche

Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task. -William James

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