Monthly Update of Hailiang Education Group March 2021

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Monthly Update of Hailiang Education Group March 2021 Monthly Update of Hailiang Education Group March 2021 u Monthly Thought from Management Contents Principal General of Hailiang Inc. Mr. Cuiwei Ye:Realizing the Utopia of Education u Business Updates • Hailiang Education and Nanjing University cooperate in Setting up “Hailiang College”, a Talent Training and Development Base. Cooperate to Build the Education Talent Training Base "Hailiang College” • Hailiang Education High-end Talents Double Election Meeting: First Batch of Reserve Principals from Prestigious Universities (Tsinghua University and Peking University) are in Place • Hailiang Education and Shaoxing Cultural Tourism Commence a Comprehensive Study Trip Strategic Cooperation • Wuhu Hailiang Experimental School Achieves Good Results in its debuts in the City’s Joint Examination. • 647 students from Hailiang Education Achieved Good Results, Wining 165 Provincial First Prizes • Hailiang Mingyou First English Writing Contest (Junior High) Winner List • Hailiang Study Trip Releases 2021 Summer Future Education Products • Notes for Hailiang’s "Aid Tibet Class” • Hailiang Foreign Language Food Festival, One-Stop Food Tasting from around the World • 2021 "Four Seasons Glistening" Hailiang Education Campus Photography Contest Kicks off • …… Monthly Thought from Management Realizing the Utopia of Education Make education a little more romantic. The original meaning of Utopia is laputan, which is the imagination of a wonderful society in human ideology. In our opinion, the utopia of education can be achieved through Mr. Tao Xingzhi’s saying “The ultimate goal of teaching is to teach people to seek truth, the ultimate goal of learning is to be a real person", and the "six liberations" in his educational practice. With the passage of time, Mr. Tao Xingzhi's series of advocacy has not been outdated but rather the "educational utopia" should become a reality now. At the two sessions not long ago, Tang Jiangpeng, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People‘s Political Consultative Conference, emphasized in an interview: “Education is not all Mr. Cuiwei Ye about score, let alone the fundamental goal of education.”, which received a series of questioning Mr. Cuiwei Ye has served from the public for being impractical. Indeed, the current social reality, anxiety, loss and hardship as a director and principal regarding education are growing with different opinions on the issue of education. However, if general of Hailiang Inc. everyone has a utopia of education and a long-term vision when discussing education issues, and With the accumulation of find a rational channel and the way forward for education. On the road of exploration, learning from 17 years of experience the strengths of others is an effective way to develop a strong oneself. Therefore, a principal should being the principal of accurately grasp how education goes beyond utilitarian and secular. Hangzhou No.2 High School. Mr. Cuiwei Ye has won the honorary Back to the essence of basic education. Basic education in Japan has always been praised in its title of "Contemporary basic logic for firstly respecting life. When we encounter challenges in life, survival skills and Education Master” with high reputation and rich physical fitness are the most meaningful, not scores and rankings. The implication for this is that we experience in education. must truly return to the essence of basic education, keep children healthy, have good habits, allow children to be calm when facing challenges, stand up when facing setbacks, and let children be willing to share with others in the process of setbacks and take responsibility firstly. This is true education. 1 Monthly Thought from Management People must be creative. Mankind has entered a post-industrial civilization, and a lot of assembly line work have been replaced by robots. And we are just turning people into machines. Current education is to arrange full of training courses for children, squeezing the time for rest and entertainment, and turning children into score copiers. This approach may allow them only to remember knowledge but lose their full creativity. To a large extent, exam-oriented education is an education that responds to current competition and selection. It more or less makes children lose their spirituality and creativity. With the development of the times, what education needs to solve most is not knowledge, not topics, but wisdom, creation, and a larger pattern. We should protect children's natural creativity. The utopia of education can become a reality now. There is such a school: it is surrounded by mountains and rivers, and it is rich in Chinese aesthetics of mountains and rivers and humanistic meaning; it is not only scores, but only talents, and pays attention to “the completion, happiness and future of people”. This school is the Xianghu Future School that Hailiang Education plans to open in September this year. It was founded by a group of people from Hailiang Education. To establish this school, the primary consideration is how to gain the trust of parents and students, and to withstand the baptism of time. We will uphold the education concept of "everyone has talents, everyone will be talent, and all lives are brilliant". Corresponding to the three educational strategies of whether there are different types of education, teaching students according to their aptitude, and each each is in his proper place, from a fair starting point, a fair process to a fair result, forming a good educational closed loop. Secondly, we will follow the basic logic of "people-oriented, connection, leisure, coordination, low-carbon, and creation", and cultivate modern citizens with "Chinese heart, national soul, world vision, future brain, and international style". Xianghu Future School has followed these concepts from the teaching staff, diversified curriculum, to the organic and healthy food supply, and the school brain that empowered by data! In addition, we will aim at the high-level learning and growth of students, and provide children with space to develop, so that every child can "be the best self"! 2 Hailiang Education and Nanjing University Cooperate in Setting up “Hailiang College”, a Talent Training and Development Base. Cooperate to Build the Education Talent Training Base "Hailiang College” • On March 4th, Zhougang Zhu, Vice President of Hailiang Education Management Group, and Hao He, General Manager of Talent Development Company, visited Nanjing University and participated in the signing ceremony of the cooperation between Nanjing University and Hailiang Education Management Group Co., Ltd. to build Hailiang College and the signing ceremony of Zhejiang Hailiang charity foundation’ s donation to Nanjing University. • In order to build a cooperation platform for student employment and career development, play the role of collaborative innovation, and jointly explore a new model for cultivating basic education talents with the integration of production and education, Hailiang Education will cooperate with Nanjing University to build "Hailiang College" as a pilot college for basic education talent training. • Hailiang College of Nanjing University has set up a “Hailiang Class” to recruit qualified students, and to implement a directional training model that combines "on-campus theoretical teaching, professional basic training, and off-campus internships" to cultivate education management talents and elite teachers. • Vice President Zhougang Zhu and Secretary-General Xiaodong Zhang signed the donation agreement. Part of this donation was used to set up the “Hailiang Education Scholarship” of Nanjing University to help cultivate students of Hailiang College; the other part was injected into the "Student Career Planning and Employment Guidance Support Fund" of Nanjing University to support the construction and development of the Student Employment Guidance Center. At the ceremony, Secretary-General Xiaodong Zhang expressed his gratitude and admiration for Hailiang’s education; Dr. Junjie Ge highly praised the work of Hailiang’s talent introduction in the past. • Signing Ceremony 3 Hailiang Education High-end Talents Double Election Meeting: First Batch of Reserve Principals of Prestigious Universities (Tsinghua University and Peking University) are in Place • The two parties participating in this double election are mentor group which consists of Lei Peng and Zhougang Zhu, the two vice presidents of Hailiang Education Management Group, and 13 principals from Hailiang Senior Middle School, Hailiang Junior Middle School, Hailiang Experimental High School, Lanzhou Hailiang Experimental School and other schools under Hailiang Education. The other party consists of 15 outstanding graduates who have signed a tripartite agreement with Hailiang Education who are about to graduate or have graduated from top local universities such as Peking University, Tsinghua University, Nanjing University, etc. They are the first batch to be selected by Hailiang Education and will be cultivated to become reserve principals as they have the potential of being principals. • The graduates introduced themselves and displayed their learning experiences, hobbies, teaching practices, educational feelings, etc. online. The tutors also shared as much as they want, fully explained the advantages of themselves and their schools, and sent out kind invitations. Finally, the graduates made a decision on their selection. For the inauguration position, which both parties felt that it was novelty and exciting. • In order to get their favorite
Recommended publications
  • Humane Education, a Bridge to Peace (4)
    Special Series: Humane Education, A Bridge to Peace (4) Daisaku Ikeda Gu Mingyuan Peace and Happiness for All People Gu: This year, 2010, marks the eightieth anniversary of the founding of Soka Gakkai. On this occasion, I should like to express my fervent congratulations to you, President Ikeda, and to your organization and my heartfelt commendations for the contributions you make in the name of peace and spreading the spirit of love throughout society. Your first president, Tsunesaburo Makiguchi, raised aloft the banner of educa- tional reform for the sake of the suffering masses and especially their children. Soka Gakkai came into being under his guidance. During World War II, your organization vigorously opposed nationalistic Shinto and Japanese militarism. As a consequence, the militarist government suppressed the organization. President Makiguchi was thrown into prison, where he died. Your sorrowful history makes it clear that, while waging a war of invasion that brought misery and suffering to China, Japanese militarists inflicted calamity and pain on good people in Japan as well. Nonetheless, you and other later Soka Gakkai leaders perse- vered in carrying out President Makiguchi’s aims and continue the mission of realizing peace and happiness for all people in highly admirable fashion today. The Path to Comparative Education—Interrelations between Culture and Education Ikeda: I am deeply grateful for your warm words. President Makiguchi once wrote, “A single courageous individual dedicated to the Great Good can accomplish far more important things....” You are precisely such a person, and I am sure that your profound understanding of us would make him very happy indeed.
    [Show full text]
  • Publications Were Issued in Latin Or German
    August 23–28, 2016 St. Petersburg, Russia EACS 2016 21st Biennial Conference of the European Association for Chinese Studies Book of ABStractS 2016 EACS- The European Association for Chinese Studies The European Association for Chinese Studies (EACS) is an international organization representing China scholars from all over Europe. Currently it has more than 700 members. It was founded in 1975 and is registered in Paris. It is a non-profit orga- nization not engaging in any political activity. The purpose of the Association is to promote and foster, by every possible means, scholarly activities related to Chinese Studies in Europe. The EACS serves not only as the scholarly rep- resentative of Chinese Studies in Europe but also as contact or- ganization for academic matters in this field. One of the Association’s major activities are the biennial con- ferences hosted by various centres of Chinese Studies in diffe- rent European countries. The papers presented at these confer- ences comprise all fields from traditional Sinology to studies of modern China. In addition, summer schools and workshops are organized under the auspices of the EACS. The Association car- ries out scholarly projects on an irregular basis. Since 1995 the EACS has provided Library Travel Grants to support short visits for research in major sinological libraries in Western Europe. The scheme is funded by the Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation and destined for PhD students and young scholars, primarily from Eastern European countries. The EACS furthers the careers of young scholars by awarding a Young Scholar Award for outstanding research. A jury selects the best three of the submitted papers, which are then presented at the next bi-an- nual conference.
    [Show full text]
  • Democracy Education the Radical Teaching, Learning, and Doing of Tao Xingzhi
    Journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies Democracy education The radical teaching, learning, and doing of Tao Xingzhi TODD ALAN PRICE National Louis University The apex of China’s 1911 Republican Revolution, the election in Nanjing of native son Dr. Sun Yat-sen, heralded an historic break with autocracy. Tragically, Sun Yat-Sen’s democracy did not last long. A bitter period of feudal strife followed as warlords sought to carve fiefdoms out of the young republic. Humiliating concessions to Japan under the Versailles Treaty added to the new republic’s problems. Continuing violation of China’s sovereignty spawned the May 4th, 1919 student movement in Peking. Reverberations from May 4th helped launch a small communist party cell in Shanghai and a larger democracy movement across the country. Trenchant feudalism, aspiring nationalism, and revolutionary communism together serve as the spectacular backdrop to progressive education reform and the journey of a public education missionary named Tao Xingzhi. Born to Christian parents, Tao Xingzhi would move from humble beginnings into the world of the Western-educated elite and would be both revered as a national hero and reviled as a dissident. At one of the pivotal turning points in his adult life, Tao Xingzhi donned the robes of a traditional peasant and, in the highly contested space between budding democracy and revolutionary communism, set out to preach to the common people the values of progressivism. Unwaveringly, with humility and pragmatism, his goal was simply to remake Chinese society through education, to develop “the union of teaching, learning and doing.” Life education I approach this research with some background in education under communism, having received a diploma for an independent study in Cuba: The Stages of Education and Revolution.
    [Show full text]
  • Creative Spaces Within Which People, Ideas and Systems Interact with Uncertain Outcomes
    GIMPEL, NIELSE GIMPEL, Explores new ways to understand the dynamics of change and mobility in ideas, people, organisations and cultural paradigms China is in flux but – as argued by the contributors to this volume – change is neither new to China nor is it unique to that country; similar patterns are found in other times and in other places. Indeed, Creative on the basis of concrete case studies (ranging from Confucius to the Vagina Monologues, from Protestant missionaries to the Chinese N & BAILEY avant-garde) and drawing on theoretical insights from different dis- ciplines, the contributors assert that change may be planned but the outcome can never be predicted with any confidence. Rather, there Spaces exist creative spaces within which people, ideas and systems interact with uncertain outcomes. As such, by identifying a more sophisticated Seeking the Dynamics of Change in China approach to the complex issues of change, cultural encounters and Spaces Creative so-called globalization, this volume not only offers new insights to scholars of other geo-cultural regions; it also throws light on the workings of our ‘global’ and ‘transnational’ lives today, in the past and in the future. Edited Denise Gimpel, Bent Nielsen by and Paul Bailey www.niaspress.dk Gimpel_pbk-cover.indd 1 20/11/2012 15:38 Creative Spaces Gimpel book.indb 1 07/11/2012 16:03 Gimpel book.indb 2 07/11/2012 16:03 CREATIVE SPACES Seeking the Dynamics of Change in China Edited by Denise Gimpel, Bent Nielsen and Paul J. Bailey Gimpel book.indb 3 07/11/2012 16:03 Creative Spaces: Seeking the Dynamics of Change in China Edited by Denise Gimpel, Bent Nielsen and Paul J.
    [Show full text]
  • Tao Xingzhi's Non-Communist Mass Education Movements in 1930S China
    Review of History and Political Science June 2015, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 25-32 ISSN: 2333-5718 (Print), 2333-5726 (Online) Copyright © The Author(s). 2015. All Rights Reserved. Published by American Research Institute for Policy Development DOI: 10.15640/rhps.v3n1a3 URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.15640/rhps.v3n1a3 Tao Xingzhi’s Non-Communist Mass Education Movements in 1930s China Qian Zhu1 Abstract This paper attempts to reveal both the historical and the historiographical significances of a non-Communist mass education movement by challenging the existent scholarships in studying Tao Xingzhi’s educational theory and practices in 1930s China. My research indicates that the emergence and the development of Tao’s “Life Education” theory was the immediate response to the interwar history as it was shown in everyday life that had been changed under global capitalism, imperialism, and war. As it was closely engaged with the issues of inequality, exploitation, and human emancipation, Tao’s theory founded upon searching for solutions to the current structural crises in Chinese society and the world. Specifically, it dealt with how to transform the social hierarchy that had been reflected in the existent educational system. Therefore, Tao’s educational theory should be seen as one of the various political efforts during the interwar period that simultaneously perceived education as the effective means to transform society anew, which corresponded to the ongoing socio-political changes in the interwar period. To synchronize Tao’s educational theory with other educational ideas, I aim to challenge the arbitrary relationship between the West teaching and the East learning and the state/the powerful vs.
    [Show full text]
  • The Enlightenment of Tao Xingzhi's Democratic Education Thought On
    Advances in Economics, Business and Management Research, volume 82 International Conference on Management, Education Technology and Economics (ICMETE 2019) The Enlightenment of Tao Xingzhi’s Democratic Education Thought on College Ideological and Political Courses Zhang Ruizhong, Wang Zhiqiang Tianjin University Education Science Research Center School of Education, Tianjin University Tianjin 300350, China Abstract—Life education thought is the core of Tao Xingzhi’s view, Tao Xingzhi’s educational thoughts always run through educational thought, and democratic education thought is the The core concept of democratic education thought. soul that runs through life education thought. From the perspective of the nature of ideological and political education, II. THE CONNOTATION OF TAO XINGZHI'S DEMOCRATIC this paper studies the purpose of ideological and political EDUCATION THOUGHT education, the main body of ideological and political education, Before Tao Xingzhi’s death, he said, “The time has come the content of ideological and political education, and the ideological and political education method. From the standpoint for democracy. Democracy is a new way of life. We are not of Tao Xingzhi's democratic education thought, this paper also used to the life of democracy. But spring has come, we must analyzes the ideological and political course and the problems in take off the cotton coat and put on spring clothes. We must teaching through the answer to the basic questions of ideological learn democracy in a new life of democracy." [4]Both the and political education to seek ways improving the ideological words of democracy and democratic education originated from and political lessons. the West.
    [Show full text]
  • Popularizing Propaganda Under Party Politics (1927-1937) ---A Case Study of Shenbao Free Talk Lei Qin Washington University in St
    Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations Arts & Sciences Summer 8-15-2017 Between Political Tendentiousness and Mass Media: Popularizing Propaganda under Party Politics (1927-1937) ---A Case Study of Shenbao Free Talk Lei Qin Washington University in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, and the Mass Communication Commons Recommended Citation Qin, Lei, "Between Political Tendentiousness and Mass Media: Popularizing Propaganda under Party Politics (1927-1937) ---A Case Study of Shenbao Free Talk" (2017). Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 1243. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds/1243 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Arts & Sciences at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS Committee on Comparative Literature Dissertation Examination Committee: Robert E. Hegel, Chair Paul Michael Lützeler, Co-Chair Lingchei Letty Chen Zhao Ma Marvin Marcus Between Political Tendentiousness and Mass Media: Popularizing Propaganda under Party Politics (1927-1937) ---A Case Study of Shenbao Free Talk by Lei Qin A dissertation presented to The Graduate School
    [Show full text]
  • Script Crisis and Literary Modernity in China, 1916-1958 Zhong Yurou
    Script Crisis and Literary Modernity in China, 1916-1958 Zhong Yurou Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2014 © 2014 Yurou Zhong All rights reserved ABSTRACT Script Crisis and Literary Modernity in China, 1916-1958 Yurou Zhong This dissertation examines the modern Chinese script crisis in twentieth-century China. It situates the Chinese script crisis within the modern phenomenon of phonocentrism – the systematic privileging of speech over writing. It depicts the Chinese experience as an integral part of a worldwide crisis of non-alphabetic scripts in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It places the crisis of Chinese characters at the center of the making of modern Chinese language, literature, and culture. It investigates how the script crisis and the ensuing script revolution intersect with significant historical processes such as the Chinese engagement in the two World Wars, national and international education movements, the Communist revolution, and national salvation. Since the late nineteenth century, the Chinese writing system began to be targeted as the roadblock to literacy, science and democracy. Chinese and foreign scholars took the abolition of Chinese script to be the condition of modernity. A script revolution was launched as the Chinese response to the script crisis. This dissertation traces the beginning of the crisis to 1916, when Chao Yuen Ren published his English article “The Problem of the Chinese Language,” sweeping away all theoretical oppositions to alphabetizing the Chinese script. This was followed by two major movements dedicated to the task of eradicating Chinese characters: First, the Chinese Romanization Movement spearheaded by a group of Chinese and international scholars which was quickly endorsed by the Guomingdang (GMD) Nationalist government in the 1920s; Second, the dissident Chinese Latinization Movement initiated in the Soviet Union and championed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in the 1930s.
    [Show full text]
  • Planting Parliaments in Eurasia, 1850–1950; Concepts, Practices
    9 The preparations for the first Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference and the quest for legitimacy Henrike Rudolph Introduction A sheet of paper in his hand, his head slightly tilted, an array of microphones in front and his most loyal supporters behind, red lanterns swaying overhead. The image of Mao Zedong’s proclamation of the founding of the People’s Republic is ingrained in public memory. The festivities on October 1, 1949, marked the begin- ning of a new era in Chinese history with cheering masses and a military parade. The founding ceremony (kaiguo dadian 開國大典) was, however, not only a show of force of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the People’s Liberation Army. The line of supporters standing shoulder to shoulder with CCP leaders on Tian’anmen Gate embodied the promise of political stability and an inclusive gov- ernment.1 Among them were eminent figures such as Shen Junru 沈鈞儒 (1875– 1963), Zhang Lan 張瀾 (1872–1955), Song Qingling 宋慶齡 (1893–1981), and Li Jishen 李濟深 (1885–1959) as representatives of several left-leaning smaller par- ties and associations that had formed during the Republican period (1912–1949). Under the direction of the CCP’s United Front Work Department (tongzhanbu 統戰部), they had laid the groundwork for the convening of a new political body, the Chinese People’s Consultative Conference (CPPCC), in September 1949. The CPPCC modeled its corporatist structure and function on Republican pre- cursors to draw intellectuals and political activists into the Communist system of government. By inviting left-leaning elites to join the bridge-building process during the turbulent months of dissolution and reconstruction in 1948–1949, the CCP heralded an era of “New Democracy” (xin minzhu 新民主).
    [Show full text]
  • Democracy Education: the Radical Teaching, Learning, and Doing of Tao Xingzhi Todd A
    National Louis University Digital Commons@NLU Faculty Publications Winter 2014 Democracy Education: The Radical Teaching, Learning, and Doing of Tao Xingzhi Todd A. Price Dr. National Louis University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.nl.edu/faculty_publications Part of the Asian Studies Commons, Education Policy Commons, and the International and Comparative Education Commons Recommended Citation Price, Todd A. Dr., "Democracy Education: The Radical Teaching, Learning, and Doing of Tao Xingzhi" (2014). Faculty Publications. 70. https://digitalcommons.nl.edu/faculty_publications/70 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons@NLU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@NLU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Curriculum Studies Democracy education The radical teaching, learning, and doing of Tao Xingzhi TODD ALAN PRICE National Louis University The apex of China’s 1911 Republican Revolution, the election in Nanjing of native son Dr. Sun Yat-sen, heralded an historic break with autocracy. Tragically, Sun Yat-Sen’s democracy did not last long. A bitter period of feudal strife followed as warlords sought to carve fiefdoms out of the young republic. Humiliating concessions to Japan under the Versailles Treaty added to the new republic’s problems. Continuing violation of China’s sovereignty spawned the May 4th, 1919 student movement in Peking. Reverberations from May 4th helped launch a small communist party cell in Shanghai and a larger democracy movement across the country. Trenchant feudalism, aspiring nationalism, and revolutionary communism together serve as the spectacular backdrop to progressive education reform and the journey of a public education missionary named Tao Xingzhi.
    [Show full text]
  • An Exploration of Embedding Intercultural Knowledge to Engage Students in Chinese Language Learning: a Bilingual Beginning Teacher’S Xingzhi/Action Research Project
    AN EXPLORATION OF EMBEDDING INTERCULTURAL KNOWLEDGE TO ENGAGE STUDENTS IN CHINESE LANGUAGE LEARNING: A BILINGUAL BEGINNING TEACHER’S XINGZHI/ACTION RESEARCH PROJECT Xiaoyan WANG Bachelor of Teaching Chinese as a Foreign Language A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Education (Honours) School of Education Western Sydney University August 2016 Acknowledgements Firstly I would like to acknowledge my gratitude to the Ningbo Education Bureau for providing the support for my participation in the ROSETE program at the University of Western Sydney. The experiences, as a student at UWS and a teacher-researcher in a western Sydney public school, have been life changing. To Dr Jinghe Han I extend my sincere thanks for her patience, encouragement and the benefit of her research and teaching experience to help me undertake this research and to refine my ideas during the analysis and writing stages. I am indebted that she made herself available any time (when on holidays or leave) to support my research and study. I would also like to extend my appreciation to Professor Michael Singh for helping me, and all the ROSETE students, with the many cultural activities provided to us (soccer games, social barbecues, and an introduction to Aboriginal and historical culture). Professor Singh’s support with the relevant literature for teaching and learning Chinese language in Australia must be mentioned. The knowledge provided by Ms Cheryl Ballantyne must also be acknowledged. Cheryl provided expert lectures and workshops to introduce the ROSETE students to intercultural language teaching in the Australian. I must also recognize the contribution of the Gardens Public School, the students and classroom teachers who welcomed me into the school and supported my teaching and research.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Dewey's Connection to China
    RESEARCH NOTE: UNDERSTANDING DEWEY’S CONNECTION TO CHINA- A BIBLIOGRAPHIC ESSAY ON SELECTED WORKS JAMES ZHI YANG University of Oklahoma Editor’s Note: Research notes offer a starting point for inquiry; they aim to introduce and orient our readers to existing literature on topics in Dewey Scholarship. They are not necessarily intended as exhaustive bibliographies or detailed treatments of the topics. Whether solicited or volunteered, the notes are reviewed for quality by the Dewey Studies editorial staff, but are not subjected to anonymous peer review. Readers wishing to prepare such notes are invited to send queries to Daniel Brunson, Reviews Editor, at [email protected] Volume 1 · Number 2 · Fall 2017 · Pages 103-111 James Zhi Yang 104 ohn Dewey’s two-year sojourn to China (1919-1921) created a J shared educational experience between the United States and China. As one of Dewey’s daughters, Jane Dewey, recalled: “when he was in China, Dewey left feeling affection and admiration not only for the scholars with whom he had been intimately associated [,] but for the Chinese people as a whole. China remained the country nearest his heart after his own.”1 During Dewey’s visit, China was in the midst of its May Fourth/New Culture Movement, during which the country transformed itself from an imperial dynasty to a modern nation-state. It is no exaggeration to say that the encounter between Dewey and modern China is one of the most fascinating episodes in the intellectual history of twentieth-century China. However, Dewey’s connection to China is one of the lesser- known aspects of his scholarly work.
    [Show full text]