Ten English teachers from western China have joined the 草莓社区 community for the 2015 fall semester. Back row, left to right: Changwan Yuan, Liu Yang, Jiao Chen, Qin Li. Front row: Hongjun Tang, Shuli Chang, Yi Wang, Yan Wang, Sha Kong, Qiuju Pu. (Photo by Kara Lofton)

Ten Chinese scholars join EMU community to learn teaching techniques and immerse themselves in the English language

For the Chinese scholars at 草莓社区 this semester, witnessing the difference between Chinese and American educational systems has been enlightening.

鈥淚n China, students are willing to listen to professors lecture,鈥 says Yan Wang. 鈥淗ere, there are a lot of group discussions. It is good for creative thinking. Every student has their own idea.鈥

Hongjuan Tang and other members of the group from China are greeted by President Loren Swartzendruber after Convocation. (Photo by Michael Sheeler)

Wang is one of ten Chinese scholars visiting EMU from Sichuan Province as part of a 鈥渧isiting faculty鈥 program. Eight are sponsored through (MPC), an exchange program that has been thriving in various formats since the early 1980s. The other two are on scholarship from the China Scholarship Council, a competitive, state-funded scholarship fund for research and study abroad.

For 16 years, Mennonite Partners in China has placed English teachers from the United States at Sichuan University of Arts and Science and many other schools. In turn, Sichuan sends visiting scholars to EMU. A cross-cultural group from EMU, co-led by MPC director , is currently in China (visit their cross-cultural blog).

The was formalized in January 2015. Administrators hope the agreement will facilitate 鈥渁cademic exchanges, scientific research cooperation, and communication between teachers and students.鈥

Sichuan province is in Southwestern China, a region Wang describes as 鈥渄eveloping.鈥 She says English teachers there have little opportunity to study the language in an immersion environment.

Teaching, learning, research

Here at EMU for the fall semester, the scholars are working on research projects, perfecting their spoken English, and auditing classes about world literature, writing, and聽methods of language teaching. Some of the scholars will analyze the teaching techniques they observe in research papers that they will eventually publish on subjects as varied as the difference between the writing of Chinese and native English speakers and differences in American and Chinese teaching methods.

English professor is the on-campus liaison for the visiting faculty, which means, among other activities, he organizes a picnic when the group first arrives and a farewell luncheon at the end of the semester. He also provides an academic orientation, a campus tour, an explanation of the academic schedule and helps the scholars connect with 鈥渇riendship families鈥 so they have an opportunity to interact with the local community.

The scholars also interact with EMU faculty at all university-sponsored faculty events and are often invited into classes to speak. Among those professors who have extended invitations to former and current groups are visual and communication arts professor and English professor . Nursing students have also benefited from visits to their classes.

From left: Hongjuan Tang, Liu Yang, Shuli Chang and Yan Wang. (Photo by Kara Lofton)

鈥淚t鈥檚 a quite different educational experience,鈥 says Liu Yang of her time so far. One of the biggest challenges 鈥渋s learning how to manage our time.鈥

Wang agrees. 鈥淚n American colleges, the students have to read a lot. In China, the students read, but not as much鈥here is a lot more out-of-class work here.鈥

Sabbatical helps busy teachers ‘recharge’

Hongjuan Tang has been teaching English for more than 20 years and, except for a brief visit to the United States for her son鈥檚 undergraduate commencement, had never been to an English-speaking country. Shuli Chang, too, visited Canada and Australia for brief periods. Out of the group, these two teachers were the only scholars to have traveled to an English-speaking country in the past. For both teachers, coming to EMU not only places them in an English-speaking environment, but also acts as a much needed sabbatical to 鈥渞echarge鈥 and further develop teaching expertise.

Back home, 鈥淚鈥檓 working on a nationally-funded research project studying the relationship between environment and children鈥檚 language competency in western China,鈥 she said. At EMU, she has the time to work on her project and access research resources not available at her home institution.

In part, the lack of research resources may be because of the rapid expansion of Chinese universities. 鈥淚n the ’80s and ’90s, most universities had 2-4,000 students,鈥 said Byler in a recent email. 鈥淲ith a 10-year expansion, most of these universities have grown to 30- and 40,000 students.鈥

As a result, class sizes in China are normally large and professors become used to teaching to an exam in order to cope. Poorer provinces, such as Sichuan, don鈥檛 have the resources to reform.

鈥淭here is a gap in inequality between the big and small universities,鈥 said Yang.

Tang agrees. 鈥淭his program is a very good thing for the western part of China because it helps with development.鈥