Archive for the 'china' Category

Safety and security in China

Monday, May 12th, 2008

This post is not about what to do to avoid having your backpack stolen in China. Although scare stories about criminality abound in China, I think it’s a lot better than most other places - especially for foreigners. There is undoubtedly a huge amount of scams going around, especially involving cell phones, but that’s a [...]

Open Learning Conference in Dalian 2008: Lessons for future events

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

I have been planning to blog about the Open Education conference in Dalian for a while, but I have been travelling, and also still digesting my experiences there. I will begin by discussing the organization of the conference itself, and things that future conferences, like the Open Learning conference hosted by COSL in Utah in [...]

Anatomy of a Chinese 网吧 (cybercafe)

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

One of the most striking things in China, and a very important feature for foreigners, is the ubiquitous cybercafes. I made heavy use of them the first time I was living in China, in 2000-2001, when I had no internet at “home” (in the student dormitory). The second time, when I was living in Hangzhou, [...]

A paean to Chinese bookstores

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

I absolutely love Chinese bookstores. They are often huge, and buzzing with activity. The biggest are often called “book cities”, and the one I visited in Shenzhen a year ago was about six huge floors. On the Sunday that I visited it, it was packed with people, sitting on everywhere voraciously reading. A big difference [...]

Wuhan, where have you been all these years?

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

While being back in mainland China is already a great experience, and I really enjoyed all my time in Dalian and the few hours in Beijing–coming back to Wuhan is still a special event. I spent a year teaching in Wuhan Scientific and Technical University in 2000-2001, and it’s the city where I first got [...]

Back in China: Dalian

Friday, April 25th, 2008

My last week in Toronto was quite hectic, with finishing up a thesis, grading 80 exams, moving out of my apartment and temporarily suspending my life in Toronto. I watched some great movies on the plane over, although it was a long trip, and it made me think again that people who fly across the [...]

Support Weng Diedie in going back to Mosuo

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

Weng Diedie is a Chinese filmmaker who has spent several years visiting the matrilineal Mosuo tribe in South-Western China, and filmed a fascinating and beautiful tale of how their traditional music is threatened by tourism and modernization. She has already shown it to full houses at many different venues in the US, and now she [...]

OpenCourseWare around the world: China and India

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

The idea of OpenCourseWare in its current incarnation started with MIT (note that the Wikipedia page I linked to talks as if MIT are the only ones in the world who do OCW - I should update it, but I won’t manage tonight, unless someone beats me to it). They received funding from the Hewlett [...]

Is Chinese the new French?

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

Although it was Eurocentric, I like to think back at the time when all serious scholars in Europe were expected to know at least French (and by association perhaps Italian and Spanish), German, English and some Greek and Latin. When you read a book, and there are frequent citations in those languages, that are not [...]

Website design in China

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

I TA for a class on International Studies and International Communication, and this week we touched upon the concept of whether there was one universal standard for web aesthetics, or whether it varied according to cultural region. I notice very clearly when browsing Chinese websites, for example, that they are a lot denser than what [...]