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Batmaniac

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  1. Hey they could put our wives to work! :D

     

    http://www.statesman.com/business/content/...125chinese.html

     

    ONLINE CHINESE LANGUAGE CLASSES

    Austin startup uses Web to teach Chinese

    MyChinese360's online courses connect teachers in Beijing with U.S. students.

    By Lori Hawkins

    AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

     

    Tuesday, November 24, 2009

     

    Two years ago, when investment adviser John Pesce began hearing school superintendents complain about a shortage of Mandarin Chinese teachers, he saw an opportunity.

     

    "The visa process since 9/11 has made it so tough to bring people into the United States. At the same time, demand for Mandarin classes has been surging," says Pesce, co-founder of Austin-based TCG Advisors, which provides financial services to school districts. "I thought 'Why not do this virtually?' "

     

    Pesce teamed with Andy Polito, who has taught English in China and is fluent in Mandarin, to start myChinese360. The result is a Web-based Chinese language program led by certified teachers in Beijing.

     

    With the click of a mouse and the switch of a webcam, students join an online classroom, where they are guided by an instructor. In addition, students can enter a 3-D virtual world where they take field trips to famous Chinese sites and create class projects.

     

    The program, which costs $600 per semester, launched in September with 25 students in Texas, Pennsylvania and California. In January, 1,000 students from those states as well as Illinois, New York and Massachusetts will begin the program.

     

    Pesce expects to have 3,000 users next September and 20,000 the following year.

     

    "It took us two years to get state approval, get the technology built, do testing to find out what works for kids and then get it off the ground," Pesce said. "Now we're getting great feedback from school districts, and we're ready to really push forward."

     

    As China becomes a world leader in business, surveys show that demand for Mandarin classes in the U.S. is accelerating, with courses being offered as early as kindergarten. Enrollment in Chinese language courses at U.S. universities grew 51 percent from 2002 to 2006, to 51,000, according to a 2007 survey by the Modern Language Association of America. But Mandarin's growing popularity has left many school districts struggling to find qualified teachers.

     

    MyChinese360 classes consist of 10 to 20 students who are guided by an instructor who is both a native Mandarin speaker and a U.S. certified teacher. Students are required to attend weekly online interactive audio/video sessions with their teacher and to participate in virtual group activities with their classmates.

     

    The company, which has raised $500,000 from private investors, has hired 15 teachers, who work from rented space on the University of Beijing campus. To ensure that they connect with U.S. teenagers, who are accustomed to interactive learning, the teachers receive training in American education theory, online learning and cross-cultural communication.

     

    "The key to this succeeding is to have the very best teachers who really connect with students," Pesce said. "We pay $18,000 a year, which is unheard of in China, where the average high school teacher there earns $3,000 a year."

     

    Among myChinese360's supporters is Nola Wellman, superintendent of the Eanes Independent School District, which will begin offering myChinese360 to eighth- through 12th-graders for language credit in January.

     

    Westlake High School has offered Mandarin for three years and has one teacher, who is a native Mandarin speaker and certified to teach at the high school level.

     

    "We've been looking for ways to expand our program, but it's hard to find high-quality teachers," Wellman said. "At the same time, we've been wanting to offer some online courses that were first-rate and would be interesting to our students. MyChinese360 intrigued us because it presents the best of all those worlds."

     

    School districts have different payment structures for the program, with some picking up all or half the tab, and others making no contribution. At Eanes, students are responsible for the whole tuition.

     

    At Prosper High School, outside of Dallas, freshman Zachary Brandt is one month into the program, which includes a one-hour class on Sundays at 9 p.m. and a one-hour tutoring session on Wednesdays at 9 p.m.

     

    Brandt said he is studying Mandarin, as well as Spanish, because he thinks language skills will help him pursue a career in business.

     

    "It has been really cool to speak Mandarin to people who are in China and who want to help you learn their language," Brandt said. "It's a very different experience than learning it from a textbook."

     

    Brandt's mom, Lasheria, said the $300 portion of the fee that Prosper parents pay "is money well spent. It has been amazing to watch him working with the teacher. The teachers have an excellent command of English, and the classes are very productive. And they're also fun ¡ª they'll play games and talk about different slang terms. It's just a fantastic way to learn a language."

     

    Pesce said the company will become profitable when it reaches enrollment of 400. The company is now deciding whether to raise additional money to speed expansion, which could include offering the program in countries including New Zealand and India.

     

    Pesce, who grew up attending public schools in New York, said he has a special interest in bringing the program to urban school districts and will soon offer it in San Antonio, San Francisco and Boston. (He said the Austin Independent School District has expressed interest in the program.)

     

    "We have a real passion about bringing this to areas that don't have a Mandarin teacher," he said. "To be able to give minority students access to Mandarin Chinese, and the opportunities that come with it, would be the definition of success for us.

  2. Thanks for the story. Interesting about the ladies entering your apartment. I recall a CFL member posting last year about losing some money and blaming the Yangs in another post. We didn't use them but they sounded like awfully nice people and that would be completely against their nature. So it sounds like watch your stuff because you never know who has a key. Which is good advice in any country!

     

    If you like sushi there is a decent place across the street towards the train station. and an even better one at the top of the same mall the Papa Johns is in. There is also sort of a deli place near kfc. They havE sandwiches, pastas and M&M sugar cookies! I had some nice lox and eggs there one morning. And IKEA has nice hot dogs and the food within their maze is decent and cheap. Of course I am only dreaming of Little Sheep hot pot these days!

  3. Hey, Robert,

    Glad your having fun. Glad to hear the family loved the gifts. Can never go wrong with candy and vitamins .... what an odd combination, but it worked with my wife's family too.

     

    Or next time he can do two for one and bring over Flintstones vitamins! :D

     

    Glad you are having fun Robert! Does that mean you will be a little bit relaxed when you return? :lol:

  4. Well FWIW I stayed in a 5 star hotel in Beijing and a 7 days with Ying and never had an issue. 5 star in Guilin no problem. 3 and 4 star in Guangzhou no problems. Howard Johnson in Shanghai and the only problem was the toilet and rude customer service. Shenzhen 3 and 4 stars no problems. Assorted $10 a night family owned places all over and no problems.

     

    That said a member here related a pretty scary story related to this subject to me personally that I won't repeat without there permission. So yeah it goes on. But I wouldn't expect problems. Heck just stay around the consulate in Guangzhou. It's not like there aren't a bunch of laowei with their fiancees in rooms already. Safety in numbers.

  5. I'd avoid the Howard Johnson in Shanghai.

     

    But why Guangzhou? If everything works out, you will have plenty of time to see the city together. ;)

     

    Because that's where my family lives or I live!!!!

     

    The flight to Guanghzou is expensive and very long, the flights to HK are long too!! So we decided to go to Shanghai, visit a little the city and then visit my city. Next time, perhaps we will visit Beijing or HK.

     

     

    Well that's a good reason!

  6. http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/toyota-...ory-102565.aspx

     

    Looks like it affects

     

    • 2007 ¨C 2010 Camry

    • 2005 ¨C 2010 Avalon

    • 2004 ¨C 2009 Prius

    • 2005 ¨C 2010 Tacoma

    • 2007 ¨C 2010 Tundra

    • 2007 ¨C 2010 ES350

    • 2006 ¨C 2010 IS250 and IS350

     

    My dad has an IS-350 so this Consumerist article caught my eye this morning. Tragic 911 call. Very disturbing. :rolleyes: The Consumerist posters are repeatedly asking why the driver just didn't turn the car off. Well crap, I know my dad wouldn't think of that. Anyway, it's a push button on the IS.

     

    http://consumerist.com/5376667/toyota-911-...ck-on-floormats

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