Adviser Update Summer 2012 | Page 2

P02.V53.I01 black cyan magenta yellow SUMMER 2012 Page 2A Continued from page 1A translator. Throughout the seven days of instruction, we provided guided practice and modeling of the structure of American newspapers, news stories, editorials, cartoons and features. Page 1 was news, page 2 editorials, page 3 features and page 4 photos. The end product didn’t have to be perfect, but we wanted the students to have a valuable experience that would carry them through the next year without the guided practice from my students and other teachers in our group. The easiest skill for them to learn was how to take photographs and interview. Nearly all of the students had either stateof-the-art cell phones or digital SLRs. When interviewing the Americans, there were no inhibitions. “This could have been partly because they wanted the opportunity to talk to the American visitors,” said Annie Curran, one of seven American students to help with the project. For a Chinese student, the typical school day begins at 8 a.m. and often doesn’t end until 5 p.m., with a two-hour lunch break. Some of the students live six-per-room in a dorm on campus and have mandatory study hall until 10 p.m. They also have to surrender their cell phones to the floor monitor when they check in the dorms for the night. Many Chinese students spend 12 to 16 hours per day in lecture or isolated study environments, so there isn’t much time for socialization. “I think they also enjoyed the interaction that interviewing provided,” Curran said. Surprisingly, Adobe products are not abundant in Chinese schools. For the layout of the newspapers, we had to defer to one of our Chinese teacher leaders who installed CorelDRAW on all of their computers. Culturally, copyright was not a consideration. Like American schools, the students displayed greater technological skills and led the design, importing of photos and the exporting of JPEGs of the final pages. In one case, we had to wean the teacher out of “control mode” and explain that this was a student newspaper, and he was not allowed to write stories, take photos or design the pages. This entire project was conceived by Carol Lange, one of the authors of the three-year grant, and the lead teacher on previous expeditions. In prior training trips, we taught to smaller groups and emphasized the soft diplomacy aspects of gaining trust with the various schools that agreed to participate in the program. We visited schools, met with principals and held dining ceremonies with local Communist Party leaders. We also beta-tested the curriculum that Carol and I wrote. Instead of bringing American texts and cobbling materials together from various websites, we had to author the 28-lesson curriculum