Monday, January 4, 2010

GCGIS Guangdong Country Garden International School

(The inside courtyard of GCGIS elementary school)

(A NOTE:  Schools change sometimes from year to year.   Please read all the reviews at the end of these posts if you are considering teaching at Country Garden Shunde.  ESL reader boards would be a good place to get updated information.  I wrote this blog so others would have some idea of what teaching at Country Garden in Shunde, China, was like and that no one would be as unprepared as I was the first time I taught here in 1994.  If you are looking into other international schools in that area, CLIFFORD is also a good school/country club/resort to check out. :] )


This is the inside of our school.  Notice all 4 stories.    This might be why I have been so tired every day since I got here.   It has been like this even after adjusting to the time change.   I just want to go to bed at 7:30 every night.   I think it's a combination of the heat and the stairs.   Even my co-workers have been like this.

~Speaking of stairs, let’s find out a little more about GCCIS Guangdong Country Garden International School and what it’s like to live here in Southwest China!

The Stairs~

There are 7 flights to get to my apartment 3 times a day. I climb 4 flights to get to my classrooms and 3 flights up and down for lunch and dinner. I do all this while carrying a computer and teaching notebooks in 100+ weather with 85% humidity.  One day I ate a whole bag of gummy worms just to get motivated to go back to school. That's not such a big deal, mind you, except that bag of gummy worms was supposed to last for the next six months.

Fun fact:  In China, apartments have to put in an elevator if the building is 9 floors or higher.    You can guess how many floors we have.   (Answer at end of post.)

School stuff~

Right now am just trying to get my curriculum in order.   This means planning for 3rd, 4th and 5th grade English reading and writing.

 It is hard to teach students that don't understand what you are saying to them. (:] said in mock earnest). I have started adjusting my talking speed and have judged comprehension by the calm vs. blank expressions on students' faces. Also, the less they understand, the more they act up.

I really need to follow non-verbal feedback indicators to know where they are at.   My questions in English don't tell me.    It's decpetive when they are answered.    That means that 'they' understand me, but  who are 'they'?  'They' are probably a handful of students in the class who know English and don't represent the class like 'they' in an English-speaking classroom.  

School Liason~

I have met an awesome Chinese teacher named Josie who has helped me so much in preparing for this subject-jump. She is so petite but has a passion for education that makes her larger than life when she tells stories. She has gone to the UK and other places abroad.

(The Chinese teachers seem to travel a lot. What rich experiences they must gain! The UK, Australia, America... All in a summer and then about every other year. I believe they get a traveling allowance from the school and then can even go with exchange programs.)

Offices~

Josie is also in my office.  (There are 4 floors of classrooms corresponding to the 1st-6th grades, with an office of teachers on each floor.)  She has given me all these flash animation stories to use for my lessons. In doing lessons, you just hook up your laptop to the large flat screen TV in the classroom and you are set to PowerPoint or video-illustrate the day away.

You would think this is just a great way to advertise technology in the school, but I also have a feeling it is used to save money on making copies.  It could even be a substitute for buying books. (I was encouraged to take pictures of the pages of a storybook so that they could be shown on the large screen.) It can be done.

School Cafeteria~

We eat in what is called 'The Canteen'. I wonder if the Chinese know that that name gives it a very 'western' feel, and therefore should come come equipped with wooden saloon doors, bar fights and the occasional tumbleweed.) 

Otherwise, it is large and semi air-conditioned with table-clothed tables and napkins  provided in the usual form of tissue.  Each table also has soy sauce and some come with a welcoming view of the school.

In the Canteen they serve five + different Chinese side dishes that make up each meal.  There are about 13 different 'meals' you can sign up for.   The three unvarying sides for lunch and dinner are rice, soup-o-the-day and one of many types of fried lettuce.

Then you could have a really amazing garlic/ginger chicken, or oyster-sauce zucchini/mushroom mixture alongside some not-so-tasty spicy eel or eggplant that was very good on Thursday but now seems to keep appearing in every dish that comes through the partition window. It appears day after day until you're very sure that there couldn't possibly be that much eggplant in all of China for it to have fed 3000 students and 500+ teachers over the course of 4-6 days.  

(What I learned later is that they cook food by the season or buy in bulk. That is why you have eggs and tomatoes, fresh shrimp or garlic eggplant for so many meals in a row.

I also found out that after a terrible cooking administration last year, the school used its own Bi Gui Yuan [Country Garden] ‘farm’ to produce the food that we eat at The Canteen now. The teachers are very happy with this arrangement and talk about how much better the food is this year!)

The Western Buffet~

On the other side of The Canteen, they have created a great Western Buffet. It is mainly used as a food option for the international kids at the school. The Koreans really requested it.    It serves things like curry and rice, potatoes and bacon, french fries, chicken nuggets (all homemade!) and sweet and sour ribs. It really is worth the 20 Y--or was it 40Y, that we pay for it.

(You get 300Y at the beginning of each month you your cafeteria food allowance money and you decide how you want to spend it.)   With our food allowance, we can afford 15 trips to the western buffet in a month. I have designated my arduous first-week Mondays (we're on a two-week school schedule) and fun-day Fridays to go there. It’s cute! We all sit in orange McDonald’s style booths and can drink cold water from a provided soup bowl. (They don’t provide drinking water on The Canteen side.)


Bi Gui Yuan (Guangdong Country Garden International School) is really two schools that are separate but share the same courtyard and eating/playing facilities. One is the Chinese private school. All of its classes are taught in Chinese except an for Oral English.

Here it seems that there is no set curriculum to follow. I have heard that the students are more difficult to teach which may be because there is less support from the Chinese administration or that the students take foreign language learning less seriously.

The GCGIS International School has a few more international students, more classes are taught in English and the ideal to follow is a western-style/discovery-learning educational format. This equals research-based activities, group projects and using different materials to create unconventional output, ei: displays, posters, storybooks and, most important of all—The Portfolio work sample.

(Activities were then designed done to be fit enough to put in The Portfolio work sample. It is a brilliant idea. I actually did that as a 1st grade teacher back in the States but didn’t think of my reading or writing class’ contributions until the end of the year when it was mentioned.) They are currently working towards IB International Baccalaureate School certification.

(The classroom westernized--see bulletin board)

You should have seen how they transformed the school during this year. In the beginning of the year it looked like a typical Chinese classroom with few adornments on the walls but always with a nicely decorated bulletin board in the back of the classroom.

In a matter of days, the classrooms had student work displayed in the windows, motivational English says broadcast on every wall and art projects hanging from the ceiling. I finally realized what made each culture’s classrooms so different. It was the amount of material on display.

The International office had just a few desks a bench and a printer. When you walked in the next day there was a full-size copier connected to a scanner, a large-scale paper-cutter and---a laminator! They just needed a die cutter and then the illusion of an office straight out of a western country would have been complete.


(A workroom)
The GCGIS international side pays more to their teachers, so there should be noticeable benefits for the students’ education, right?  In that, I mean, they have the chance to play intra-mural sports that the foreign teachers initiated.

By the way, I am now assisting with the middle school boys soccer team. At our official foreign teacher's meeting, these two volunteer sports program directors got everyone to talk about what sport they had played in the past.

Before we knew it, we were signed up to coach or help coach that given sport. It was very sneaky of them though. (There was still some agreement on our part before we were signed up lock, stock and barrel.) They took this on all per gratis so it is a good thing to help out in.

The initiator of this is from the Philippines and has lived and taught in China for 7 years. He has the coolest apartment due to all the stuff he has been given from past teachers who left.

Speaking of cool apartments, our floor—the 7th--is the coolest. We are just like ‘Seinfeld’ or ‘Friends’. Whenever we hear someone at their door, we all poke our heads out like little mice to see what's going on. Someone's always got something to say about this or that to add to the day’s stories or a comment that gets us wondering whether we should stand, open-doored, out in the landing or take the conversation to someone’s room and save our hard-earned air-conditioning because we hate to leave our happy little group. It's so comforting. We all joke around and try to figure out who is who. So, I'll give you our little cast of characters...in real life..

(The names have been changed to protect the innocent.)
First there's my little Canadian friend, Sunny. She just finished her college teaching courses and is doing 1st and 2nd grade here after she student-taught high schoolers just before. She fits her name and is the most cheerful, sunny person around.

She also loves to travel and has been to Africa, backpacking through Europe and in and out of the pubs of Ireland. She is probably the closest in age to me even though she is in her 20’s.

That being said there are not very many girls here my age and even fewer unmarried young people. The majority of foreign teachers here are older/retired men that have taught all around China and are here because of the reputation of our school.

Then there are 4 younger couples and a few odd balls like me and the cool people on the 7th floor. :] (we are kidding!  Everyone in our building--they put all the foreigners together--unless we get an apartment somewhere else, is very cool.  :])

Also on our floor, there's Mamando, our black brother from Chicago who has an African name and speaks Chinese. He's planning to marry his Chinese girlfriend and settle down in China.

Next door to him is our very cute little Pakistani brother that likes to dance. He is just a button. We all want to take him home with us. :] (Like a puppy). He just taught at an International School in China and also has a potential reason to stay in China for the long-haul.

Mamando has a DJ station in his room and a bottom shelf just full of records that he mixes. He moved all his unwanted furniture up two flights of stairs so he could move in $500 worth of black and white furniture from IKEA. (Yes! They have one here in Guangzhou!)

By the way, they have a metro (subway) here going to the important places in the city--shopping, the embassies, a waffle shop, Starbucks, Pizza Hut…It's just a quick ride away. Also, the city is so much cleaner than I remember!!

Maybe that is because the subway took the place of many of those diesel-spouting buses...or maybe it's because I'm here in August when it's summer and you can see the sky.

That's a quick low-down on some of the school and some of the city things around here.

(* 8 floors)
P.S.  Since I wrote this article, the school now gives the teachers an apartment stipend for them to chose wherever they would like to live.   There are some great high rises in the newer Bi Gui Yuan Country Garden Estate areas and some beautiful villas with yards and gazebos.   


9 comments:

  1. Hi,

    I'm happy to read your post about GCGIS. I have been in communication with the school for a possible job, so I had some questions about it. Would you be willing to talk about it?

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    1. I am sorry for the delayed response. If you have not already applied at this school, it looks like you might want to look for another position. Please read the reviews below for a better idea. Good luck!

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. This school is dangerous for your career. Around 15-20 teachers did not even complete the contract this year. Those were the ones who did a midnight runner, or resigned. The year started with 117 teachers. Mid-year the Middle School Principal Mr. Shaw had his powers increased and became Head of Secondary. Immediately a more serious purge began and the losses have accelerated with around another ten teachers either being fired or threatened into leaving. This purge coincided with an announcement that the school would have "no more and no less than 100 foreign teachers." For instance Mr. Shaw turned on one of his friendly associates one day who simply commented that Mr. Shaw "looked overwhelmed" in an attempt to offer help and counsel. This Ivy League educated teacher with 20+ years of experience has never quit a teaching job and he ended up resigning because Mr. Shaw started screaming at him for thirty minutes. This veteran teacher complained to the Chinese Leaders and nothing happened. Some of the finest teachers were removed during this purge and are still being removed. Do not believe that it was just "cleaning out the junk."

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  4. Everybody thought the "no more and no less than 100 teachers" would take effect school year 2016-2017, but it's clear from the level of enforcement over little things like going to Chinese political propaganda flag-raising ceremonies and not wearing "trainers" that the school's strategy is to get rid of people now. Additionally the school's financial department is not paying promised benefits such as airfare in full. They are in serious financial trouble and teachers are bearing the brunt of these problems because our school is completely ran "top-down." Many are beginning to wonder if teachers who are leaving will receive their full pay.

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  5. Teachers do not have any rights at this school whatsoever. No right to complain and no right to speak openly or freely at all and if a teacher does than she is singled out and called into meetings. The person you are supposed to complain to is the Foreign Affairs Liaison Mr. Carlyon, but he is there only to learn who is disgruntled so that the person can be contained. He will not help you in most cases if you have a real problem. In fact he is an insider that represents the interests of administration and not the teachers. Do not assume confidentiality on anything at this school.

    Moreover this community is dangerous in the literal sense. One teacher died in a scooter accident in the "quiet safe" garden. Several others have sustained serious motorbike related injuries as well. I know of at least four other teachers who have been in a motorbike accident just this year. Medical problems abound too. There have been multiple instances of current teachers - and former ones - either returning home or going to the next school and learning that they have a tumor. One teacher was diagnosed with cancer last year. Evidence is lacking to be able to say that this is China's environmental problems "causing" these cases, but there is something more to all this than pure coincidence. Everybody will tell you the pollution is "much better than Beijing" but it is still very bad for a large percentage of the year. A community of only around one hundred foreigners should not have rates of tumors that are this high. It isn't just strange growths either, one teacher had to be treated for tuberculosis.

    Many are not signing contracts for next year. This was a school that had a chance at one point a couple of years ago, but since then I have heard too many stories about grade manipulation, undue administrative pressure, and breaking IB rules. It is only a matter of time before the entire place loses credibility and parents stop bringing children. Do not risk your career or your family's future here. Do not convince yourself that the negative reviews you are reading are a "few bad apples." Search the web for yourself and you will see that reviews for this school are not only here on ISR. Protect yourself and your family. No amount of money is worth what we have all endured.

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  6. Do not trust this school AT ALL. Times have changed significantly. Please search for reviews and you will readily find them available.

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  7. I highly suggest you read the reviews of CGS on esl teachers board,International School Adviser,International School Reviews (the paid section) and Guangdong Country Garden School -Exposed.

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  8. Thank you everyone for your comments and the information about the school at this point. I am sorry these comments have been published after the start of the school year. It seems times have indeed changed at Country Garden. I am appalled at what I am hearing and amazed that a school which used to value their foreign teachers has changed its tune so violently. Financial trouble...sounds like one source...
    This blog was written in the hopes that foreign teachers would have some idea of what they were getting into before coming to China or applying at this school. If you are looking this school still, please read the reviews mentioned above and whatever you can find on ESL teaching boards. Again, this information is priceless. I am so sorry for all that these teachers have gone through. I hope they will have a better experience from here on out! I also hope this serves as a warning to Country Garden to value their foreign teachers and treat them with the respect and integrity advertised.
    Thank you again for all your input.

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