Crazy English: How China's language teachers became big celebrities



Crazy English: How China's language teachers became big celebrities


This year it will be announced that China now has more English speakers than any other country in the world. And such is the demand for their services that top teachers have become big stars


Saturday, 29 August 2009
Share
Print
Email
Text Size Normal
Large
Extra Large


SEAN GALLAGHER

Preaching to the converted: Li Yang, founder of the Crazy English movement, lectures a crowd of students
More pictures


"Where are you from? Do you speak English?" It's a familiar phrase near the Forbidden City in Beijing, or along the capital's Nanjing Road, as Chinese people try a standard opening gambit to spark up a conversation with a foreigner. Many visitors baulk at being approached so baldly, and are worried that it could be a scam. Very occasionally it is a con – and tourists should be wary when some nice young people offer to bring them to a tea house – but mostly the youngsters are desperate for access to real live Anglophones who can help them improve their conversational English.


Chinese people are becoming more and more obsessed with speaking English, and efforts to improve their proficiency mean that at some stage this year, the world's most populous nation will become the world's largest English-speaking country. Two billion people are learning English worldwide, and a huge proportion of them are in China.

And sometimes it seems like most of these eager students are learning from Li Yang, who is the true folk hero of the English-language-training business. Li founded the "Crazy English" movement, which now involves him visiting a dozen cities a month and lecturing in English to crowds of up to 30,000 people. His books sell in the millions.

The principle is that "you can't learn to swim in a classroom" – so "Crazy English" teaches language learning as a form of mass activity. At a recent tutorial in Beijing, students passed large banners saying, "I can realize all my dreams" before entering the classroom to sample Li's inimitable mixture of English-language teaching and motivational speaking. There is even a touch of the evangelist about him – though he is preaching to the converted – and the enthusiasm of the response is amazing, with plenty of arm-waving, fist-raising and punching the air.

The desire to learn the world's language of commerce is reflected in the way that English is everywhere these days. It's deeply fashionable but also part of a broader goal to encourage greater use of English to help boost China internationally. So the people turn to Li, who started doing this 20 years ago and whose Guangzhou-based business is now vast. "I talk to 10 million people a year, face to face," he says proudly. "Back in 1988, China was in the process of opening up to the outside world but the whole Chinese educational system was based on tests. There were so many people learning English to pass the tests but they couldn't communicate."

There are currently 200 million Chinese at secondary school who are bored with tests, and Li is still trying to change the way people learn to speak English. "This is a new method for Asian people, who are shy and introverted," he explains. "My method can give people confidence very quickly. I try to simplify English for common people. I became an idol and a celebrity for Chinese young people because of this content. People get excited and I also tell them how to face difficulties and obstacles; I combine a lot of things into teaching."

Most of his students are aged between 10 and 40, and they include professionals and students, lawyers and bus drivers. "The older generation is interested, but English is not that useful for them. They have more important things to learn. But basically everyone in China is interested in learning some English," says Li. "It is growing with the openness of China – English is now a required subject. Good English will help you get a better job. There are many different situations that determine Chinese people's craziness for learning English. We waste a lot of time analysing and memorising – it's time- consuming and stupid. My mission is to direct people into learning English."

Most people in China still don't have the opportunity to travel abroad, so they are eager for ways to practise spoken English and correct their mistakes. Li's reading materials contain inspirational – and patriotic – phrases, such as "Help 300 million Chinese people speak English fluently" and "Make the voice of China be widely heard throughout the world". "This is still a poor country, a developing country, and we lag behind in technology," explains this father of four daughters. "I promote hard work and the work ethic. I am described as a patriotic teacher – and I am patriotic because I want to get young people into school and away from video games. I want to kill all video games."

A big factor in the craze for learning English was the pre-Olympic drive to make China more international, when even taxi drivers learned a couple of words of English. In the bookshops, you can still learn English the traditional way, reading texts such as Wuthering Heights, but you can also use books featuring scenes from Friends. China's most famous actress, Zhang Ziyi, has spent a long time learning English, though she claims she picked up most her best phrases listening to rappers such as Eminem. English is now used, at times with hilarious results, on signs and posters around Beijing – real-estate developers believe it gives great cachet to a development to have English billboards, even if the language used is often absurd: anyone fancy a "National Cream" apartment or a "Boning" flat? And the signs saying "Careful landslip attention security" or "The slippery are very crafty" demand attention. Watch your step.

English-language training in China is an industry worth around 15 billion yuan a year, or about £1.3bn, and there are more than 50,000 English-training organisations in China. In Beijing alone, some 200,000 people took English classes last year. Some of these help Chinese students study for the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) or the GRE (Graduate Record Examination) needed to study abroad, while others help white-collar workers improve their oral English or their business and financial English.

In China, English allows you to travel, to gain social advancement, and English-language teachers have become minor celebrities. Another giant of English-language learning is Dashan, a Canadian whose English name is Mark Rowswell and whose fluent Chinese has transformed him into the most famous Westerner in China – taxi drivers and passers-by point at him. His language-teaching shows, including programmes such as Dashan's Adventures in Canada, have made him a television legend. He also hosts shows teaching Chinese to foreigners – though his amazing Chinese skill annoys some incomers, who have been satirical of his ability to blend in at Chinese gatherings. But he is adored by the Chinese, especially for his mastering of the wildly popular xiangsheng (crosstalk) comedy style.

"You will often hear Chinese say things like, 'Dashan is more Chinese than the Chinese'," says the man himself. "But I think, first of all, that's a huge exaggeration. Secondly, it largely reflects the breaking down of barriers that I've worked on throughout my career. Chinese tend to pigeonhole people into clear categories: either you're Chinese or you are a foreigner. Dashan, at least to a certain extent, defies that sort of oversimplification." Dashan's status in China is such that he has been appointed as Canada's commissioner general for next year's Expo in Shanghai, heading up the whole pavilion team there. He's also the face of a Ford marketing campaign aimed at Chinese Canadian consumers.

For Dashan, teaching English to the Chinese has transformed him into a senior diplomat. Indeed, he's not the only one. During a recent reporting trip to Kashgar, in the restive western province of Xinjiang – where foreigners, especially journalists, are not especially welcome – I was approached by a plainclothes policeman in the lobby of my hotel, who identified himself, sat down, and asked me, in English: "Do you feel safe here?" My heart sank. This was a few days before the riots in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, in which scores of Han Chinese were killed by rampaging Muslim Uighurs, angry at Han China's growing domination in the region. "Do you feel safe here?" is a standard opening line when officialdom comes knocking in China, although it is usually delivered in Chinese, and I readied myself for a trip down the station, or at least a lengthy interrogation about what I was doing in this hotbed of separatism at China's westernmost extreme. Instead, the man produced an English-language textbook, helped himself to a glass of my beer, and began to ask me questions. "Are you loaded? Do you change diapers? I can count in English. Listen..." he said, before doing just that, counting to 10,000 in English. Thankfully, once he got past 29, he started using every 10th number, but it was still a lengthy process. The policeman followed this with a strange moral tale about why bats only come out at night, which he had clearly learnt off by heart.

He was definitely checking me out, and he knew I was a foreign reporter, as all hotels are required to register foreigners with journalist visas in their passports with the local Public Security Bureau. He took my mobile phone number. But what was significant was that he used the opportunity to sharpen up his English.

During the conversation, or interrogation, or tutorial, whatever it was, with the police officer in Kashgar, a couple of young students approached the table, and asked: "How are you? Where are you from? Do you speak English?" They too were eager to open a conversation in which they could practice their English, before my policeman friend intervened, barking at them to get home and not to be interfering in police business, taking their mobile phone numbers too. They left; red-faced, apologetic, and a bit scared.

On the flight back from Xinjiang, a young high school student also kept trying to interrupt my efforts to write on my laptop with various opening lines, such as, "The weather today is very beautiful" – despite the fact our flight had been delayed by several hours because of a minor hurricane hitting our airport. The opportunity of practising her English was too great to pass up, and I was happy to oblige.

Even monks are now getting into learning English. Last year, the China Religious Culture Communication Association and the Buddhist Association of China opened an English-language training course for Buddhists so they would be better prepared for working in foreign countries. Elder Master Yicheng, president of the Buddhist Association, said it was "imperative for China to train people who could spread Buddhist teachings in other languages". More than 20 Buddhist monks were chosen from monasteries around the country and put through their English-language paces at the Shanghai International Studies University.

All this does not mean, however, that English is yet spoken as widely, or as well, as it is in European countries such as Sweden, Germany or even France – and you still have a hard time getting around the place without being able to speak Chinese, even in big cities such as Shanghai and Beijing.

But English proficiency has improved markedly in recent years – and there are a lot more Chinese people learning and speaking English than there are English native-speakers learning Chinese. We should perhaps remember that – despite China's rapid rise to economic dominance – Britain is a long way off the time when an average local copper could spark up a conversation with a visiting Chinese journalist in Mandarin Chinese. Not until our own answer to Li Yang arrives, exhorting the nation to learn Chinese. Read More......

Cambodian students make dialogue

Eat them alive !!!


Robert You don't look too happy. Anything you want to talk about ?
Ella It's my new boss. She's horrible.
Robert In what way ?
Ella If anyone does anything wrong, she practically eats them alive.
Robert No one is that terrible.
Ella You've never met her. She's been nicknamed the Witch of the Accounting Office.
Robert That's not bad. At least it's not the entire company.

Explanation :

Eat someone alive - to criticize someone very angrily

Example : If we get our facts wrong we'll be eaten alive by the press.

Read More......

Khmer element students make conversation

Memory




Expressions about memory...



o

I can't think of it off hand. GO
o I've got to brush up on it. GO
o It slipped my mind. GO
o I left the keys in the car. GO

o

I was locked out of my apartment last night. GO
o Let's back up. Where was I? GO
o I can't think of it off the top of my head. GO


Read More......

Khmer element students making English conversation,.

Conversations on the phone....





o

You're so difficult to get through to! GO

o I kept getting a busy signal. GO

o Is your phone out of order? GO

o My telephone was disconnected. GO

o We seem to have a bad connection on this phone. GO

o Would you care to leave a message? GO

o He's out to lunch? Would you like to leave a message? GO

o Let me get back to you in a few minutes. GO

o I've put him on hold. GO





Telephone Service...





o

I'd like to get telephone service. GO

o I'd like to have a phone installed. GO

o I'd like to have my phone disconnected.
Read More......

Cambodian element students making English Conversation, Narin & Linda


Learn English Conversation

English conversation is quite different from English reading. Conversation uses a different type of English, including different vocabulary.

English conversation vocabulary is much more casual. In English, this means we use more words of Saxon or Old English origin during conversation. We also use more phrasal verbs (two or three word verbs).

The difference between conversation and more formal English is one reason that even “advanced” students have difficulty with everyday conversations.

The problem is that students learn more formal English in school. Formal English tends to use more words of French & Latin origin. This kind of English is, in fact, much easier for students who speak Romance languages such as Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, or French. These students often do quite well when reading English, but have a lot of trouble understanding normal speech.

So, if you want to communicate with native speakers its very important to learn English conversation– not just textbooks and reading.

To learn conversation, you must listen to more casual English and you must learn the different vocabulary and patterns used in normal speech.

In my lessons, I always focus on real English conversation and I use the vocabulary of common speech. Another great source of casual English conversation is film. Listen to American and English movies and read the subtitles. This will also help you.

Finally, Kristin, Joe, Tomoe, and I are working on some very exciting projects. We are recording real conversations with our friends and family. In fact, Kristin and Joe are already finished recording over 30 real conversations.

Next, we’ll send these recordings to be transcribed– so you’ll have the text for all of them. Then we’ll make lessons based on the vocabulary in the conversations– including idioms and slang. For example, we’ll use the Listen & Answer technique to guarantee you learn the vocabulary and grammar deeply.

These lessons are scheduled to be released on November 1st. The title of these lessons is simple and direct. We’re calling them “Learn Real English“. Read More......

Khmer element students making English dialogue


Do you ever feel unsure of yourself when making conversation?
"If You Can Follow Simple Step-By-Step Instructions - You are About to Discover a Breakthrough & Refreshingly Different Method for Developing Exceptional Conversation Skills...

If you are searching to find out more about how to develop great conversation skills and exceptional people skills then this is going to be the most exciting message you’ll ever read...

Even if this sounds amazing to you now - by the time you read to the end of this article you'll know why it is not only possible but achievable for you.

Would you like to discover how to put an end to feeling unsure of yourself with other people? How much easier would your life be if you already knew...

How to start a great conversation with anyone you meet

The best way to deal with awkward people and take the sting out of rejection

How to exude a confidence & inner strength that makes people eager to listen to you

A sure-fire way top keep any conversation moving along without deadly silences

How to win the approval, admiration and deep appreciation of anyone you talk to
Imagine the relief of never being stuck for words again!
Even when meeting new people...

Even though it isn’t really, it seems like a long time ago when I used to have great difficulty meeting and dealing with people. Back then getting rapport usually depended on sheer luck and all my problems were really just people problems I couldn’t solve.

And like you I was looking for a breakthrough - a more effective way to talk to people. Everything changed for me once I discovered a highly effective strategy - and it can work for you too...

Back in 1993 I attended a 12-month course in peak performance that took my communication skills to a new level. Each month I spent 21% of my income to attend this program and what I learned nearly blew my mind. At these intense information packed seminars I sat next to dynamic, confident men and women who managed major companies and I learned the very same peak performance communication strategies they used to lead teams of people to success and to earn huge salaries.

I had never felt so confident and powerful in all my life. And all of a sudden my social life took off. Instead of sitting at home reading about how to make my life better I was out making new friends and having a ball. And the most exciting part is that there is nothing stopping you from doing the same...

Imagine always knowing the right thing to say...

And having people everywhere respect and appreciate you in a whole new way. Imagine how good it would feel to be someone who people love to be around - the kind of person everyone wants as one of their trusted and closest friends. Read More......

Teaching English House Rules


កាលពីថ្ងៃ​អង្គារ ទី២​ ខែមិថុនា ​ឆ្នាំ២០០៩ វិទ្យាស្ថាន​ពុទ្ធសាសន​បណ្ឌិត្យ​​​​ដែ​ល​​នៅ​ក្រោម​ការ​​គ្រប់គ្រង​របស់​ក្រសួង​ធម្មការ​ និង​កិច្ច​ការ​សាសនា ​នៅ​ក្នុង​ប្រទេសកម្ពុជា បានបើកសម្ពោធ​ឲ្យប្រើប្រាស់វចនានុក្រមខ្មែរអេឡិចត្រូនិក សកបរិវត្តន៍​ (កំណែ)ទី២។

ការបើក​សម្ពោធ​វចនានុក្រម​ខ្មែរ​អេឡិចត្រូនិក​កំណែទី២​នេះ​គឺ​ដើម្បី​ជា់​ប្រយោជន៍​​ដល់​​​សាធា​រណៈជនមានភាពងាយស្រួលក្នុងការប្រើប្រាស់​ ស្រាវជាវ និង​ស្វែងយល់​ ​​​ពីអក្សរសាស្ត្រខ្មែរ ឲ្យបានកាន់តែប្រសើរ​ឡើង។

Teaching English House Rules

The House Rules which appear below are divided into two sections. Violation of any of the rules in the first section is likely to lead to the immediate suspension of your account and could lead to legal action being taken against you by the authorities or an aggrieved party. Be aware that in exceptional circumstances the British Council and BBC could be legally obliged to reveal your registration information and/or IP address to the authorities.

Keep your contributions civil, tasteful and relevant. Please:
Do not post messages that are unlawful, harassing, defamatory, abusive, threatening, harmful, obscene, profane, sexually oriented, homophobic or racially offensive.
No defamatory comments. A defamatory comment is one that is capable of damaging the reputation of a person or organisation. If successfully sued you could be held liable for considerable damages and costs.
Do not incite people to commit any crime, including incitement of racial hatred.
Do not post content which you've copied from someone else and don't own the copyright.

Although breaking one of the house rules below is less likely to land you in court, the rules are still important for your own safety, the safety of others and to avoid causing offence. Violation of these rules may result in suspension of your membership.
No swearing. Please don't use profanities or other words which might offend other users.
No spamming or flooding. Don't repost the same message, or very similar messages, more than once.
No personal information. It is not acceptable to publicise your or anyone else's contact details including address, place of employment, name of educational establishment, telephone or mobile number, email address, etc. This is for your own safety and that of everyone who uses this service.
Keep your posts relevant. Comments added to a particular article, activity, poll or other content should be connected to the topic of the content. Posts which aren't relevant lower the value of the debate for everyone and may be removed. See the Blogs and Forums section for details on type of content that is considered appropriate.
No advertising, promotion of products or services. If the editors feel that your content is overtly commercial or for promotional purposes it may be removed.
Post in English only. Posts containing languages other than English may be removed. Common greetings and salutations in languages other than English may be acceptable.
No capital letters. This is internet shorthand for raising your voice. You can make your point perfectly well in lower case so please take the caps lock off.
No impersonating. Impersonating someone (including other members) is unacceptable.
No inappropriate usernames (vulgar, offensive, etc).
Abusing the complaints system. Please don't abuse the complaints system. It exists to enable visitors to alert the Teaching English moderators about content which breaks the above rules. Please contact us to alert us to multiple postings, spelling mistakes and so on. Anyone who abuses the complaints system repeatedly may have their account suspended.

Copyright and the law
You own the copyright in your postings, articles and pictures, but you also agree to grant the British Council and BBC a perpetual, royalty-free, non-exclusive, sublicenseable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform, play, and exercise all copyright and publicity rights with respect to any such work worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any media now known or later developed for the full term of any rights that may exist in such content, consistent with privacy restrictions set forth in the BBC's Privacy Policy.

If you do not wish to grant such rights to the British Council and the BBC, it is suggested that you do not submit your contribution to this site.

By submitting your contribution to this site, you also warrant that such contribution is:
your own original work and that you have the right to make it available to the British Council and BBC for all the purposes specified above
is not defamatory
does not infringe any law

You also agree to indemnify the British Council and BBC against all legal fees, damages and other expenses that may be incurred by the British Council and BBC as a result of your breach of the above warranty.

You also agree to waive any moral rights in your contribution for the purposes of its submission to and publication on the British Council and BBC site and the other purposes specified above.

You may not post any defamatory or illegal material of any nature. This includes text, graphics, video, and/or audio. Posting a message with the intention of committing or condoning an illegal act is strictly prohibited.

You may not violate, plagiarise, or infringe on the rights of third parties including copyright, trademark, trade secret, privacy, personal, publicity, or proprietary rights.

If there is any conflict between these Terms and Conditions and/or specific terms appearing elsewhere on this site relating to specific material then the latter shall prevail.

About your privacy
If you register with us, our registration process requires you to supply us with your email details, but we will only use this information to validate your access to the discussions and for other service administration purposes. However, from time to time we also contact a small number of contributors to ask them to participate in focus groups or to provide feedback. The British Council and BBC comply with the 1998 Data Protection Act.
If you're under age 18

The materials on this site are designed for non-native speaker teachers of English working predominantly in secondary education in state schools around the world. Children under 18 aren't allowed to become members and will not be allowed to submit comments, blogs or interact on the site.

Disciplinary procedure
Violation of any of the rules above may lead to your membership account be temporarily suspended or terminated. The British Council and the BBC additionally reserve the right to suspend or terminate any membership account at any time and at its sole discretion. While suspended, returning to the site by creating another account will constitute a further offence and will result in your account being closed permanently. The British Council and the BBC reserve the right to delete any posting, at any time, for any reason, and is under no obligation to publish any work submitted. Read More......
Student: Hyejin Ju
Personality: Audrey Hepburn
School: Seoul National University
Teacher: Jina Kwon
Class: College English 46
Hyejin Ju's improvement was quite notable. Her final video shows off her presentation skills by smiling and speaking directly to her audience with confidence. She recited Audrey Hepburn's words with the same grace and sincerity. Read More......

Grammar Kills Your English Speaking

Grammar Kills Your English Speaking

“How You Will Speak Excellent English
In 6 Months Or Less”

Dear Friend,

Do you feel embarrassed when you speak English? Is your pronunciation bad? Do you make a lot of grammar mistakes when you speak?

Do people have trouble understanding you? Do they seem confused when you speak English?

Is it difficult for you to understand native speakers? Do you feel frustrated because you still can’t understand English speakers easily?

You have studied English for years. You read English well, but when its time to speak– you feel nervous, foolish, embarrassed, and shy when speaking English.

Is it possible that you will never speak English well?

Are you angry that you studied for years but still cannot speak English easily?

What is wrong? Have you wasted all of your study time? Have you wasted all of your English vocabulary? Will you ever speak English easily?

Will you ever feel relaxed and happy when you speak English?

I Love It!
“Effortless English is great! I love it! Since using the system, my speaking has improved so fast. My friends can’t believe it. They all want to know the secret. Of course, I tell them all about Effortless English.”
Akemi Sato, Japan

Read More......
Read More......

Study at Asia Euro University

For Under Graduate Study
1. Foundation Year
2. Faculty of Arts, Humanities & Languages
3. Faculty of Business
4. Faculty of Economics
5. Faculty of Hotel & Tourism
6. Faculty of Science & Information Technology

For Post Graduate Study



For more information, click here!


Read More......