In early
2006 a young
American woman with a ready and perfect smile, Shannon May, came to
Huangbaiyu, in China's northeast
Liaoning Province. A Harvard graduate, now
studying for her doctoral degree at the University of California,
she became an English teacher at a local primary school in the
small mountain village.
Before Shannon showed up on the scene, most of her students
struggled with English, lagging behind other area schools. Now the
average overall English score at the school ranks second in the
township.
She lives in a rented farmhouse, and has adapted to the local
food that previously may have been too salty or too spicy for her.
When there is a wedding or funeral in the village, like the native
villagers she would pay her respect with a gift, usually money.
In addition to serving as an English teacher, Shannon is
fulfilling an assignment issued by a US IT firm, Intel, to conduct
research into rural development in China. The Sustainable
Development Demonstration Village, a joint project of the China-US
Center for Sustainable Development and the Municipal Government of
Benxi, is underway in the village. In fact, Shannon volunteers her
time to teach the kids English free of charge.
Shannon teaches in a humble classroom, of which the exterior wall
surfacing sometimes sheaves off. In winter when this happened she
and her students used thick folded paper to fill the gaps between
the glass and window frames.
Benefiting from Shannon's teaching, 12-year-old Wang Shicheng
scored 80 of a possible 100 on his English examination, where
previously he might have only scored about 30. Shannon's graduate
thesis at Harvard was on rural education. She has said to her
colleagues that the countryside would decide the fate of China, and
education would decide the fate of the countryside. During her
stay, an important objective was to try to help her students
comprehend abstract concepts, which in days past would have been
difficult for them to grasp.
Student Wang Shicheng says that when Shannon teaches a word, for
example, "basin," she will hold up the object and point to it when
pronouncing the word. So he is quick to correctly recall the word.
Wang says if he is required to write a composition on her, he will
say Shannon is a beautiful aunt, and the two wardrobes she wears in
the winter-one gray, one black-are beautiful, too. "Shannon is our
friend," Wang says, "and she plays games with us. Once we had a
snowball fight, and the number of boys was less than the girls, so
Shannon joined with us. We defeated the girls in the end."
Shannon cooks for herself and is often seen with blades of grass in
hair. She lives in a rented farmhouse, and there her books account
for most of her belongings. In addition to English books, she also
keeps some Chinese volumes, such as the
Chinese Cookbook
and
How to Prepare Chinese Dishes. She keeps few
cosmetics, only very simple and common lotions. Though still trying
to adapt to Chinese cuisine, she says she relishes in the tasting
of new dishes.
Villagers say that Shannon is welcome at every wedding without
invitation and, according to Chinese tradition, she presents her
share of money as a congratulation gift to the newlyweds. She would
take photos of the newlyweds, and at her own expense had those
developed and sent to the couples. Sometimes she would take the
stage and serve as hostess. At first, the locals were awed by her,
but as time went by they came to love her.
Shannon likes to pose for photos with others. Each time she
encountered those who would back away because of their shabby
clothes or shyness, she would ask them to remain with her as a part
of the group photo. She said that people she had met in the village
were very kind-perhaps the kindest she had encountered in
China.
Shannon will end her mission near the end of 2006. She had already
begun to pack her luggage. But before she left that small mountain
village in northern China, she married her boyfriend, Zhe, in a
traditional Chinese wedding ceremony.
In her farewell letter, Shannon fondly wrote of the friends she
had made and the experiences she had enjoyed. "From you I have
learned to make dumplings, heat kang (a brick bed), gather wild
vegetables, farm and drink," she wrote to her village friends.
"These and my experience as an English teacher in the village will
be a highlight of my life. To share my wedding is to celebrate the
one year we shared together."
She has promised to provide a total of 37,500 yuan in grants for
middle school graduates in the village. The program will begin next
year and will continue five years. Each year a selected middle
school graduate in the village will receive an annual grant of
2,500 yuan for three years, so that he or she can continue their
high school education.
(China Pictorial, 12/2006)