Posts Tagged ‘student’

Topographical survey completed for Guangji Kindergarten

Monday, May 4th, 2009

On 30th April 2009, two SQR volunteers and a professional surveyor went up to the Guangji Kindergarten and the topographical survey is now complete.

The next stage is to get architectural plans drawn up, whilst finding builders and project management professionals.

GuangJi Kindergarten

GuangJi Kindergarten

The Guangji Preschool & Kindergarten was founded in 2000 by school principal Kang Yuling and several other teachers. The school is now the only preschool and kindergarten serving five villages. After the closure of other schools, to ensure the continuing education of the youngest members of her community, Kang Yuling rallied her fellow teachers, and then donated her family home and farmland to the cause. The group raised enough money to build a basic two-storey structure, and a small play area alongside her family home.
The new structure became classrooms, while the older structures housed teachers’ quarters, kitchen, and offices.

The May earthquake destroyed Kang’s house, and the former family home is badly damaged, and needs to be demolished. The new structure needs reinforcement if it is to be declared safe.

See photos of the school (in temporary prefabricated buildings) from January 2009.

Sichuan Quake Relief is working with the school principal, parents and teachers, on a project to rebuild the kindergarten.

Xinhua: Students from Sichuan quake epicentre to return for new terms

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Students from Sichuan quake epicentre to return for new terms

More than 10,000 students forced to study elsewhere will return to newly-built schools in their hometown, Wenchuan County, the epicentre of the massive earthquake last May in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, local officials said Sunday.

Ninety-five percent of the school reconstruction in Wenchuan is expected to be finished before September 1 when the new term begins, said Hu Zheng’an, Wenchuan Education Bureau head.

Students of four primary schools continued their education in prefabricated houses in Wenchuan, while most of the nearly 16,000 students across the county moved to other cities or provinces after the 8.0-magnitude earthquake which left more than 87,000 people dead or missing and millions homeless.

The county made a fresh new program of the school building with more than 2.2 billion yuan budgeted. As one of the first to start reconstruction, the Sanjiang Primary School will resume classes for all the 360 pupils on May 12, the first anniversary of the earthquake, Hu said.

Currently, more than 300 workers are working in the construction site of a primary school around the clock in Yanmen Township.

“Construction of a school covering more than 10,000 square meters normally takes a year, but we plan to finish it within six months so that students can come back to school earlier,” said Huang Guangcan, the project manager. “We must strengthen supervision to ensure the quality of the project.”

Clowns Without Borders – tour report, part 2

Friday, April 10th, 2009

The following is a second journal entry from Becky Priebe, who, as Becky Hoops took part in the recent ‘Clown Trauma Tour.’

200903 Clowns Sans Frontieres Sichuan Tour 2009

See also Part 1 for a report on Clowns Sans Frontieres’ tour of Sichuan.

China Earthquake Tour, Part 2

The second half of our tour took place in a city called Mianzhu.  This city, 2 hours north of Chengdu, was gravely affected by the earthquake.  At first glance we immediately  saw small signs of damage: cracked buildilngs, random piles of bricks, almost empty river beds (dams that controlled the rivers had burst during the earthquake), but the most obvious sign was the thousands of rows of temporary housing and temporary schools, on the outskirts of the city.
This “temporary” city, made of white and blue metal, consisted of corrugated retangle row housing, forming a completely new city… like a refuge camp within the country’s own borders.  Conditions are basic: electricity, no heating, no running water and no windows.  There are more than a million people currently living in these conditions.  They are no longer receiving governement aid and most are separated from their family networks.  In China, family, community and work networks are very important, many earthquake victims are left without this support system.

Most of the shows we did in Mianzhu were in one of the temporary schools.  There were about 10 000 children attending this school, so we did multiple shows at the same school for a few days.  The children  were between the ages of 5 and 16, and shows were for between 400 and 1200 kids at a time.  By the end of the week we were had apparently earned a somewhat disconcerning rockstar status…. for those who are curious: yes, 1000 Chinese teenagers who all want an autograph at the same time, is a bit intimidating.

In Mianzhu we also did shows for a retirement home and in the temporary housing project for those who happened to be there.  The elderly reacted just as strongly as the children, with a bit less pushing for autographs at the end.  One man began yelling, or what I perceived at yelling, at me before we started a show.  I was intimated and thought that he didn’t want us there, he seemed agressive and upset.  Upon receiving traslation, we realized that he was expressing his apologies that we should see such an ugly part of the country and that he was happy we had come.  After he saw me two-person-hula-hooping with a stern, young police officer he was even more happy we had come.

The day that hit me the hardest was when we visited the city of rubble where all of the displaced people had lived, worked and attended school.  For the first time since we had arrived in China, it was quiet.  There were no people in streets selling fruit, cheap clothing and plastic toys, no herds of school children, there were no traffic jams or honking horns.  But within the disturbing silence, if you listened carefully, you could still hear the millions of people screaming as their homes and schools collapsed upon them.  Among the rubble we saw toys, stuffed animals, baby shoes; unsettling reminders of  children crying and whimpering under mountains of rubble, wondering if they would be rescued in time. Or relatives, crying out to loved ones for days and weeks, with the chances of their survival dwindling with each hour.  This day hit me hard.  It made me realise in a very tangible way what these “refugees”, we have been performing for, had been through.  It fed me with a heightened desire to make the children laugh, to bring joy and smiles to the people.  My ridiculous complaints about the food and cold weather began to seem  insignificant and frivolous compared with the grim realities these displaced people had lived through and are continuing to face.

One collapsed school we visited was reduced to rubble in seconds, killing 3000 students instantly.  Some parents lost their only child; with the “One Child Policy” in China, families are legally restricted from having more than one child; couples are sometimes sterilized after their first child is born.

The government is not really giving much money or aid to these temporary cities.  Maybe I don’t understand the issue in its entirety, but I am still somewhat enraged when I think back to the massive expenditures of the recent Olympics in Beijing.  There is also a theory that the numerous dams built in the area contributed to weakening the fault line. There are so many issues like these that seem to become increasingly complex upon deeper research and investigation.  It is really touchy for any Chinese people to say negative things about the government; even when we had translaters it was difficult to know how people really felt.

The last show we did was in a school for children that had lived in the hardest hit city of WenChuan.  These kids were, for some reason or another displaced over 6 hours from their families to live in a vacant factory.  The kids were mostly teenagers of minority background.  They loved the show and we even won over the slightly reluctant principal.  This show, and one other show we did during this tour, was in collaboration with an organization called “Sichuan Earthquake Relief”.  This non-governmental oganisation (NGO) has done and is still doing some really phenomenal work in the quake stricken communities accross the province.  For more information on this NGO please visit:

http://www.sichuan-quake-relief.org/

For those who are interested in statistics of the aftermath of the quake (as of June 2008, stats obtained from Sim’s Cozy Guesthouse):
69 197 deaths
374, 176 people were injured
12, 222 missing
7, 789,100 houses were totally collapsed
24, 590,000 houses were damaged
15, 147,400 survivors had been transferred (mostly to temporary housing units, I described earlier)
Up to 46 million people were estimated to have been affected.

See first part of Becky’s report here, and her website, for more.

SQR trip: trip to Emei Shan (meet teachers, students)

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

Title: SQR trip: trip to Emei Shan (meet teachers, students)
Location: Emei Shan
Description: March 2nd Trip to Emei Shan (meet teachers, students)
Date: 2009-03-02

20090112: Xinhua: Quake area students to visit Philippines

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Students from Sichuan quake-hit areas to visit Philippines
www.chinaview.cn
BEIJING, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) — A total of 100 secondary school students from the areas hit by the May 12 earthquake in China’s Sichuan Province will pay a visit to the Philippines, at the invitation of the Philippine Government, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang announced here on Thursday. The students will visit the Philippines from Jan. 11 to 17.

China enjoys a traditional friendship with the Philippines, and the bilateral relations have witnessed stable development since the two sides forged diplomatic ties in 1975, said Qin.

He said the invitation fully demonstrated the friendliness extended by the government and people of the Philippines, to which China expressed appreciation and gratitude. China believed the visit will reinforce the exchanges and friendship between people of the two countries, especially between the youth, enrich the China-Philippines friendship of cooperation, and promote the bilateral relationship, said Qin.

The 8.0-magnitude quake, occurring in China on May 12 last year, left more than 69,000 people dead, 374,000 injured, 18,000 missing and millions homeless.

新华网1月12日电,中国外交部发言人秦刚宣布,应菲律宾政府邀请,四川地震灾区的100个初中学生将赴菲律宾度过一个有意义的春节。他们的旅行将从1月11日进行到17日。

中国和菲律宾长期以来维持着良好的互利合作关系,双边关系自1975年建交以来就一直经历平稳的发展和持续。

他说中国感激和感谢菲律宾向地震灾区孩子们提供的帮助和支持,这是两国人民和两国政府友谊的良好见证。我们相信这次访问会加强两国人民,尤其是两国亲少年的交流和友谊。

——————–

Hundred China quake zone kids to rehabilitate in Philippines
2009-01-07 18:43:25

MANILA, Jan. 7 (Xinhua) — Invited by Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, a group of 100 children who survived a devastating earthquake in China last May will arrive in the Philippines this weekend for rehabilitation, with visits to the archipelagic state’s stunning beaches, museums, schools and the Presidential Palace, officials said Wednesday.

The one hundred middle school students were from Beichuan, Mianzhu, Shifang, the worst-hit towns in southwestern Chinese province of Sichuan, with many losing close relatives in the 8.0-magnitude earthquake on May 12, 2008, according to officials with the Chinese Embassy to the Philippines.

More than 80,000 people, including at least 19,000 school children, were killed in the killer quake, the worst natural disaster China experienced in three decades, the government statistics show.

According to the schedule, the quake zone kids, most of whom have never traveled abroad, will arrive at Manila on board a Philippine Airline charter flight on Jan. 11 and fly to the crystal water and white-sand beach in Bohol island after touring around the national capital. They will also call on President Arroyo in the Presidential Palace Malacanang a day before they return to China on Jan. 17.

The rehabilitation plan was formalized in August during Arroyo’s visit to Sichuan quake zone and meeting with her Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao. Two groups of school children from the Sichuan quake zone took similar rehabilitation trips to Russia and Hungary last year.

In a report to the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Philippine Ambassador to China Sonia Brady said the visit is designed for the Sichuan students to have a meaningful time and interaction with the Filipino people to help them recover from the effects of the earthquake.

Brady said the visit is a “very significant milestone” in promoting people-to-people exchanges between the Philippines and China.

Yuan Zhiju, a teacher with the Leigu middle school in Beichuan, told Xinhua reporters in Sichuan that kids were very excited about going abroad and had hand-knitted with needles and threads three ethnic hand-bags that traditions say would bring good fortune to President Arroyo.

“It is a gift from us to represent our gratitude to President Arroyo and the Filipino people,” Yuan said.

20090112: Verein der Chinesischen Studenten und Wissenschaftler an der Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

The Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Ruhr University Bochum has made a significant donation part of which has been put towards the purchases of blankets, and the rest of the donation will be used to support kindergarten projects.

The Association is particularly interested in supporting the Guangji kindergarten project, the library project (http://library-project.org) and are keen to support other projects, too.

Xie xie / Vielen Dank / Many thanks for their interest and support.

http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/china/

Qipangou Middle School relocated to Chengdu

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

About 220 secondary school students from Qipangou in Wenchuan have been relocated to Chengdu and will spend at least the next 18 months in the provincial capital separated from their parents while their hometown is being rebuilt.

The students, most of whom are from the Qiang ethnic minority, are aged between 12 and 15. They have 22 teachers and administrative staff who look after them. The parents are either back in Wenchuan rebuilding homes, or have moved to the coastal cities to look for work.

Because of an insufficient supply of teachers, classes often have more than 50 students. The education fees are covered by the Wenchuan government but the students generally need about 600 RMB a month for food and basic living expenses. There is a government subsidy of 300 RMB for this and the rest comes from family members, if they have it to spare.

Sichuan Quake Relief Projects for the Qipangou Students

Basic warm winter clothing

The children do not have sufficient winter clothing. We aim to supply each child with at least two sets of long johns (winter undergarments). Other warm clothing would be put to good use to here.

One set costs 25rmb. 220 x 50rmb is 11,000 RMB.

Minimum target for winter clothing project: 11,000 RMB.

Library Books

They have a small library in place but they need more books.

500 children’s books: 3,500 RMB.

Weekend support projects

Separated from their family, the children are stuck in the Chengdu school at the weekends and have very little by the way of leisure activities to break their study routine. As the teachers have to mind them all the time, they haven’t been able to take a day off since the earthquake.

SQR and members of the local community plan to organise day trips, sports days, and fun informal educational projects for groups of these children. If your company or school would like to help cover some of the costs of these weekend activities, please email us at peter@sichuan-quake-relief.org.

Costs involved would be small, generally covering expenses like bus travel, lunch, fun educational projects, and entrance tickets into places they would like to visit, such as the Panda Base, the Moon Bear centre, cinemas, parks etc. Please also get in touch if you’d like to help arrange these activities.

Guangji Kindergarten Project

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

In the village of Guangji, there are 132 children in the Di Kang Le Kindergarten. As there are now very few employment prospects in the quake zone, almost all of the parents of these children have been forced to move to the coastal cities to look for work. The kindergarten has nine teachers who are looking after the children, but they have very few resources and are in serious need of some basic help including warm clothing and basic school supplies.

Following discussions with the staff and the students, SQR has drawn up the following list of basic needs for the school.

Total budget for Guang Ji Kindergarten Project: 36,372 RMB

Items unit price Quantity Sum (RMB)
Coat and pants 80 132 10560
Shoes (pair) 30 132 3960
Gloves (pair) 3 132 396
Socks (pair) 3 132 396
Desk and Chairs (set of 1+6) 200 20 4000
Desk and Chair (for teachers) 200 4 800
Water colour pens 5 132 660
Notebooks 1 500 500
Plastic toys 50 100 5000
Computer/printer for admin 4500 1 4500
Computer desk 150 1 150
Cassette recorder 150 3 450
TV 1500 3 4500

“Foreigners give children fun day,” China Daily

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

From the China Daily:

SHIFANG, Sichuan: Oliver Baudouy knelt on the dusty ground amid the rubble of Bayi Primary School and played the drums. The simple but strangely attractive rhythm started to draw children from the village. They became increasingly mesmerized by the music but kept their distance from the man. Baudouy’s fellow foreigners started dancing and invited their young audience to join them. The visitors’ exaggerated movements and facial expressions made the children laugh.

That was how 40 expatriates yesterday celebrated Children’s Day with hundreds of youngsters in the rural areas of Shifang, about two hours’ drive away from Chengdu, the provincial capital of Sichuan. The foreigners were part of relief efforts for the May 12 quake that devastated the province.

The expats, aged between 18 and 60, come from 30 countries, including the United States, Britain, France, Ireland and Germany. Most of them work in Chengdu. “We wanted to spend the day with children in the mountains rather than in a city to deliver the message that they are not forgotten,” Peter Goff, who organized the day’s activities, said.

The team visited three different places in Luoshui county, a region severely hit by the quake. The treks to the areas were harsh, with county roads virtually destroyed by the quake, but the visitors were not deterred.

“A nice smile on a child’s face was all the reward we needed. It warmed our hearts,” said Baudouy, a Canadian teacher of the English and French languages.

It was the first time for He Jia to see so many foreigners in person. The 11-year-old girl had previously only seen such foreigners on TV . “I think they are very funny, especially when they are dancing,” she said, as her friends and classmates played with the men. The girl could not wait to show people what was inside her pockets. They were stuffed with candy. “The foreigners gave them to me for Children’s Day,” the pupil said, beaming.

“The students have never been so playful in the aftermath of the quake,” said villager Yang Xiaohong, who later joined the dance with the children. Yang said the children stayed at home or in makeshift sheds after the primary school collapsed. Watching TV was the only leisure activity they had. More than 1,700 gifts were distributed to the children, including balls, toy cars, dolls and sports equipment.

The EtonHouse International School in Chengdu donated most of the gifts. “We tried to choose gifts that more than one person could play with, which means more people can have fun,” said the school’s principal, Sarah Moore. Frenchman Max De Villers agreed, saying that children needed activities to keep them busy, as they have a lot of energy that needs to be “let off”. Staying in a crowded tent was not good for them. “Playing is one important step for them to return to normal life,” he added.

Various activities, such as painting, drum lessons and ball games, took place on the site after more children and their parents joined the visitors. The children were also eager to take photos with the foreigners. Gradually, the ruins became a happy playground for the young quake victims yesterday. “Happiness is very important. Even though you have experienced difficult times, life must go on, and you must enjoy your life, ” said Baudouy.

More photos can be seen in SQR’s photo gallery of the day.