Discussion:
@#$*% -- Chinese Instructors Who Can't Speakee Englishee!!!!
(too old to reply)
NYC XYZ
2005-11-17 15:43:36 UTC
Permalink
Okay, y'all know I'm Chinese-American myself, born on Taiwan no
less...but I'm getting quite frustrated with Chinese
instructors/teaching assistants who CAN'T SPEAKING FUCKING
ENGLISH!!!!!!!!!!!

They tend to be employed for "technical" classes in math and sciences,
which for most folks that take such courses are confusing enough to
begin with!

Ironically, often in these fields if you're off by a decimal place you
screw up big...but when it comes to English proficiency the widest
chasm of unintelligibility is tolerated for some reason!

I know you're FOB, whatever...but fuck it, even undergrads have to take
some fucking TOEFL or whatever the fuck it's called! How the fuck did
y'all get hired speaking with rocks in your mouths! Do they do
interviews anymore, or is the situation that goddamned desperate??

You don't know whether they are saying "able" or "apple," whether they
mean "find" instead of "found," if it's "probability" or "property" or
"probably"...it just adds an extra layer/level of semantic
cross-referencing/parsing...WTF!!!!!! Imagine the guy at your local
take-out trying to teach you math and sciences...you want some x with
that y??

@#$%^&*!!!
PeterL
2005-11-17 17:43:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Okay, y'all know I'm Chinese-American myself, born on Taiwan no
less...but I'm getting quite frustrated with Chinese
instructors/teaching assistants who CAN'T SPEAKING FUCKING
ENGLISH!!!!!!!!!!!
Not doing too well in your math classes? Don't party so much and try
studying a little.
Post by NYC XYZ
They tend to be employed for "technical" classes in math and sciences,
which for most folks that take such courses are confusing enough to
begin with!
Ironically, often in these fields if you're off by a decimal place you
screw up big...but when it comes to English proficiency the widest
chasm of unintelligibility is tolerated for some reason!
I know you're FOB, whatever...but fuck it, even undergrads have to take
some fucking TOEFL or whatever the fuck it's called! How the fuck did
y'all get hired speaking with rocks in your mouths! Do they do
interviews anymore, or is the situation that goddamned desperate??
You don't know whether they are saying "able" or "apple," whether they
mean "find" instead of "found," if it's "probability" or "property" or
"probably"...it just adds an extra layer/level of semantic
cross-referencing/parsing...WTF!!!!!! Imagine the guy at your local
take-out trying to teach you math and sciences...you want some x with
that y??
@#$%^&*!!!
NYC XYZ
2005-11-17 19:38:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by PeterL
Not doing too well in your math classes? Don't party so much and try
studying a little.
Not the point. I'm actually one of the best students. But even I am
annoyed -- if it weren't for the fact that I am Chinese and thus
actually like reading the textbook, I'd be lost like the other
dunderheads who expect to learn everything from lectures only!
nt@MyDvdsInTheMail.Com
2005-11-23 13:36:43 UTC
Permalink
"Not the point. I'm actually one of the best students. But even I am
annoyed -- if it weren't for the fact that I am Chinese and thus
actually like reading the textbook, I'd be lost like the other
dunderheads who expect to learn everything from lectures only!"

It's a legitimate complaint. But as many already said, if the
textbooks are good enough, lectures in some classes might just be a
waste of time.
When I was your age, most of my buddies and I always thought many
teachers, instructors are basically just the folks who had had a chance
to study the textbooks before you did. You could understand some
concept even better than they can...

n.t.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-23 15:07:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by ***@MyDvdsInTheMail.Com
It's a legitimate complaint. But as many already said, if the
textbooks are good enough, lectures in some classes might just be a
waste of time.
When I was your age, most of my buddies and I always thought many
teachers, instructors are basically just the folks who had had a chance
to study the textbooks before you did. You could understand some
concept even better than they can...
n.t.
Ah, thanks for confirming my suspicions...this is my first semester
doing any mathematics in a long time, and I'm already starting to feel
just that way. I guess I'll be all right once I adjust my
expectations. Indeed, ultimately this goes beyond English fluency....
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-26 23:35:53 UTC
Permalink
why can't chinese learn to speak english as well as the indians?
chinese must
be the world's MOST INARTICULATE race, next to the silent bowing
japanese.
Herman Rubin
2005-11-28 16:00:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
why can't chinese learn to speak english as well as the indians?
chinese must
be the world's MOST INARTICULATE race, next to the silent bowing
japanese.
The Indians have been speaking English all their lives,
even taking much of their education in English.

Also, the sound system of the languages in India are
not all that dissimilar from Western languages; those
of Chinese are quite dissimilar. This means that
Chinese have a fair amount of difficulty in distinguishing
phonemes which we find easy. BTW, this occurs for other
languages as well. Many sound combinations in English
are difficult for Chinese, and vice versa, and this is
not only the case for those languages.

Also, the grammar of Chinese is missing many of the features
of English, and English may well be the easiest outside of
Chinese in this respect.
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
***@stat.purdue.edu Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-28 19:26:31 UTC
Permalink
The Indians have been speaking English all their lives, even taking much of their education in English.
All this may be true, but my general impression is still that some
cultures are more
predisposed to clear articulation (verbal as well as written) than
others. In other
words, I bet that most of those inarticulate chinese TAs would be
inarticulate
TAs in Mandarin as well as english. Articulation is more than just
pronunciation, accent; and vocabulary; it is a personality trait that
includes expressiveness and soft communication ability and body
language. Some of it is just common sense -- like using shorter
sentences and avoiding jargon.
Japanese are horrific in this regard and chinese are a close second.

It does seem that western culture values communication clarity much
more and so cultivate this trait more; thus, an english speaking
american TA in china would fare much better than the chinese TAs in USA.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-29 16:28:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
All this may be true, but my general impression is still that some
cultures are more
predisposed to clear articulation (verbal as well as written) than
others.
Physically speaking, Chinese -- and many tonal languages, I believe --
do not rely so much on using the tongue. It's basically the opposite
of you trying to learn Chinese, say.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
In other
words, I bet that most of those inarticulate chinese TAs would be
inarticulate
TAs in Mandarin as well as english. Articulation is more than just
pronunciation, accent; and vocabulary; it is a personality trait that
includes expressiveness and soft communication ability and body
language.
Indeed -- some of us were skirting that very issue in this thread, how
sometimes these "eggheads" are just like that, Chinese or white or
whatever.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Some of it is just common sense -- like using shorter
sentences and avoiding jargon.
Oh, trust me, if it's one thing Chinese know how to do it's to find
short-cuts! That's quite my complaint, too -- too much "clipping" of
syllables (like an English Cockney) combined with the "tonal
accent"...brrr!
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Japanese are horrific in this regard and chinese are a close second.
Hmmm...it seems that you're talking about the cultural stereotype of
the Oriental who's not given to too much speech, or mysterious
speech...ROR!
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
It does seem that western culture values communication clarity much
more and so cultivate this trait more; thus, an english speaking
american TA in china would fare much better than the chinese TAs in USA.
I'd bet that an American TA in China would be more "open" and
extroverted, sure. I don't think "articulate" is quite the word any
more, though.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-29 18:10:33 UTC
Permalink
Hmmm...it seems that you're talking about the cultural stereotype of the Oriental who's not given to too much speech, or mysterious speech.
stereotypes perpetuate for a reason -- they capture a grain of truth.
I'd bet that an American TA in China would be more "open" and extroverted, sure. I don't think "articulate" is quite the word any more, though.
bottom line: the american would make a better TA than the chinese.
Chinese -- and many tonal languages, I believe -- do not rely so much on using the tongue.
accent has very little to do with communication. I have had italian
and isreali TAs who
had huge accents and weird grammar. however, they were EXCELLENT TAs
because they
still had expressive personalties and can make their points very
clearly despite the language
barrier. chinese TAs need to work more on expression, not just their
accent, which is not at the
heart of the problem.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-29 19:59:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
stereotypes perpetuate for a reason -- they capture a grain of truth.
Oh, perhaps. It also depends on what you mean by "truth" -- are these
timeless truths of biology, say? Or variable truths of culture?
(These are tricks questions.)

In any case, now you've taken the conversation to the meta-level --
we're no longer talking about the phenomenon, but we're talking about
our talk about the phenomenon.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
bottom line: the american would make a better TA than the chinese.
Not necessarily. Just because someone is more extroverted doesn't make
them a better TA, even though a "social butterfly" sounds like someone
who might be better at the job, all else being equal.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
accent has very little to do with communication.
!

That's like saying sound waves have very little to do with
communication, or interference or "sound shadows" or "sound masks"....
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
I have had italian
and isreali TAs who
had huge accents and weird grammar.
Of course, an Indo-European accent is still closer to standard American
speech than a Chinese accent.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
however, they were EXCELLENT TAs
because they
still had expressive personalties and can make their points very
clearly despite the language
barrier.
Um...then we're no longer talking about the mechanics of speech and
communication. You want to talk about the factor of engaging
personalities, you need to start your own thread, or be very explicit
about this. Else you just muddy the waters.

We are, in other words, having two different conversations.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
chinese TAs need to work more on expression, not just their
accent, which is not at the
heart of the problem.
When you first learn the piano, you focus on "technical" matters, not
"expressive" ones. Of course, in reality it's often symbiotic, but the
effort -- the devotion of resources -- is rightly applied mainly on
"technical" matters when it comes to beginners.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-29 20:19:15 UTC
Permalink
Um...then we're no longer talking about the mechanics of speech and communication.
I was NEVER talking about mechanics, idiot. You chinese are so
stupidly fixated
on mechnics.

Your lack of comprehension indicates you probably have very poor
communication skills.
What a stereotypical chinese; completely fixated on mechanics but lack
comprehension of
what is important. You are probably one of those very bad chinese
TAs even if you might have good grammar.

We were always talking about
being a good TA, which is determined by having good COMMUNICATION
skills. You obviously
have a comprehensiion problem. Comprehendo?!

COMMUNICATION is not equal to mechanics, just like a good movie
has very little to do with the mechanics of the movie. You can have a
great
movie in 1940's film (black and white, no close-ups, grainy pictures).
You can
have a bad movie even if it is in 2005 panoramic color and quadraphonic
stereo
with the latest animation. Mechanics is a minor factor.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-30 14:47:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
I was NEVER talking about mechanics, idiot. You chinese are so
stupidly fixated
on mechnics.
But I was. If I talk about property x of object y, and you reply to me
without specifying that you're talking about proptery z of object y,
then it's perfectly legitimate for me to assume that you're also
talking about property x.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Your lack of comprehension indicates you probably have very poor
communication skills.
Your lack of reading comprehension belies any pretense of intelligence
you have.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
What a stereotypical chinese; completely fixated on mechanics but lack
comprehension of
what is important. You are probably one of those very bad chinese
TAs even if you might have good grammar.
It's very clear from my initial remarks that I'm a student. Do you
need ESL?
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
We were always talking about
being a good TA, which is determined by having good COMMUNICATION
skills. You obviously
have a comprehensiion problem. Comprehendo?!
I started this thread. What makes you think we were always talking
about being a good TA?
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
COMMUNICATION is not equal to mechanics, just like a good movie
has very little to do with the mechanics of the movie.
I never said communication was "equal" to mechanics. I only responded
that you cannot discount the mechanics. I only noted that because I
didn't realize at the time that you weren't talking about mechanics
like I have been since the very beginning!
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
You can have a
great
movie in 1940's film (black and white, no close-ups, grainy pictures).
You can
have a bad movie even if it is in 2005 panoramic color and quadraphonic
stereo
with the latest animation. Mechanics is a minor factor.
ROTFLMAO!

OMG...typical dumb American tourist...ahahahahahahahaha!!!!
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-30 20:33:42 UTC
Permalink
pity your low IQ. I have no doubt you are not very successful in the
real world, and will never be.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-01 15:17:08 UTC
Permalink
Eat some ass, butt-head.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
pity your low IQ. I have no doubt you are not very successful in the
real world, and will never be.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-02 00:13:10 UTC
Permalink
my my, your retort is so clever! it reflects how clever you are!
NYC XYZ
2005-12-02 14:35:56 UTC
Permalink
Try shit. You'll like it.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
my my, your retort is so clever! it reflects how clever you are!
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-03 04:42:38 UTC
Permalink
you must think so.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-05 14:46:05 UTC
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You are what you eat.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
you must think so.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-30 15:33:27 UTC
Permalink
I vague recall reading a recent issue of the Scientific American on
brain development. The predisposition to language acquisition skills
are acquired by the age of five. A toddler picks up language and
language nuances, of any language, at an amazing pace. After five (or
some infant age) the brain circuitry becomes hardwired though still
retaining some flexibility.
I came to the States at age seven; I don't think I was really
functioning in English until like nine! Moreover, I honestly didn't
know what "fuck," "faggot," and "shit" meant 'til...high school!

BTW, did you ever come across some report that there's a strong
correlation between students who study Chinese characters and
mathematical ability? I really don't remember where I read this, but
it was a while ago....
Spoken Chinese is a tonal language and an understanding of the word
depends as much on its pronounciation as in the context in which a
particular word is used.
Yes! There's this other report that came out just this year which
found that Chinese people tend to look at context much much more than
European-Americans...Chinese-Americans were somewhere in the
middle...it was one of them pyschological experiments where subjects
had to somehow analyze different pictures, and somehow the researchers
concluded that probably because of the way the Chinese language is --
so context-dependent -- that that practice of being aware of one's
surroundings, as it were, carries over into other aspects of life....
Toddlers exposed to spoken Chinese have no
trouble grasping the meaning of the words on their own. Adults who
have not been exposed Chinese have great difficulty in learning the
language and in pronouncing them. This difficulty applies to Chinese
too. For example northern Chinese who speak the Beijing dialect find
it impossible to understand the dialects of the more fragmented
populations of southern Chinese. As a southern Chinaman who had been
exposed to some five regional dialects I have less, but still
considerable, difficulty in just changing the tones to grasp most of a
conversation.
Understood. Though I have the rather opposite experience of being
amazed at how easily I seem to "understand" Chinese accents, even
though my own Chinese is about that of someone taking a 301 course in
conversational Chinese! (Pronunciation is impeccable, as always; so
too my French and German [well, within 96%].) Even accounting for the
majority of non-verbal cues, I can still recall situations where I
shouldn't have understood what was being conveyed but I did. So I
wonder if maybe there's some kind of Jungian "racial memory" in me that
allows me to get the gist of it all -- even with all the regional
accents!
A consequence of being Chinese (as per the SA article) is most Chinese
have perfect pitch hearing and therefore encounter less difficulties
training in classical music.
Ah! You know, I have indeed heard that rumor...unfortunately, I seem
to be tone-deaf myself! Love the piano, though...what a bitch! =)

Maybe that pitch-perfect capability has something to do with the
aforementioned math reasoning...??
It is unfair to fault mainland Chinese TAs for poor language skills
for the above reasons.
I'm not sure what "unfair" means, even given the context you've
outlined -- the students' needs ought to come first in academe (ahem,
ahem). Like I said, an out-of-place decimal is critical in many
applications; while less so, I think we should be about as rigorous in
staffing instructional positions WRT communication, the very basic
first or second frontline of which is pronunciation.
A better comparison will be ABCs (American
born Chinese) of which two are participating in this thread. Also go
to the top university campuses where you will already find a
significant student population of ABCs. Observe their socializing and
speech. They stand out as very confident and very at ease among the
elite of American society. Look up the faculty staff list where there
will be proportionately as many mainland academic staff (>30%) and
talk to them. Quite a few will fit the stereotype discussed in this
thread about their language awkwardness. But we are the same people.
Don't sneer at them because you have a temporary advantage.
Who's sneering? I'M FUCKING PISSED OFF!!!!
And don't
extrapolate their language awkwardness as symptomatic of a
dysfunctional Chinese society.
I don't recall having done this. The closest I've grumbled was that I
can't stand the "ma ma hu hu" mentality some might have in not cleaning
up their English.
If that is true you wouldn't be
reading headline about the threat of China advancing too fast and
becoming too powerful. And you are seeing only the beginning of a
trend that won't run out of steam anytime soon.
Well, I certainly salute that, you know: I can be quite the Chinese
irridentist.

But God damn it, we still need English-speaking instructors here in
college!!!!
RichAsianKid
2005-12-01 05:16:02 UTC
Permalink
I can never respond to PapaPeng. His messages keep disappearing on the
server. Like this quaint MI time bomb I guess. But let me interrupt
Post by NYC XYZ
I'm not sure what "unfair" means, even given the context you've
outlined -- the students' needs ought to come first in academe (ahem,
ahem). Like I said, an out-of-place decimal is critical in many
applications; while less so, I think we should be about as rigorous in
staffing instructional positions WRT communication, the very basic
first or second frontline of which is pronunciation.
A better comparison will be ABCs (American
born Chinese) of which two are participating in this thread. Also go
to the top university campuses where you will already find a
significant student population of ABCs. Observe their socializing and
speech. They stand out as very confident and very at ease among the
elite of American society. Look up the faculty staff list where there
will be proportionately as many mainland academic staff (>30%) and
talk to them. Quite a few will fit the stereotype discussed in this
thread about their language awkwardness. But we are the same people.
Don't sneer at them because you have a temporary advantage.
Who's sneering? I'M FUCKING PISSED OFF!!!!
papapeng just don't understand. It's a new world now, a new world
order.

Rules are made.

Not followed.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-01 15:34:48 UTC
Permalink
I never learnt to swear either and I'd choke up laughing at myself if
I tried.
You could always just say in Chinese! ^_^
I haven't come across any paper on such a co-relation. But there is
one paper you should find very interesting at
http://www.thomasarmstrong.com/multiple_intelligences.htm
Yes, thank you, I've heard of this, and have already surmised such a
thing for myself, seeing how, as the old joke goes, some of the
smartest people do the stupidest things. Well, a theory of "multiple
intelligences" accounts for all that! Just like strength isn't one
simple quality, or speed, etc. -- a typical power-lifter isn't
necessarily as "strong" as a typical fighter pilot, depending on the
context and exact exercise measured -- someone good at mathematics may
be (often is!) ho-hum at writing or politics (and
vice-versa!)...different "intelligences" are utilized.
[The theory of multiple intelligences was developed in 1983 by Dr.
Howard Gardner, professor of education at Harvard University. It
suggests that the traditional notion of intelligence, based on I.Q.
testing, is far too limited. Instead, Dr. Gardner proposes eight
different intelligences to account for a broader range of human
Logical-mathematical intelligence ("number/reasoning smart")
Spatial intelligence ("picture smart")
Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
Musical intelligence ("music smart")
Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
Dr. Gardner says that our schools and culture focus most of their
attention on linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligence. We
esteem the highly articulate or logical people of our culture.
However, Dr. Gardner says that we should also place equal attention on
individuals who show gifts in the other intelligences: the artists,
architects, musicians, naturalists, designers, dancers, therapists,
entrepreneurs, and others who enrich the world in which we live.
Unfortunately, many children who have these gifts don't receive much
reinforcement for them in school. Many of these kids, in fact, end up
being labeled "learning disabled," "ADD (attention deficit disorder,"
or simply underachievers, when their unique ways of thinking and
learning aren't addressed by a heavily linguistic or
logical-mathematical classroom. The theory of multiple intelligences
proposes a major transformation in the way our schools are run. It
suggests that teachers be trained to present their lessons in a wide
variety of ways using music, cooperative learning, art activities,
role play, multimedia, field trips, inner reflection, and much more
(see Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom). The good news is that
the theory of multiple intelligences has grabbed the attention of many
educators around the country, and hundreds of schools are currently
using its philosophy to redesign the way it educates children. The bad
new is that there are thousands of schools still out there that teach
in the same old dull way, through dry lectures, and boring worksheets
and textbooks. The challenge is to get this information out to many
more teachers, school administrators, and others who work with
children, so that each child has the opportunity to learn in ways
harmonious with their unique minds (see In Their Own Way).
The theory of multiple intelligences also has strong implications for
adult learning and development. Many adults find themselves in jobs
that do not make optimal use of their most highly developed
intelligences (for example, the highly bodily-kinesthetic individual
who is stuck in a linguistic or logical desk-job when he or she would
be much happier in a job where they could move around, such as a
recreational leader, a forest ranger, or physical therapist). The
theory of multiple intelligences gives adults a whole new way to look
at their lives, examining potentials that they left behind in their
childhood (such as a love for art or drama) but now have the
opportunity to develop through courses, hobbies, or other programs of
self-development (see 7 Kinds of Smart).]
From the arguments in this thread so far us Chinese tend to be strong
in six intelligences but weak in 6. & 7.
I beg to differ: many an American businessman grumble about the "wily
wascally Chinee!" And it's in China that Zen Buddhism started
(Bodhidharma's Indian origins notwithstanding), the "tenets" of which
modern psychology has finally discovered through a different method.
2. Logical-mathematical intelligence ("number/reasoning smart")
3. Spatial intelligence ("picture smart")
4. Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
5. Musical intelligence ("music smart")
6. Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
7. Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
8. Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
I would even say that it isn't so much different "intelligences" as
much as different tasks -- for example, a muscle can be trained to
excel at one task, at the cost of performing well at
another...likewise, one's intelligence may be more focused ("trained")
on one task than another, so that it's really a matter of resource
allocation, as opposed to multiple resources existing (though it's a
nice colloquial short-hand of sorts, kind of like talking about
"talent" or "love" or even "laziness" -- there's no such thing as
laziness, there is only lack of interest; there's no such thing as
love, there are only degrees of interest; there is no such thing as
talent, there is only attention and devotion).
Yourself and richasiankid certainly fit this profile of being weak in
6 & 7.
LOL -- and you think this one aspect of one's personality, "usenet
mischief," could be adequate input for any assessment of so grand an
ontological investigation as self and intelligence??
I was writing for a general readership rather than addressing anyone
in particular.
Well, maybe some HTML tags might help for those of us who are not 100%
context-sensitive 100% of the time!
But my point (6 & 7 above) is made. We are entering
road I had skirted so far because I admittedly no answer for. But
there is an old adage that will sound Confuscian but is pretty
universal. Be nice to others. Share. Help those less fortunate. Do
no harm. Figure out for yourself what they involve. I don't want to
sound like a patronizing old man.
Yes, yes, yes...but we still need people who SPEAK @#$%& ENGLISH!!!!!
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-02 00:17:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Zen Buddhism started
(Bodhidharma's Indian origins notwithstanding), the "tenets" of which
modern psychology has finally discovered through a different method.
2. Logical-mathematical intelligence ("number/reasoning smart")
3. Spatial intelligence ("picture smart")
4. Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
5. Musical intelligence ("music smart")
6. Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
7. Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
8. Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
While this may be an accurate list of what chinese society blindly
worships,
it it NOT acccurate list of what achieves success in the real world.
Let's just
make a list of the richest billionaires who made their money FAST.
Who are they?
Richard Branson, Warren Buffett, the Google guys, the Yahoo guys,
etcetera.
What "smarts" do they have?
#1 = street smarts
#2 = common sense
NYC XYZ
2005-12-02 14:37:59 UTC
Permalink
Suck your own dick.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Post by NYC XYZ
Zen Buddhism started
(Bodhidharma's Indian origins notwithstanding), the "tenets" of which
modern psychology has finally discovered through a different method.
2. Logical-mathematical intelligence ("number/reasoning smart")
3. Spatial intelligence ("picture smart")
4. Bodily-Kinesthetic intelligence ("body smart")
5. Musical intelligence ("music smart")
6. Interpersonal intelligence ("people smart")
7. Intrapersonal intelligence ("self smart")
8. Naturalist intelligence ("nature smart")
While this may be an accurate list of what chinese society blindly
worships,
it it NOT acccurate list of what achieves success in the real world.
Let's just
make a list of the richest billionaires who made their money FAST.
Who are they?
Richard Branson, Warren Buffett, the Google guys, the Yahoo guys,
etcetera.
What "smarts" do they have?
#1 = street smarts
#2 = common sense
nat
2005-11-29 17:07:22 UTC
Permalink
They must be slow learners! :o)

I've tried understanding some of them on software help desks. It ain't easy.
nat
Post by Herman Rubin
The Indians have been speaking English all their lives,
even taking much of their education in English.
drydem
2005-11-29 22:21:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
why can't chinese learn to speak english as well as the indians?
The english skills of south asian indian instructors can be very poor,
especially for those coming to the USA after the age of 18. I've also
dealt with chinese instructor's whose english skill were superior to
native born americans too. What I've notice is that women tend to
have better language skill than men in general but that certain
men can have good if not superior language skill than most
women. Over half of a person's communication skill is dependent
on the ability to listen and understand which is severely impaired
when social intolerance and bigotry interfere in the cognitive
process.
RichAsianKid
2005-11-30 02:56:31 UTC
Permalink
I've never heard of any East Asian philosophy that propagates the
notion that adaptation is equivalent or the sine qua non to eternal
truth.
Post by drydem
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
why can't chinese learn to speak english as well as the indians?
The english skills of south asian indian instructors can be very poor,
especially for those coming to the USA after the age of 18. I've also
dealt with chinese instructor's whose english skill were superior to
native born americans too. What I've notice is that women tend to
have better language skill than men in general but that certain
men can have good if not superior language skill than most
women. Over half of a person's communication skill is dependent
on the ability to listen and understand which is severely impaired
when social intolerance and bigotry interfere in the cognitive
process.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-30 15:48:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by drydem
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
why can't chinese learn to speak english as well as the indians?
The english skills of south asian indian instructors can be very poor,
Indeed! I just haven't ran into any of them yet (but I believe you
based on some of them tech support reps!), but an Indo-European accent
is still probably more easily penetrated than a Chinese one.
Post by drydem
especially for those coming to the USA after the age of 18. I've also
dealt with chinese instructor's whose english skill were superior to
native born americans too.
Hehehe...that would be me! (Seriously, I've lead both ESL and math
labs in an instructional [and not simply tutorial] capacity.)
Post by drydem
What I've notice is that women tend to
have better language skill than men in general but that certain
men can have good if not superior language skill than most
women.
I believe this, since the accepted finding is that women tend to be
better at non-verbal cues.
Post by drydem
Over half of a person's communication skill is dependent
on the ability to listen and understand which is severely impaired
when social intolerance and bigotry interfere in the cognitive
process.
I agree. But we still need instructors who speak clear English!
yaofeng
2005-11-17 19:02:13 UTC
Permalink
I don't know if your English is better than the ones you are accusing
speaking worse English. I do know you curse too much. That makes you
a far worse speaker.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-17 19:36:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by yaofeng
I don't know if your English is better than the ones you are accusing
speaking worse English. I do know you curse too much. That makes you
a far worse speaker.
Yeah I knew that was going to come up, but since you understood me, I
win!
yaofeng
2005-11-17 21:11:11 UTC
Permalink
Of course you do. You win in the "expletive deleted" department.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-17 21:37:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by yaofeng
Of course you do. You win in the "expletive deleted" department.
I win in the "you-understand-me" dep't. Now why don't these Chinese
instructors pay attention to their English? I mean, we're supposed to
pay attention to decimal places and such. It only stands to reason,
God damn it!
Chairman Mao
2005-11-18 01:22:57 UTC
Permalink
Here is the deal,

Most are called Grad assistants that teach or tutor for a reduction in their
tuition fee. I know for a fact many are worried about their English
abilities and try to improve this situation.

As you know, most cannot legally work in the USA during their period of
study. With tuition increasing every year the universities cut the students
a break on tuition by helping around the university and they can allow the
students to earn some $$.

I would cut them some slack, many have dreams about the ability to
study-abroad. You should know this family pressure being Chinese yourself.
Maybe help their English level improve while you get the extra math
instruction is a good trade.
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by yaofeng
Of course you do. You win in the "expletive deleted" department.
I win in the "you-understand-me" dep't. Now why don't these Chinese
instructors pay attention to their English? I mean, we're supposed to
pay attention to decimal places and such. It only stands to reason,
God damn it!
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NYC XYZ
2005-11-18 20:21:05 UTC
Permalink
Post by Chairman Mao
Here is the deal,
Most are called Grad assistants that teach or tutor for a reduction in their
tuition fee. I know for a fact many are worried about their English
abilities and try to improve this situation.
As you know, most cannot legally work in the USA during their period of
study. With tuition increasing every year the universities cut the students
a break on tuition by helping around the university and they can allow the
students to earn some $$.
I would cut them some slack, many have dreams about the ability to
study-abroad. You should know this family pressure being Chinese yourself.
Maybe help their English level improve while you get the extra math
instruction is a good trade.
I understand...but, c'mon, it's just not acceptable. Like if some kid
keeps mixing up his positive and negative numbers, say...or writers in
an advanced writing workshop who keep making grammatical and
orthographical mistakes....

I still place a good 80% of the responsibility on the students'
shoulders, especially since this is college, after all...but really,
you do need a certain level of competence, too -- we all know of the
teachers who know their stuff but can't teach -- and in this case,
can't even speak the language!

Anyway, it's just how things are...you go into a supermarket and no one
speaks English anymore either -- no one knows where anything is, etc.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-21 16:12:33 UTC
Permalink
Look at it this way. If they (the TAs) have difficulty with English
imagine how much harder it was for them to master their academic
course load as undergrads.
Um, I think these people come with degrees from China. They're doing
post-grad work here, in the States.

I do sympathize. But just like they might sympathize with their
students who've been subjected to American mis-education, but still
cannot simply pass them along, I also do not think it right that these
instructors ought to be "let loose" without English language skills, of
which pronunciation is a good part.
Yet they made it good enough to qualify
for post grad. And they will finish their degree too. Your
difficulties are not half as tough as they have to go through.
Be
nice to them and why not help them with their English.
I was thinking of this, too. But how can I do it without looking like
I'm angling for favors? Or even insulting them, for that matter!

Besides, just like there are math labs for the students, we have
language labs too...I'm certain they can avail themselves of many, many
opportunities if they had the interest in the first place.

Sigh...I fear it's that "ma-ma-hu-hu" Chinese attitude of
we'll-muddle-along WRT English. This is no different in spirit than
social promotion for failing kids in NYC public education.
By teaching
others you will in the process refine your own ability to define the
problem and with that discover the answers yourself.
"Quarendo invenietis" indeed!

But no...not my job.... =)

Seriously, you've got the wrong end of the stick here, trying to put
the cart before the horse. Instead of a student trying to help them
out, why aren't they expected to speak English at a certain level of
all-round competence in the first place?

University finances aside, of course....
NYC XYZ
2005-11-21 20:32:41 UTC
Permalink
I follow your arguments. On "apple polishing" one way to avoid the
discomfort is to get into their social group and less of focussing
just on one TA.
The other problem, which if you're "really" Chinese you know, if that
they'll look at me like a "rice barrel" (fan-ton) 'cause I was born on
Taiwan but can't speak Chinese past a seven year-old's! ^_^
You'll be surprised how isolated the mainlanders feel
living in a rich strange land of which they are not really part of.
No, I can still recall such feelings myself as a seven year-old. But
so many resources abound that it staggers the imagination to believe
they couldn't reach out on their own had they the interest in the first
place.

Fine, fine, I'll start a new club on campu...Club FOB! FOB X-tian
Fellowship! Or FOB TA Welcome Club! Or the TOEFL Klub!
They feel isolated by their language limitations, their social
awardness and their lack of finances. eg. Socializing thru bar hopping
or western style restaurant meals + 15% tips are not an option. Nor
can they join white guy team sports as paying for club memberships,
court fees and expensive equipment is also not an option. Badminton
and ping pong just don't make it as a white guy bonding vehicle.
LOL -- but come on, what do you suppose white techies do on the
weekends when they're not studying or tinkering in the garage?

I think the uncomfortable truth is that such people were just "limited"
as people -- all work and no play, so to speak, and it isn't that they
don't have the opportunities as much as that they haven't the
imagination...you see this too with bored teenagers who don't know what
to do in NYC despite all the horseback-riding, kayaking, parachuting,
etc., outfits around, some of which are totally free, and others quite
modest in their fees.
I once took a bus ride to Berkerly's off-campus student's/staff
quarters. I was surprised to see a lusty basketball game going on
just next to some rather run-down housing complex. I was puzzled that
there would be a Oriental ghetto until I saw that the court was
actually an adjunct of the u-hostel complex. They were Chinese
students and probably staff from the u. Now basketball would be one
sport that could have served as a vehicle to socialize with other
races. But I didn't see too many blacks at Berkerly and nerdy whites
prefer other sports.
Yup, no doubt about it -- the only thing keeping such folks back is
their own lack of imagination and guts. It's true that a man brave and
smart can live anywhere. All that you cite are very interesting cases
in themselves, but really still do not speak to the fact that getting a
much better handle on English is a moral duty to themselves and their
charges. Quite the pity that it isn't a requirement out-right -- would
only serve to benefit them if so. As it is, they're like the YOUNG
hispanics one encounters in NYC who after ten-twenty years living here
still cannot speak good English -- no one forces them to.
On their academic pursuits their aim is to get the post grad and then
go home. A few can hope to stay, with the language skills and the
qualifications. Unfortunately for you and for your university they
are all that is available to employ as TA's. I don't have an
solution.
The problem is that no one really complains. I mean, they complain to
themselves, amongst themselves, my classmates -- they complain to me,
like I should be able to do something -- but really, is anyone marching
to the dean's office?

And ultimately, it's probably just a financial issue, a matter of
cost-cutting. "Real" professors avoid teaching the more basic stuff,
so there's a real manpower gap here.

@#$%^&*!!
But one way to mitigate the situation is to get to know
them better socially. If nothing else you will have some very useful
friends from the mainland who will give you a fantastic welcome should
you every visit them.
Oh, puh-leeze!

As it happens, the male instructor is from my father's province of
Henan (that's the northern one, right? Always get that mixed up with
Hunan). We've chatted socially, and are really on good terms -- like I
said, classmates come to me like I should be able to help resolve the
language issue!

So frustrating...like being a kid all over again, having to translate
for your parents!

@#$%^&*!!
Chairman Mao
2005-11-22 12:08:40 UTC
Permalink
I am not sure at your university but at mine when I was a post-graduate
student, we only selected the ones that had good verbal skills. I know with
the hard sciences maybe the verbal aptitude is lower. The language arts
students always had better command of second languages while the hard core
science students usually did not. So I've found the verbal skills vary from
grad assistant to assistant and programs they are involved in.

Maybe you got a lemon too..this would be frustrating .
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by Chairman Mao
Here is the deal,
Most are called Grad assistants that teach or tutor for a reduction in their
tuition fee. I know for a fact many are worried about their English
abilities and try to improve this situation.
As you know, most cannot legally work in the USA during their period of
study. With tuition increasing every year the universities cut the students
a break on tuition by helping around the university and they can allow the
students to earn some $$.
I would cut them some slack, many have dreams about the ability to
study-abroad. You should know this family pressure being Chinese yourself.
Maybe help their English level improve while you get the extra math
instruction is a good trade.
I understand...but, c'mon, it's just not acceptable. Like if some kid
keeps mixing up his positive and negative numbers, say...or writers in
an advanced writing workshop who keep making grammatical and
orthographical mistakes....
I still place a good 80% of the responsibility on the students'
shoulders, especially since this is college, after all...but really,
you do need a certain level of competence, too -- we all know of the
teachers who know their stuff but can't teach -- and in this case,
can't even speak the language!
Anyway, it's just how things are...you go into a supermarket and no one
speaks English anymore either -- no one knows where anything is, etc.
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NYC XYZ
2005-11-22 15:00:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Chairman Mao
I am not sure at your university but at mine when I was a post-graduate
student, we only selected the ones that had good verbal skills. I know with
the hard sciences maybe the verbal aptitude is lower. The language arts
students always had better command of second languages while the hard core
science students usually did not. So I've found the verbal skills vary from
grad assistant to assistant and programs they are involved in.
Maybe you got a lemon too..this would be frustrating .
It's not just one instructor, but two I have who are like this...and
unfortunately, this seems to be fairly widespread at Hunter College.

Your observations concerning the "arts/sciences divide" dovetail with
my own...that's partially why I've begun pursuing this second degree in
mathematics -- it's free and I've got nothing better to do (than
trolling usenet!) but most importantly I want to see for myself if this
divide can be bridged in myself, for it is a divide I share to some
degree....

Anyway, they really need a special kind of ESL for these instructors at
Hunter...but no one's going to organize a "movement" for it since it's
a commuter college and folks don't just "gel" like that -- not even
tuition hikes faze anyone anymore! Besides, it's a slippery slope
between asking 'em to improve their English and getting "nativist" and
things taking a racist turn, even....
Chairman Mao
2005-11-24 13:59:33 UTC
Permalink
Maybe you hit a nail here, with the politically correct University
environment these days, to ask an instructor to learn better English can be
considered racism.

Then comes the news-media and the Jew law outfits to stroke the gravy train.

Some of the worst racist/selective groups are Jew lawyer groups that have
made millions off chasing discrimination and diversity gravy train cases.

Southern-Poverty Law center is a good example.
the ACLU is another group.
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by Chairman Mao
I am not sure at your university but at mine when I was a post-graduate
student, we only selected the ones that had good verbal skills. I know with
the hard sciences maybe the verbal aptitude is lower. The language arts
students always had better command of second languages while the hard core
science students usually did not. So I've found the verbal skills vary from
grad assistant to assistant and programs they are involved in.
Maybe you got a lemon too..this would be frustrating .
It's not just one instructor, but two I have who are like this...and
unfortunately, this seems to be fairly widespread at Hunter College.
Your observations concerning the "arts/sciences divide" dovetail with
my own...that's partially why I've begun pursuing this second degree in
mathematics -- it's free and I've got nothing better to do (than
trolling usenet!) but most importantly I want to see for myself if this
divide can be bridged in myself, for it is a divide I share to some
degree....
Anyway, they really need a special kind of ESL for these instructors at
Hunter...but no one's going to organize a "movement" for it since it's
a commuter college and folks don't just "gel" like that -- not even
tuition hikes faze anyone anymore! Besides, it's a slippery slope
between asking 'em to improve their English and getting "nativist" and
things taking a racist turn, even....
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NYC XYZ
2005-11-25 04:53:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by Chairman Mao
Maybe you hit a nail here, with the politically correct University
environment these days, to ask an instructor to learn better English can be
considered racism.
Indeed -- and as a Chinese-American, it could be, ahm,
"complicated"...so I bitch here. =)

I should say at this point, however, that my classmates have all been
fairly "tolerant" of these instructors...though every one agrees that
much better English on their part would make the whole experience much
more pleasant, no one has been publicly "outraged" yet beyond a
tongue-biting sigh of frustration. =(
Post by Chairman Mao
Then comes the news-media and the Jew law outfits to stroke the gravy train.
Um, I doubt the media would even notice this case, much less make some
kind of issue of this. And if anyone might sue over this it'll
probably be some conservative legal advocacy outfit like what fought
over the recent college admissions case that went to SCOTUS.
Post by Chairman Mao
Some of the worst racist/selective groups are Jew lawyer groups that have
made millions off chasing discrimination and diversity gravy train cases.
There is a preponderence of Jews in legal circles, but I don't see it
as a bad thing. Don't forget that it was Jews from the ACLU -- headed
by a black attorney, no less, IIRC -- who argued on behalf of neo-Nazis
for their right to march in Skokie, IL.
Post by Chairman Mao
Southern-Poverty Law center is a good example.
I'd have to disagree. Dee's Southern Poverty Law Center helps with
cases of actual, physical violence, and not just "white collar" stuff
like affirmative action and whatnot. IIRC, the guy's not even Jewish.
Post by Chairman Mao
the ACLU is another group.
While I personally have no use for them -- their NYCLU chapter turned
down my case where I was hand-cuffed and given a summons by a police
officer for cussin' in public ("disorderly conduct" 'cause I told a
woman to go fuck herself during an argument, but no physical
intimidation was projected from me) -- I see how they are a necessary
part of the structure of a democratic society in their role as
watch-dog.
c***@my-deja.com
2005-11-18 04:32:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by yaofeng
Of course you do. You win in the "expletive deleted" department.
I win in the "you-understand-me" dep't.
You lose in the "I-don't-underdand-him/her" dept. Have you tried to use
that little brain of yours to deduce ordinary context of ambiguous
words in a sentence? Have you tried to sit closer, instead of way back
in the class room? Have you talked to the TA or professor?

Have you ever considered these people are highly qualified, and have
successfully passed whatever requirements there is to teach? Perpahs
it's an institutional issue, or perhaps it's you.

Sigh, I seriousely think it's not the quality of the grad student, but
the quality of the undergrad that has fallen off.

Give you an example. When I first came to school in US, people from
Taiwan are older, sometimes married, nice people. TSA helped us settle
in and we take our money to buy used cars (beaters.) By the time we
were about to graduate, the new comers are all 18 year old (guys)
wearing pink sungalsses with sacks of money demanding that we take them
shopping for new cars (then some manage to wreck their cool cars a
month).

It's really sad to see the declining standards of Taiwanese students
have continued, FOB or ABC.
Post by NYC XYZ
Now why don't these Chinese
instructors pay attention to their English? I mean, we're supposed to
pay attention to decimal places and such. It only stands to reason,
God damn it!
Beatrice Humperdink
2005-11-18 05:06:49 UTC
Permalink
you sound like a snob who dislikes people only because they are
different from you.
slim
2005-11-18 20:31:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Beatrice Humperdink
you sound like a snob who dislikes people only because they are
different from you.
A reference to whom your bile is aimed at would be helpful.
--
http://mindprod.com/politics/iraq.html

"How many American casualties is Saddam worth?
The answer is not very damned many."
- Dick Cheney, Seattle, August 1992

Donald Rumsfeld: "If you're asking if there's a direct
link between 9/11 and Iraq, the answer is no."
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4865948/

On May 01, 2003, President Bush declared that,
"Major combat operations in Iraq have ended."

"I'm the commander -- see, I don't need to explain --
I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the
interesting thing about being the president.
Maybe somebody needs to explain to me why they
say something, but I don't feel like I owe anybody
an explanation. "
- George Bush, Washington Post, 11-19-02
NYC XYZ
2005-11-18 20:06:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@my-deja.com
You lose in the "I-don't-underdand-him/her" dept. Have you tried to use
that little brain of yours to deduce ordinary context of ambiguous
words in a sentence? Have you tried to sit closer, instead of way back
in the class room? Have you talked to the TA or professor?
You lose in the "I-can't-read-and-think" dep't.

Have you tried using that Intel 286 of yours to induce what
"ironically, often in these fields if you're off by a decimal place you
screw up big...but when it comes to English proficiency the widest
chasm of unintelligibility is tolerated for some reason" means within
the context of "it just adds an extra layer/level of semantic
cross-referencing/parsing" and "classes in math and sciences for most
folks that take such courses are confusing enough to begin with"...?

Have you tried getting bifocals?

Have you tried freetranslation.com?
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Have you ever considered these people are highly qualified, and have
successfully passed whatever requirements there is to teach? Perpahs
it's an institutional issue, or perhaps it's you.
Have you ever considered what "how the fuck did [they] get hired
speaking with rocks in your mouths" and "do they do interviews anymore,
or is the situation that goddamned desperate" means?

It's definitely you.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Sigh, I seriousely think it's not the quality of the grad student, but
the quality of the undergrad that has fallen off.
You discuss not the content of my complaint at all. Seems like the
quality of the reader is the issue for you!
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Give you an example. When I first came to school in US, people from
Taiwan are older, sometimes married, nice people. TSA helped us settle
in and we take our money to buy used cars (beaters.) By the time we
were about to graduate, the new comers are all 18 year old (guys)
wearing pink sungalsses with sacks of money demanding that we take them
shopping for new cars (then some manage to wreck their cool cars a
month).
And Issac Newton was an alchemist...so what?
Post by c***@my-deja.com
It's really sad to see the declining standards of Taiwanese students
have continued, FOB or ABC.
Non sequitor indeed!

Feel free to start your own thread if this one's above your head.
c***@my-deja.com
2005-11-19 02:15:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by c***@my-deja.com
You lose in the "I-don't-underdand-him/her" dept. Have you tried to use
that little brain of yours to deduce ordinary context of ambiguous
words in a sentence? Have you tried to sit closer, instead of way back
in the class room? Have you talked to the TA or professor?
You lose in the "I-can't-read-and-think" dep't.
I already graduated. You on the other hand, lose in the
"I-will-go-far-with-this-attitude-in-life" dept, little one:

- @#$*% -- co-worker who can't speakee Englishee!!!
- @#$*% -- boss who can't speakee Englishee!!!!
- @#$*% -- customer who can't speakee Englishee!!!!
(when white chicks don't dig you)
- @#$*% -- women who can't speakee Englishee!!!!

Look, the TAs obviousely passed the prerequsits to teach, so go see
your ombudsman if you have a bone to pick, or like I said sit closer
and pay attention.
Post by NYC XYZ
Have you tried using that Intel 286 of yours to induce what
"ironically, often in these fields if you're off by a decimal place you
screw up big...but when it comes to English proficiency the widest
chasm of unintelligibility is tolerated for some reason" means within
the context of "it just adds an extra layer/level of semantic
cross-referencing/parsing" and "classes in math and sciences for most
folks that take such courses are confusing enough to begin with"...?
Have you tried getting bifocals?
Have you tried freetranslation.com?
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Have you ever considered these people are highly qualified, and have
successfully passed whatever requirements there is to teach? Perpahs
it's an institutional issue, or perhaps it's you.
Have you ever considered what "how the fuck did [they] get hired
speaking with rocks in your mouths" and "do they do interviews anymore,
or is the situation that goddamned desperate" means?
It's definitely you.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Sigh, I seriousely think it's not the quality of the grad student, but
the quality of the undergrad that has fallen off.
You discuss not the content of my complaint at all. Seems like the
quality of the reader is the issue for you!
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Give you an example. When I first came to school in US, people from
Taiwan are older, sometimes married, nice people. TSA helped us settle
in and we take our money to buy used cars (beaters.) By the time we
were about to graduate, the new comers are all 18 year old (guys)
wearing pink sungalsses with sacks of money demanding that we take them
shopping for new cars (then some manage to wreck their cool cars a
month).
And Issac Newton was an alchemist...so what?
Post by c***@my-deja.com
It's really sad to see the declining standards of Taiwanese students
have continued, FOB or ABC.
Non sequitor indeed!
Feel free to start your own thread if this one's above your head.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-21 16:01:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Post by NYC XYZ
You lose in the "I-can't-read-and-think" dep't.
I already graduated.
So did I. This is my second undergrad degree, 'cause it's free. I've
always had a strong interest in math and science, though arts and
humanities came easier by far!
Post by c***@my-deja.com
You on the other hand, lose in the
(when white chicks don't dig you)
You lose with honors in the "non sequitor" dep't.!

I wouldn't put too much faith in your degree, seeing how you don't know
how to read what's there as opposed to read into what's there.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Look, the TAs obviousely passed the prerequsits to teach,
Hello, it's obvious that I'm questioning why the requirements for the
job don't include English fluency, which typically means, in the real
world, being able to pronounce properly as well.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
so go see
your ombudsman if you have a bone to pick, or like I said sit closer
and pay attention.
I'm not the one having problems. Just aced the mid-term Saturday, as a
matter of fact (okay, absolute worst-case will be a B). I'm one of
those who "have faith" in textbooks, being traditionally Chinese in
this regard. But I do feel for my classmates who didn't have the, erm,
benefit of strict Chinese parents! And it is annoying, all the same,
that even in maths and sciences things -- and people -- don't "work"
like they're "supposed to"....
NYC XYZ
2005-11-21 16:30:13 UTC
Permalink
Hehe...my bad: you WIN in the dep't. of non-sequitors!
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Post by NYC XYZ
You lose in the "I-can't-read-and-think" dep't.
I already graduated.
So did I. This is my second undergrad degree, 'cause it's free. I've
always had a strong interest in math and science, though arts and
humanities came easier by far!
Post by c***@my-deja.com
You on the other hand, lose in the
(when white chicks don't dig you)
You lose with honors in the "non sequitor" dep't.!
I wouldn't put too much faith in your degree, seeing how you don't know
how to read what's there as opposed to read into what's there.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Look, the TAs obviousely passed the prerequsits to teach,
Hello, it's obvious that I'm questioning why the requirements for the
job don't include English fluency, which typically means, in the real
world, being able to pronounce properly as well.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
so go see
your ombudsman if you have a bone to pick, or like I said sit closer
and pay attention.
I'm not the one having problems. Just aced the mid-term Saturday, as a
matter of fact (okay, absolute worst-case will be a B). I'm one of
those who "have faith" in textbooks, being traditionally Chinese in
this regard. But I do feel for my classmates who didn't have the, erm,
benefit of strict Chinese parents! And it is annoying, all the same,
that even in maths and sciences things -- and people -- don't "work"
like they're "supposed to"....
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-23 04:20:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@my-deja.com
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by yaofeng
Of course you do. You win in the "expletive deleted" department.
I win in the "you-understand-me" dep't.
You lose in the "I-don't-underdand-him/her" dept. Have you tried to use
that little brain of yours to deduce ordinary context of ambiguous
words in a sentence? Have you tried to sit closer, instead of way back
in the class room? Have you talked to the TA or professor?
Have you ever considered these people are highly qualified, and have
successfully passed whatever requirements there is to teach? Perpahs
it's an institutional issue, or perhaps it's you.
Sigh, I seriousely think it's not the quality of the grad student, but
the quality of the undergrad that has fallen off.
Give you an example. When I first came to school in US, people from
Taiwan are older, sometimes married, nice people. TSA helped us settle
in and we take our money to buy used cars (beaters.) By the time we
were about to graduate, the new comers are all 18 year old (guys)
wearing pink sungalsses with sacks of money demanding that we take them
shopping for new cars (then some manage to wreck their cool cars a
month).
What? I don't believe this. People from China, yeah, I believe they're
poor. But I thought immigrants from Taiwan are at least middle class if
not upper middle class!? Here's a pic similar to my car (at the time I
was still in high school) but I have a few other extras:
Loading Image... I seriously considered
upgrading to an M3 but I'll wait till the M4 with 400 hp comes out.
M5/M6s are great but too ponderous.
Post by c***@my-deja.com
It's really sad to see the declining standards of Taiwanese students
have continued, FOB or ABC.
Post by NYC XYZ
Now why don't these Chinese
instructors pay attention to their English? I mean, we're supposed to
pay attention to decimal places and such. It only stands to reason,
God damn it!
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-11-30 20:35:51 UTC
Permalink
cursing is a sign absence of articulacy. people who cannot identify
and articulate the source
of their anger often curse or grunt as a substitute.

cursing is like a mouse squeaking; the mouse squeaks
because he cannot talk.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-30 21:42:58 UTC
Permalink
Eat dick and enjoy.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
cursing is a sign absence of articulacy. people who cannot identify
and articulate the source
of their anger often curse or grunt as a substitute.
cursing is like a mouse squeaking; the mouse squeaks
because he cannot talk.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-01 05:17:15 UTC
Permalink
see? NYCXYZ speaks gibberish englisheeeeee!
NYC XYZ
2005-12-02 21:31:05 UTC
Permalink
Like dick? Try shit.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
see? NYCXYZ speaks gibberish englisheeeeee!
drydem
2005-11-20 14:15:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Okay, y'all know I'm Chinese-American myself, born on Taiwan no
less...but I'm getting quite frustrated with Chinese
instructors/teaching assistants who CAN'T SPEAKING FUCKING
ENGLISH!!!!!!!!!!!
They tend to be employed for "technical" classes in math and sciences,
which for most folks that take such courses are confusing enough to
begin with!
Some technical courses are so confusing and difficult that
even if your instructors english skills were very good and
he was well versed on the topic -- the material would
still sound like Greek or pig-latin (9_9) Quite a few of
my technical instructors were foriegn-born whose first language
was not english, e.g. hindu(computers) , spanish(math),
russian(computers), persian(engineering), chinese(math),
vietnamese(biology). I agree a student's work is much
easier if he understands the instructor's lecture. Reading
the assigned lecture material before the lecture and
memorizing the new technical terms and formulas
before the lecture is given goes a long way in
deciphering what is being said - then a student
can focus on the lecture's key concepts
being stressed by the instructor (which are likely to
be on the next exam or the final exam)
NYC XYZ
2005-11-21 16:25:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by drydem
Some technical courses are so confusing and difficult that
even if your instructors english skills were very good and
he was well versed on the topic -- the material would
still sound like Greek or pig-latin (9_9)
Absolutely correct, Walt. This is precisely the tack I take to pacify
my classmates, who look to me to help them out -- I'm Chinese after
all: I must not only understand her but know math inside-out! ^_^

I feel like having them look up RTFM in the ASF FAQ....

But be that as it may, it is still an unnecessary extra level of burden
for the students to parse mathematical concepts and also parse
Chinese-inflected English. I will agree with you that this is not that
big a deal -- but it's annoying, and takes on the force of a mosquito
bite. Remember, this is both Chinese instructors, male and female, in
a science and a math class I have. I can only hope that my experiences
are singular.
Post by drydem
Quite a few of
my technical instructors were foriegn-born whose first language
was not english, e.g. hindu(computers) , spanish(math),
russian(computers), persian(engineering), chinese(math),
vietnamese(biology).
Aw, man, I think a Vietnamese accent is the WORST of all! I think the
only accents more cringe-inducing are Gaelic and Jamaican!
Post by drydem
I agree a student's work is much
easier if he understands the instructor's lecture. Reading
the assigned lecture material before the lecture and
memorizing the new technical terms and formulas
before the lecture is given goes a long way in
deciphering what is being said
Yes, I've also noted that at least 80% responsibility rests with the
student. But, c'mon, if it's all a matter of resorting to the
textbook...WTF you need the lecturer for? So you see, the human
element is important, and for most students vital as well. I honestly
believe the university derelict in its...um, fiduciary duties to the
student here....
Post by drydem
- then a student
can focus on the lecture's key concepts
being stressed by the instructor (which are likely to
be on the next exam or the final exam)
No joke, but all this is kinda inspiring me to be a math teacher! But
no...I would only want to teach at the collegiate level, and there's no
way I'm doing post-grad work in this stuff! Maybe I'll pick up a JD
like you...is the Socratic Method anything like SCAA flame-fests?
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-22 04:08:50 UTC
Permalink
In my 1st year physics class, my tutor was from either mainland China
or from Taiwan, but I suspect he's from the mainland. He kept on saying
that the 'lotion' of this and that when I thought he meant 'notion' --
but then, oh wow, he really meant 'ratio'!! Wow. I skipped the class &
aced the course (not necessarily coincidental). The funny thing was
that in the end course student eval, the admin had the gall to ask
point blank 'do you think that the lack of female tutelage is a
detriment to your academic progress'? Female physicists are a rare
breed apparently. I replied anonymously and very diplomatically in the
survey, 'no, as long as we hire people who can speak'. Spare me PC BS
pleez.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-22 15:06:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In my 1st year physics class, my tutor was from either mainland China
or from Taiwan, but I suspect he's from the mainland. He kept on saying
that the 'lotion' of this and that when I thought he meant 'notion' --
but then, oh wow, he really meant 'ratio'!! Wow. I skipped the class &
aced the course (not necessarily coincidental).
It's funny how some of them still do attendance sheets and weekly
homework assignments, though. That's my case -- though I'm much more
motivated within a "social context"...that human element really makes
things mean so much more to me, even though I understand texts well
enough and have no problem reading them on my own.

I'm just starting out on this...I'm quite the arts and humanities man
myself, but I feel like half my brain is missing (LOL) without a strong
math and science component to my, uh, life...but it's very frustrating
to have to deal with people who, you know, you kinda feel ought to know
better -- and knowing better, ought to be improving their English --
since, after all, if something's not rounded off right, even if only to
the thousandth decimal place, we don't tolerate it, but such gross
weakness in language skills are overlooked....
Post by r***@hotmail.com
The funny thing was
that in the end course student eval, the admin had the gall to ask
point blank 'do you think that the lack of female tutelage is a
detriment to your academic progress'? Female physicists are a rare
breed apparently. I replied anonymously and very diplomatically in the
survey, 'no, as long as we hire people who can speak'. Spare me PC BS
pleez.
That's a very bizzare question...whatever could have been the point of
it???
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-23 02:55:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In my 1st year physics class, my tutor was from either mainland China
or from Taiwan, but I suspect he's from the mainland. He kept on saying
that the 'lotion' of this and that when I thought he meant 'notion' --
but then, oh wow, he really meant 'ratio'!! Wow. I skipped the class &
aced the course (not necessarily coincidental).
It's funny how some of them still do attendance sheets and weekly
homework assignments, though. That's my case -- though I'm much more
motivated within a "social context"...that human element really makes
things mean so much more to me, even though I understand texts well
enough and have no problem reading them on my own.
I'm just starting out on this...I'm quite the arts and humanities man
myself, but I feel like half my brain is missing (LOL) without a strong
math and science component to my, uh, life...but it's very frustrating
to have to deal with people who, you know, you kinda feel ought to know
better -- and knowing better, ought to be improving their English --
since, after all, if something's not rounded off right, even if only to
the thousandth decimal place, we don't tolerate it, but such gross
weakness in language skills are overlooked....
When it comes to attendance, obviously it depends on the
course/university. In some you only need to attend 2/3 of the
tutorials, in others attendance is not required. In those where
attendance is not required, I note that class size in the tutorials
shrunk by 80% by the end of the term. I find many of the tutorials
useless, for they inevitably are rate-limited by the lowest common
denominator. I am not faulting people for accents, but that in some
cases, some tutors actually muddle the issue more than they clarify. It
is possible that you come out of it more confused than before you went
in.
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
The funny thing was
that in the end course student eval, the admin had the gall to ask
point blank 'do you think that the lack of female tutelage is a
detriment to your academic progress'? Female physicists are a rare
breed apparently. I replied anonymously and very diplomatically in the
survey, 'no, as long as we hire people who can speak'. Spare me PC BS
pleez.
That's a very bizzare question...whatever could have been the point of
it???
In my case, if they followed my suggestion, roughly 1/2 of the
department would be fired. The survey is anonymous anyway so I didn't
direct it personally to the tutor. Again I'm not talking about accents,
but rather a very serious problem with communication. It does not help,
for example, if you have to ask a simple question 4 times and then have
to spit out each word because he does not know what you're talking
about. It's really that bad.

As for that bizarre question - I suspect that it's a prelude to
affirmative action. I suspect the department wants to square the circle
because of the fact that there is a serious female underrepresentation
in math/hard sciences. So if the survey shows that many people think
that the lack of female tutelage is a bad thing, then they may have a
basis to change to a policy where merit is not the only criteria for
hiring.
NYC XYZ
2005-11-23 15:03:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
When it comes to attendance, obviously it depends on the
course/university. In some you only need to attend 2/3 of the
tutorials, in others attendance is not required.
Whoa, hang on: we're not talking about "tutorials" here, we're talking
about the classese themselves, the lectures and/or labs. These are
actual "instructors" I'm talking about, not just "tutors."
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In those where
attendance is not required, I note that class size in the tutorials
shrunk by 80% by the end of the term. I find many of the tutorials
useless, for they inevitably are rate-limited by the lowest common
denominator. I am not faulting people for accents, but that in some
cases, some tutors actually muddle the issue more than they clarify. It
is possible that you come out of it more confused than before you went
in.
Indeed, I find tutorials work only as "vitamin supplements," and not
"meals" themselves.
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In my case, if they followed my suggestion, roughly 1/2 of the
department would be fired. The survey is anonymous anyway so I didn't
direct it personally to the tutor. Again I'm not talking about accents,
but rather a very serious problem with communication. It does not help,
for example, if you have to ask a simple question 4 times and then have
to spit out each word because he does not know what you're talking
about. It's really that bad.
Yes, it's true. Quite a divide, the left-right hemisphere! The
professor himself -- and not the instructor -- for one of these courses
drones on and on and doesn't realize he's boring folks to death.
Actual case in point: after droning on and on, he said, "okay, next
chapter, Climate Change" and looked up at some commotion in the
audience...and then said, "Am I going too fast for you?" There was
laughter all-around, and somewhat mystified, he added, "Wow, you guys
need to read faster!"
Post by r***@hotmail.com
As for that bizarre question - I suspect that it's a prelude to
affirmative action.
The Physics Dep't.????

I know there's a general effort to get more females and minorities
(non-Asian, of course -- LOL!) into the sciences, but I'm surprised at
the rigor of the pursuit suggested....
Post by r***@hotmail.com
I suspect the department wants to square the circle
because of the fact that there is a serious female underrepresentation
in math/hard sciences. So if the survey shows that many people think
that the lack of female tutelage is a bad thing, then they may have a
basis to change to a policy where merit is not the only criteria for
hiring.
I think it's a fact widely recognized; doubt they needed a survey of
students to clarify such matters.
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-24 00:45:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
When it comes to attendance, obviously it depends on the
course/university. In some you only need to attend 2/3 of the
tutorials, in others attendance is not required.
Whoa, hang on: we're not talking about "tutorials" here, we're talking
about the classese themselves, the lectures and/or labs. These are
actual "instructors" I'm talking about, not just "tutors."
OK, see your point. Good luck. The lecturers (profs) are usually
better, although there are a few exceptions: one never knows how to say
'calculate', and so she always says 'compute this, compute that'.
Another one says 'orgasm' for 'organism'. One says 'take out a shit of
paper'.
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In those where
attendance is not required, I note that class size in the tutorials
shrunk by 80% by the end of the term. I find many of the tutorials
useless, for they inevitably are rate-limited by the lowest common
denominator. I am not faulting people for accents, but that in some
cases, some tutors actually muddle the issue more than they clarify. It
is possible that you come out of it more confused than before you went
in.
Indeed, I find tutorials work only as "vitamin supplements," and not
"meals" themselves.
Yep.
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
In my case, if they followed my suggestion, roughly 1/2 of the
department would be fired. The survey is anonymous anyway so I didn't
direct it personally to the tutor. Again I'm not talking about accents,
but rather a very serious problem with communication. It does not help,
for example, if you have to ask a simple question 4 times and then have
to spit out each word because he does not know what you're talking
about. It's really that bad.
Yes, it's true. Quite a divide, the left-right hemisphere! The
professor himself -- and not the instructor -- for one of these courses
drones on and on and doesn't realize he's boring folks to death.
Actual case in point: after droning on and on, he said, "okay, next
chapter, Climate Change" and looked up at some commotion in the
audience...and then said, "Am I going too fast for you?" There was
laughter all-around, and somewhat mystified, he added, "Wow, you guys
need to read faster!"
Post by r***@hotmail.com
As for that bizarre question - I suspect that it's a prelude to
affirmative action.
The Physics Dep't.????
I know there's a general effort to get more females and minorities
(non-Asian, of course -- LOL!) into the sciences, but I'm surprised at
the rigor of the pursuit suggested....
It is really quite astonishing. A while back I posted a thread on
affirmative action and learnt quite a bit about this. I'll repost it
here. If you have time, it is really worth while to read the entire
paper. It samples only 3 universities, but a casual search indicates to
me that this is a systemic thing. To add insult to injury, people lie
through their teeth and say that diversity equals merit!!

As you can see, we're not talking about giving a nod when credentials
are roughly equal; we're talking a complete obliteration of standards.
The pursuit of equality has taken on a religious quality. Again, see
below. It's probably worth saving onto the harddrive for reference.

------------------------------------
http://www.ceousa.org/pdfs/VAS%20Report.pdf (you need Adobe Reader to
view it)

"The odds ratio for blacks compared to whites at NCS is 13 to 1, but at
UVA it is 106 to 1 and at William &Mary 267 to 1. In other words, at
UVA the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times
the odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications.
The odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than
250 times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant.
The odds ratios for Asians at all three schools are less than one,
meaning that Asians are less likely to be admitted than
equally-qualified whites (the odds ratio for Asians at UVA is not
statistically significant). The odds ratios for Hispanics are 2.8 and
1.9 at UVA and NCS, respectively, but less than one at W&M. This means
that Hispanics are somewhat more likely than whites to be admitted at
UVA and NCS but less likely than whites to be admitted at W&M Law (but
this is not statistically significant)."

University of Virginia (UVA) undergraduates, North Carolina State (NCS)
undergraduates, and William and Mary Law (W&M Law) School.

-----

Discussion:

http://groups.google.ca/group/talk.politics.misc/browse_frm/thread/ec...

Let's recap. From the paper, and with numbers you provided assuming a
freshman class of 1000:

At UVA, white median is 1350 and a whopping 360 whites scored above and
below this threshold
Black median is 1026 and only 60 blacks scored above and below this
threshold

If you pick a black at random, 50% of the time he will score below
1026. This is exceedingly low in the white distribution -- recall that
very few whites who score between 1050-1150 get admitted in the first
place. Half of black students are at the very very bottom. This
contributes significantly to 'stereotyping' on college campus at UVA I
suspect. But this 'stereotyping' is based on some element truth as we
just saw - they really have low scores. The distributions of blacks and
whites in college are not identical and in fact differ profoundly and
astonishingly. Black median is lower than the white median by more than
300 SAT points. Are you suggesting that this is not a huge difference?

We've also seen that blacks and whites are held to very different
criteria during the admission process. The odds ratio for admission for
blacks compared to whites (with SAT/LSAT scores, gpa, and residence
controlled for) at UVA is 106 to 1. The corresponding odds ratio of
admit at William &Mary law school is 267 to 1. In other words, at UVA
the odds of a black student being admitted is more than 100 times the
odds of admission of a white student with the same qualifications. The
odds of admitting a black applicant at William & Mary is more than 250
times the odds of admitting an equally-qualified white applicant.
That's all in the paper - I didn't make this up!

In the stats you provided you implied perhaps that even if we admit ALL
blacks, i.e. 100% blacks, i.e. *any black who applies gets in* without
regard to merit, GPAs, SATs etc - the cost to the total would only be
slightly over 11% (backtrack a few posts if you don't remember this),
since they are only a small percentage of applicants. I think most
people will have concerns about this even if overall cost is 11% -
what, blacks get 100% admit rate regardless of merit?? Anyone who
applies gets in??? In that case, what do you think people will say
when they see black students on the campus?

Now, when the percentage of blacks who apply increases, so does the
corresponding social cost. Should people stay away from colleges with a
huge black applicant population as they will be treated as second-class
applicants? Well? That's one interpretation of the data.

Of course, the difference between the above scenario and in real life
is only a matter of degree. It does not differ in fundamentals. As we
have seen, standards have already been thrown out the window with an
over 300 median SAT point difference in the freshman class.

The pertinent question therefore is whether people should be held to
the same standard, or whether people should be held to such a
drastically different standard in the UVA admit process. I'm inclined
to say no, in part because this contributes (albeit not totally) to
huge median SAT (and likely LSAT) differentials between favored
(blacks) and nonfavored groups (all others), with visible ramifications
in campus life and dropout rates. The more important indictment,
however, is such a practice deeply conflicts with principles of
equality and fairness that we cherish.

And with this I close our discussion. Nice chatting with you,
sincerely,

---
addendum: Your little thought experiment - were you suggesting that
some may benefit from majority or all black schools or universities?
Howard University, the "black Harvard" as some call it, cites a mean
SAT of only 1019. A quarter of students score under 820. Was it you who
said that UVA was a "crappy" school? ;)

-------------------------
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
I suspect the department wants to square the circle
because of the fact that there is a serious female underrepresentation
in math/hard sciences. So if the survey shows that many people think
that the lack of female tutelage is a bad thing, then they may have a
basis to change to a policy where merit is not the only criteria for
hiring.
I think it's a fact widely recognized; doubt they needed a survey of
students to clarify such matters.
But if someone challenges them, then they have a good, documented,
hardcopy reason of a good 'utility value', I guess. That's what I think
anyway. Yes, it is astonishing that it takes place in math or physics
departments, not just in the humanities. It's a desperate way to
equalize outcomes when everything else fails. I often think these
slower students are great because they shift the entire curve leftwards
making things easier for everyone -- as long as they don't drop out in
large numbers which really neutralizes the situation - and as long as
you're 'in'. Still, you'll never know what happens in your next app!!
:) Again see that paper above.
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-26 08:10:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
The pertinent question therefore is whether people should be held to
the same standard, or whether people should be held to such a
drastically different standard in the UVA admit process.
I don't really know where to pick the place but this is as good as
any. If you guys think you have competition take a look at the job
fair at Chongqing
http://english.people.com.cn/200511/24/eng20051124_223625.html
There were photos of a similar one, 100,000 graduates at job fair,
last week, at Nanjing if I remember. The URL link is in another post
somewhere in this NG.
I love looking at the eager brainy fresh young faces of you guys and
gals. I'd love it even more if we can sit down together and shoot the
breeze. But so long as you young folks have worlds to conquer and am
doing it, that's a happy enough feeling.
I have never seen such a crappy site!! It's like close to 2 minutes
here and tick-tock tick-tock I'm still patiently waiting for these damn
pics to appear and they're still being spat out! That's the side
point.

But I still don't see the mainpoint of this. China is a big country and
obviously there are many people competing for jobs. Also baseline IQ is
important. If most of these people are dumb then competition will not
necessarily be that stiff. It may well be that it's natural selection,
or rather, unnatural selection - those who went to the West are the
cream of the crop; those who are stupid stayed behind. That's the
standard North American Liberal's version of things anyway. What do you
think of that?
NYC XYZ
2005-11-29 16:31:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
I have never seen such a crappy site!! It's like close to 2 minutes
here and tick-tock tick-tock I'm still patiently waiting for these damn
pics to appear and they're still being spat out! That's the side
point.
What do you expect from AOL? =D
Post by r***@hotmail.com
But I still don't see the mainpoint of this. China is a big country and
obviously there are many people competing for jobs. Also baseline IQ is
important. If most of these people are dumb then competition will not
necessarily be that stiff. It may well be that it's natural selection,
or rather, unnatural selection - those who went to the West are the
cream of the crop; those who are stupid stayed behind. That's the
standard North American Liberal's version of things anyway. What do you
think of that?
Actually, that's the damned Chinese-parent-POV!
r***@hotmail.com
2005-12-01 08:17:11 UTC
Permalink
You know I can't help but think that the chinese mentality is that
reproduction is as important as if not more important than
recreation!!! LOL!!!!!! Again, product is more important than process.
Hey i mean sex is a sport too!! It's health! Numbers won't hurt of
course but it's a by-product, not the end-product!!!

And yes I know that's the side point.

I can't help but think that you're a modern american liberal though. A
kind one, maybe a misguided one, I even admire, perhaps, but still.
Because you start out from the premise that things should be the same,
ie should be fair.

But life's not fair. And, perhaps, that's the way it should be?

SEe my other thread on how blacks compared to whites/asians in spite of
being controlled for parental IQ will still have lower IQ offspring.
Post by r***@hotmail.com
But I still don't see the mainpoint of this. China is a big country and
obviously there are many people competing for jobs. Also baseline IQ is
important. If most of these people are dumb then competition will not
necessarily be that stiff. It may well be that it's natural selection,
or rather, unnatural selection - those who went to the West are the
cream of the crop; those who are stupid stayed behind. That's the
standard North American Liberal's version of things anyway. What do you
think of that?
Numbers do count. There was a late 80s era IEEE Spectrrum article on
a national policy level forum on the state of Enginnering and Science
education in the States. Then as now the concern was that the US was
not producing enough graduates in the hard sciences to maintain her
world leadership in these fields. One finding was of course the rise
of China, then just opening up and sending their best graduates to the
US and the best of universities in the world to do post-grad studies.
Some memorable parts in that report were that the top three to five
per cent of any student population will do well in any university
system in the world. They're the genius level brains. At that time
only about five per cent of all school leavers in China ever get to go
to a univeristy. So what they were sending to the US were the cream
of the cream.
The number of university students in China exceed the entire US
educational establishment (IEEE) from K through to university. I
wasn't too successful in googling for hard numbers on this. China's
population is four times that of the US Presumably gthe K-12 student
number is also four times. In the US I think post secondary
enrollment is about 30 percent of high school grads while in China it
is still around five percent. Math is not my strong suite so without
published figures I cannot make any definitive statements.
So what is their quality? At the post grad level and in a hard
science there is no fudging the results. If you read professional
journals you will find mainland Chinese (id-ed by the way they spell
their names) as the lead researchers in many papers, mostly in the
biological and basic sciences. They are quite well represented in
engineering too. Take a look at the faculty academic staff list you
next visit a university
This thread is about their ability to speak good English. I had
personally met a few US trained (the best universities) China PhDs who
missed their high school education because of the Cultural Revolution.
When that ended and the schools were reopened they happened to be of
univeristy entry age and were told to take the entrance exams. Three
months of intense self study and they made it in. Did their bachelors
in the sciences they had never studied before. It wasn't their choice
of study but they were ordered to take it because China wanted grads
in that field. At this point we might dismiss them as as flukes and
the products of a dysfunctional educational system.
On graduation they were told that they would be sent abroad to do post
grad. They had to pass English first. Another three months of
intense study on something they had no contact with before. Passed
that and off they went. The astonishing thing was that not only did
they master an entirely new discipline they also did well in their new
environment and graduated with distinction. The ones I met got on to
really love their discipline and became successful scientists. Their
stories are by no means unique for I have read very similar life
histories in other publications such as Science, Scientific American,
Wired and others. With such fascinating backgrounds and such
impressive brains what can I do but listen in awe.
1. Anyone who makes it into a university in China is already the
cream of the crop. Not having the opportunity to study abroad in no
way detracts from their level of intelligence and ability to compete.
2. All things being equal they can probably do better academically
than most of you. But things are not equal. Their inequality is in
their social and linguistic awkwardness. But look at your own
parents. You turned out alright. These mainlanders are way above your
parents in achievement. Their children will be way above you when
their time comes. A child finishes school at age 25 thereabouts. An
average working life is 40 years. They'll be out there competing with
you just when your earning capacity is peaking.
I'll sign off here.
My thoughts are starting to drift and I risk over stating my case.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-02 21:33:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
But life's not fair. And, perhaps, that's the way it should be?
If "life's not fair," then there are no "shoulds."
RichAsianKid
2005-12-04 04:26:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by r***@hotmail.com
But life's not fair. And, perhaps, that's the way it should be?
If "life's not fair," then there are no "shoulds."
woops, you just caught me in a 'liberal moment'.
r***@hotmail.com
2005-12-04 04:42:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by r***@hotmail.com
You know I can't help but think that the chinese mentality is that
reproduction is as important as if not more important than
recreation!!! LOL!!!!!! Again, product is more important than process.
Hey i mean sex is a sport too!! It's health! Numbers won't hurt of
course but it's a by-product, not the end-product!!!
And yes I know that's the side point.
I can't help but think that you're a modern american liberal though. A
kind one, maybe a misguided one, I even admire, perhaps, but still.
Because you start out from the premise that things should be the same,
ie should be fair.
But life's not fair. And, perhaps, that's the way it should be?
SEe my other thread on how blacks compared to whites/asians in spite of
being controlled for parental IQ will still have lower IQ offspring.
I am not quite sure where this thread is going anymore. My basic
premise on the IQ of Chinese is that we are not second to anyone. I
don't believe we, as a race, are super-geniuses either. I don't
subscribe to any put-downs of the intellectual abilities of other
ethnic groups for many reasons.
How that intelligence is manifested is dependent on our environment.
If one has not gone through school to acquire the tools of learning
and be aware of the work of predecessors the consequences are one
cannot communicate one's cleverness to others. One is doomed to to
reinvent the basics instead of building on precedent.
China had stagnated in the later reigns of the Qing Dynasty. By the
time the West could force China to "open up" her trade China had
already forgotten much, her institutions fossilized to maintain the
status quo and new ideas were neither encouraged nor required.
Suffice to say China was Third World until very recentl times. Our
standing as a modern nation took a hit. But China's astonishing
transformation into First World status is happening right before our
eyes.
I happen to be reading Robert Temple's book on "The Genius of China"
ISBN 0-671-62028-2, a distilled version of Joseph Needham's seminal
work. Much of the inventions that made the Industrial Revolution
actually had their precedents in China more than a thousand years
before. These Chinese inventions were diffused to the west when they
made contact with China. These are lofty claims and its best you
(anyone) should read the book(s) to draw your own conclusions.
To recap.
o. We are second to none in intellectual capability.
o. Anything you can do we too can do with equal if not greater
competence.
o. There are more of us than any other identifiable group. On a
normal distribution we will have more people of exceptional talent
than anyone else.
o. China can now train, support and employ people of talent to
improve the material lives of everyone.
o. Given the peace and freedom from want that China now enjoys the
Arts, the Sciences and Technology will bloom. Like you say, we should
also develop recreation and sports to round off character.
o. China had shown through the centuries her inventiveness. That
ability had never been lost. We have acquired the (superior)
scientific method from the West necessary for modern advances. We
should be able to resume our inventiveness and excel.
East Asians have lower IQs than Jews overall, especially verbal IQ -
which is important for careers like law, media, business, and finance
(vs physics, chemistry, engineering). The question is not whether IQ is
is 100% genetic. No one - unless you're insane - believes that. Of
course of course environment plays a role. Question is whether it's
100% environmental (culture is subsumed under this term also). I don't
think so. And therefore, given identical conditions - one should NOT
expect identical results.
r***@hotmail.com
2005-12-04 07:03:07 UTC
Permalink
Well, since you referred specifically that jewish dominated neo-cons in
GWB's inner circle distort American strategic interests, then, well,
that IS or at least CAN BE or should be a china problem no? Well?

Besides, if Jews are not a concern for you in China, then why do you
seem afraid of being tarnished as an anti-semite?

I, btw, have friends of all stripes, including Jews. Some do, however,
echo your sentiments.

So why? (Is that because I'm near-rich or upper middle class that I
have fewer inhibitions?)

And of course, I agree, people are *different*, for whatever reasons.
Afterall, that's what *diversity* is all about! LOL!!!
Post by r***@hotmail.com
East Asians have lower IQs than Jews overall, especially verbal IQ -
which is important for careers like law, media, business, and finance
(vs physics, chemistry, engineering). T
Jews are a compelling subset of human society. I used to admire them
for their gutsiness in their (Israel) wars of independence. But after
the Seven Day War they showed their true colors and did to the Arabs
what the Nazis and earlier European anti semites did to them (Jews) up
till recent history. Then add to the distortions to American
strategic interests caused by the jewish dominated neo-cons in GWB's
inner circle one begins to understand why they induced such fear and
hatred in the lands they had settled in. Read medieval European
history for details. If ever there is a people doomed never to live
in peace it will be the jews. That is both their curse as well as the
font of their genius.
Jews are not a China problem and I hold no feelings for or against
them. I had always avoided saying anything about them for there is no
rational discussion possible without being tarred as being
anti-semite.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
I can't find the place I wanted to insert this (below) but here's as
good as any.
On Fri, 02 Dec 2005 18:00:47 -0800, Tim May
(snipped Tim's write-up on under achieving blacks)
Americans are tired of seeing how the children of penniless boat
people grew up and were valedictorians and such in their high schools,
just 5-10 years after arriving with nothing, no English, and living in
crowded situations.
I saw this firsthand here in Silicon Valley, with the wave of boat
people who arrived in large numbers in 1978-83 and who taught their
children to appreciate learning and reading...these children were
constantly checking out stacks of books at the local Silicon Valley
libraries, not complaining that "dey be skiminated ginst" and "books
be tool fo whitey to represses da bruthas!"
By the late 80s, Vietnamese immigrants were founding start-up
companies, their children were going to college, becoming engineers
and doctors and scientists. Meanwhile, "da po peeps in da hood" keep
making the same old excuses about how whitey be repressin' dem and how
"Massah in Da Big White needs to be givin da slaves mo handouts and
shit!"
Meanwhile, there are fewer negroes in engineering and science at UC
Berkeley, for example, than there were in 1975. Several times fewer,
from the stats I have seen. (And the number who graduate is almost
miniscule...it seems that Affirmative Action gets them in, albeit in
very small numbers, but it can't keep them from flunking out because
they just didn't study, or didn't care, or think they are being race
traitors by "playing honkey's game." Whatever, I laugh to see Berkeley
graduating 55% Asian, 1.3% negro.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
55% at Berkerley is a surprise. I visited the campus last January and
thought it was >30%. I told this to a friend from Vancouver and he
said only 30%? He says its even more gruesome at the Univ of British
Columbia (UBC). In the professional (Medical, Engineering, Law) and
the hard science programs its more than 70% Orientals*. Of the
remaining 25% to 30% some 10% to 20% are taken by South Asians
(Indians and Pakistanis.) That leaves 5% to 10% for the rest (whiteys
mostly). Among the whiteys East European immigrants are a lot
hungrier and work harder than the Canadian born. This friend feel so
sorry for his white Canadian friends' children who are practically
shut out of the elite programs.
*(there's a difference among orientals too. The hungrier, harder
working mainland Chinese come out on top followed by Canadian born
Chinese - numbers count. The Vietnamese are mostly ethnic Chinese.
Then there are the Japanese and other orientals.
r***@hotmail.com
2005-11-23 03:03:00 UTC
Permalink
Spare me PC BS pleez.
This is an interesting thread. I look back to my student days and
wince at the opportunities missed. In my time one does not question
the system and I/we never knew what it was like to buck the system.
My instincts and inclination pointed elsewhere. We had only one
chance to get a degree. A poor undergrad course choice and one had to
live with that or flunk and be excluded for good. Fortunately, during
my time all one had to do was get an undergrad degree and many doors
were opened. We did okay on qualifications that an undergrad nowadays
would find hard to get a foot in the door with.
I envy your being able to " I skipped the class &
aced the course (not necessarily coincidental). " I too skipped
classes (health reasons) but the missing class instruction could not
be made up by reading alone. By the time one reaches a post secondary
institution winging it doesn't work. I never aced anything. But
neither did the others as these were the days before grade inflation
and mutiple choice exam answers. To NYCXYZ there is an alternative
way to look at your situation. Bitch to Admin about language
challenged TAs by all means. But don't let that hold you back for any
change won't be in time to correct your beef. Do your work the way
that works best for you. Your other classmates experience the same
language problems as you. In sofar as passing that exam is concerned
you are no worse off than anyone else and the faculty has to pass the
majority of the class for any one year. Yep. It sucks but so does
life in general and we all get by somehow.
Some tutors are better than others, so changing tutorials/tutors will
help. I would not skip the lectures however, but I know someone who
skipped many lectures and who still did very well. In fact he even left
his books in the lab! So he can't really be home studying, can he?

About dumbing down, this is a situation where stupid students are great
in a class - as the prof has to bell the curve somehow. Some attribute
this to one of the side effects of affirmative action.

Also, multiple choice questions are not necessarily easier. In fact
when the class average is too high, MCQs are often the format of choice
in some courses to ensure that only students who get everything right
get credit. No partial credits are awarded, and in some cases, you get
points deducted for wrong answers/guessing.
Yajyuam
2005-12-03 01:01:19 UTC
Permalink
NYC,

I think you are very insensitive to the Chinese instructors. Don't you
ever think that they are trying very hard to speak English to you? At
least give them respect for their effort.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-05 15:33:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Yajyuam
NYC,
I think you are very insensitive to the Chinese instructors. Don't you
ever think that they are trying very hard to speak English to you? At
least give them respect for their effort.
I think you are very insensitive to the English-speaking students. Why
should they have to try so hard to understand what is being spoken to
them? We're in an American university, after all!

I don't disrespect them, believe me -- this isn't "personal." But I
just don't think it's right that they're hired to "teach"...when folks
don't understand them and they actually don't understand us students!
Even accounting for the fact that most people don't read textbooks or
study along as the course progresses but only cram last-minute -- even
for all that, these instructors still have to speak English beyond a
grasping good-enough-to-order-food level of competency!!!
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-06 00:37:41 UTC
Permalink
if they cannot teach american students at an american university, then
they should not be collecting their thousands of dollars of salary from
the students, who pay tuition.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-06 15:41:53 UTC
Permalink
Hey, Bing, whaddaya doin' here?

I thought I told ya ta fuck yer mudder!
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
if they cannot teach american students at an american university, then
they should not be collecting their thousands of dollars of salary from
the students, who pay tuition.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-06 19:11:36 UTC
Permalink
nyc must be a 17 year old teen who gets straight As and has no
girlfriend, no?
NYC XYZ
2005-12-06 19:27:25 UTC
Permalink
Yo moma what?
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
nyc must be a 17 year old teen who gets straight As and has no
girlfriend, no?
t***@spamgourmet.com
2005-12-31 16:24:51 UTC
Permalink
x-no-archive: yes

Too many of them, and because of the former there is too much support
of Israel.
Phil
2005-12-31 18:01:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
x-no-archive: yes
Too many of them, and because of the former there is too much support
of Israel.
It's because they're more disciplined than American students. That,
and their parents play a more active role in their upbringing and
education.


Phil
======
visit the New York City Homebrewers Guild website:
http://www.hbd.org/nychg
t***@spamgourmet.com
2005-12-31 19:11:03 UTC
Permalink
x-no-archive: Yes

it's because their parents have more money and influence than do a lot
of other ethnic groups. that's a big part of it, i suspect. they buy
their way in. they can afford high tuitions too. too many of the Jewish
students, though, means that their beloved genocidal Zionist state will
have a blank American check forever.
Phil
2005-12-31 19:33:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
x-no-archive: Yes
it's because their parents have more money and influence than do a lot
of other ethnic groups. that's a big part of it, i suspect. they buy
their way in. they can afford high tuitions too. too many of the Jewish
students, though, means that their beloved genocidal Zionist state will
have a blank American check forever.
Does it take more money to check your kids homework? Or to spend some
time with them? Or to not immediately blame their illiteracy on their
teachers?

The television is not a babysitter. Unsupervised time in front of the
computer is not studying.

Hillary Clinton was wrong. It does not take a village to raise kids.
It takes responsible parents.


Phil
======
visit the New York City Homebrewers Guild website:
http://www.hbd.org/nychg
slim
2006-01-04 22:14:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phil
The television is not a babysitter. Unsupervised time in front of the
computer is not studying.
Homebrewing beer is not a life.
--
http://mindprod.com/politics/iraq.html

"How many American casualties is Saddam worth?
The answer is not very damned many."
- Dick Cheney, Seattle, August 1992

Donald Rumsfeld: "If you're asking if there's a direct
link between 9/11 and Iraq, the answer is no."
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4865948/

On May 01, 2003, President Bush declared that,
"Major combat operations in Iraq have ended."

"I'm the commander -- see, I don't need to explain --
I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the
interesting thing about being the president.
Maybe somebody needs to explain to me why they
say something, but I don't feel like I owe anybody
an explanation. "
- George Bush, Washington Post, 11-19-02
slim
2006-01-04 22:13:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phil
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
x-no-archive: yes
Too many of them, and because of the former there is too much support
of Israel.
It's because they're more disciplined than American students. That,
and their parents play a more active role in their upbringing and
education.
Too bad for you, eh?

All you learned how to do is make beer and WHINE!!!!

BHWAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAAA!!!!!

HEY PHIL! I'M BACK!!!!
--
http://mindprod.com/politics/iraq.html

"How many American casualties is Saddam worth?
The answer is not very damned many."
- Dick Cheney, Seattle, August 1992

Donald Rumsfeld: "If you're asking if there's a direct
link between 9/11 and Iraq, the answer is no."
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4865948/

On May 01, 2003, President Bush declared that,
"Major combat operations in Iraq have ended."

"I'm the commander -- see, I don't need to explain --
I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the
interesting thing about being the president.
Maybe somebody needs to explain to me why they
say something, but I don't feel like I owe anybody
an explanation. "
- George Bush, Washington Post, 11-19-02
Jim Walsh
2006-01-01 09:14:03 UTC
Permalink
1. The subject line is ungrammatical. Replace "does" with "do".

2. The subject line is false.
--
Love, Jim


----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----
hillaryC
2006-01-01 20:10:39 UTC
Permalink
How else can he prove that he is less educated than the Jews and the Asians?
Post by Jim Walsh
1. The subject line is ungrammatical. Replace "does" with "do".
2. The subject line is false.
--
Love, Jim
----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----
Herman Rubin
2005-12-06 19:10:59 UTC
Permalink
Post by NYC XYZ
Post by Yajyuam
NYC,
I think you are very insensitive to the Chinese instructors. Don't you
ever think that they are trying very hard to speak English to you? At
least give them respect for their effort.
I think you are very insensitive to the English-speaking students. Why
should they have to try so hard to understand what is being spoken to
them? We're in an American university, after all!
Do American students speak English? Do they even speak
American? No, each speaks his own idiolect.

There WAS a time when the schools tried to teach good
English, but now the idea, not just among educationists
but among many linguists, that everyone knows his own
native language. This is nonsense.

Chinese students do have problems with idioms, but many
American students are not much easier to understand than
"Waltzing Matilda".
Post by NYC XYZ
I don't disrespect them, believe me -- this isn't "personal." But I
just don't think it's right that they're hired to "teach"...when folks
don't understand them and they actually don't understand us students!
Even accounting for the fact that most people don't read textbooks or
study along as the course progresses but only cram last-minute -- even
for all that, these instructors still have to speak English beyond a
grasping good-enough-to-order-food level of competency!!!
They do speak English; the students do not try to understand,
but want the TAs to "teach them how to do the problems which
will be on the exam". Any decent college course is not like
that at all.
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
***@stat.purdue.edu Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558
NYC XYZ
2005-12-06 19:38:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Herman Rubin
Do American students speak English?
LOL -- I love that line from "My Fair Lady!"
Post by Herman Rubin
Do they even speak
American? No, each speaks his own idiolect.
Um, but what if you don't speak Chinese? ("You wont to found zer
pobility en zen take zer null-hypothesis to z of afa over two....")
Post by Herman Rubin
There WAS a time when the schools tried to teach good
English, but now the idea, not just among educationists
but among many linguists, that everyone knows his own
native language. This is nonsense.
Especially when the instructors can't speak it themselves!
Post by Herman Rubin
Chinese students do have problems with idioms, but many
American students are not much easier to understand than
"Waltzing Matilda".
It's true, those damned Aussies and Irish and Jamaicans and Cockneys
and Indians suck, too. I used to work for Pearl Paint Art Supply in
Chinatown, and this Aussie kept asking for what I could only finally
determine ater two minutes to be some strange thing called "rottin'
peiper"....
Post by Herman Rubin
They do speak English; the students do not try to understand,
but want the TAs to "teach them how to do the problems which
will be on the exam". Any decent college course is not like
that at all.
Yes, agreed, but that's another issue (the dunderheads! Then again, I
too am slacking off, thanks to liberal largesse...ah, a new New Year's
Resolution!).
Post by Herman Rubin
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
Oh God, I am never never never never taking another basic one or
two-hundred level course outside of M-F/9-5 again!! It seems that "odd
hours" are staffed by the H4B visas or something....
Yajyuam
2005-12-06 22:34:00 UTC
Permalink
Herman,

"They do speak English; the students do not try to understand,
but want the TAs to "teach them how to do the problems which
will be on the exam". Any decent college course is not like
that at all. "


Agreed.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-06 22:48:06 UTC
Permalink
Any decent college course is not like that at all. "
students are the paying customers; pay them what they demand so you
have a satisfied customer
Herman Rubin
2005-12-07 15:00:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Any decent college course is not like that at all. "
students are the paying customers; pay them what they demand so you
have a satisfied customer
At few universities are the students providing the bulk of
the support.

Also, what are they paying for? An essentially worthless
piece of paper saying they spent four years at good
behavior, or the ability to use their supposedly acquired
knowledge? We are giving them the former, and it is time
it was recognized that, for most, the latter is not even
close to present.
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
***@stat.purdue.edu Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558
NYC XYZ
2005-12-07 16:44:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Herman Rubin
At few universities are the students providing the bulk of
the support.
Also, what are they paying for? An essentially worthless
piece of paper saying they spent four years at good
behavior, or the ability to use their supposedly acquired
knowledge? We are giving them the former, and it is time
it was recognized that, for most, the latter is not even
close to present.
Indeed:

http://www.slate.com/id/2130322/?nav=tap3

I think even the very theoretical foundations are problematic, much
less the students (as real a problem as they are, too).
Post by Herman Rubin
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
Still, they really ought to work on their English.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-08 08:20:34 UTC
Permalink
nyc, put down the book and move away from the terminal. work on
getting a life.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-08 16:31:19 UTC
Permalink
Back on your knees, bitch.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
nyc, put down the book and move away from the terminal. work on
getting a life.
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-09 03:18:49 UTC
Permalink
in your wet dreams, darling.
NYC XYZ
2005-12-09 15:34:44 UTC
Permalink
Shut up, bitch, you missed a drop.
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
in your wet dreams, darling.
t***@spamgourmet.com
2005-12-31 08:12:22 UTC
Permalink
x-no-archive: yes

Do you not find the holidays and the forced cheer a phony yet somehow
terribly depressing time? How many of us yearn to wrap a noose around
our necks and end it all during the end of the year?
Phil
2005-12-31 14:08:17 UTC
Permalink
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
x-no-archive: yes
Do you not find the holidays and the forced cheer a phony yet somehow
terribly depressing time? How many of us yearn to wrap a noose around
our necks and end it all during the end of the year?
Nothing's stooping you, loser. Just remember that the rabbit goes
around the tree seven times for a proper hangman's noose.


Phil
======
visit the New York City Homebrewers Guild website:
http://www.hbd.org/nychg
t***@spamgourmet.com
2005-12-31 19:13:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phil
Nothing's stooping you, loser. Just remember that the rabbit goes
around the tree seven times for a proper hangman's noose.
you are another abusive usenet coward.
Phil
2005-12-31 19:29:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
Do you not find the holidays and the forced cheer a phony yet somehow
terribly depressing time? How many of us yearn to wrap a noose around
our necks and end it all during the end of the year?
Why do you say that? Is it because I enjoy the holidays with my
family and friends? Or because I don't suggest that people take the
cowardly way out and kill themselves?

If you truly wanted to kill yourself, you'd either do it or you'd seek
help to get over it. Posting on the newsgroup is not getting help.


Phil
======
visit the New York City Homebrewers Guild website:
http://www.hbd.org/nychg
slim
2006-01-04 22:24:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phil
Post by t***@spamgourmet.com
Do you not find the holidays and the forced cheer a phony yet somehow
terribly depressing time? How many of us yearn to wrap a noose around
our necks and end it all during the end of the year?
Why do you say that? Is it because I enjoy the holidays with my
family and friends? Or because I don't suggest that people take the
cowardly way out and kill themselves?
Like your buddies the PsychoCops do?

They usually kill the entire family and thier girlfriends before they
eat thier guns. Fucking psycho cowards.
--
http://mindprod.com/politics/iraq.html

"How many American casualties is Saddam worth?
The answer is not very damned many."
- Dick Cheney, Seattle, August 1992

Donald Rumsfeld: "If you're asking if there's a direct
link between 9/11 and Iraq, the answer is no."
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4865948/

On May 01, 2003, President Bush declared that,
"Major combat operations in Iraq have ended."

"I'm the commander -- see, I don't need to explain --
I do not need to explain why I say things. That's the
interesting thing about being the president.
Maybe somebody needs to explain to me why they
say something, but I don't feel like I owe anybody
an explanation. "
- George Bush, Washington Post, 11-19-02
Ira Humperdink MD
2005-12-31 14:03:32 UTC
Permalink
lso, what are they paying for? An essentially worthless piece of paper saying they spent four years
No, they are paying for:
1) entertainment (obviously not to be found in your class)
2) use of the career services office to find a job
3) a diploma that certifies admission to college

Item #3 is most important, because admission to a school like Harvard
is quite impressive to employers. Not graduation -- ADMISSION. It
means you got selected in the top 5% of all applicants. Wall Street
sucks up Harvard grads because they know the Harvard admissions office
screened out all the losers.

How much is admission to Harvard worth? At least the $150,000
tuition/board for 4 years. How much is admission to UBC worth? $2000
canadian?? buahahahahaha!
Ira Humperdink MD
2006-01-01 00:04:24 UTC
Permalink
Hillary Clinton was wrong. It does not take a village to raise kids. It takes responsible parents.
but what about the milions of kids with incompetent or evil parents?
who takes care of them?
Herman Rubin
2006-01-01 17:36:54 UTC
Permalink
Post by Ira Humperdink MD
Hillary Clinton was wrong. It does not take a village to raise kids. It takes responsible parents.
but what about the milions of kids with incompetent or evil parents?
who takes care of them?
If one puts them with the children of responsible parents,
and there are not many of them, it might work. But if
there are many of them, the only result will be to the
detriment of those with responsible parents.
--
This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views
are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University.
Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University
***@stat.purdue.edu Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558
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