Format: 2013-05-18
Format: 2013-05-18
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  • The Public Option 2010-09-09 14:49

     

    Can and would you put your youngsters through the public school system?

  • Choosing the right international school

    Moving to a new country is hard enough, and moving to Shanghai – where ‘bustle’ takes on new connotations – can be downright daunting. Finding the right school for your children is always a challenge that expat parents face.

  • As more attention is focused on good health and prevention of disease, plastic surgery has also become increasingly popular and available, not just to movie stars in Hollywood, but in most big cities around the world. Shanghai is no exception. The new Department of Plastic Surgery and Cosmetic Medicine at WorldPath Clinic International offers clients the highest quality plastic surgery and cosmetic medicine services in Shanghai.

  • Adolescence: What Gives! 2009-12-15 17:31

    ...And you really thought it wouldn't happen? You know what I mean! It's a nice Saturday afternoon and you're shopping with the family at one of Shanghai's mega malls. Your daughter picks out some outfits to try on and you can't wait to see the latest "Dora the Explorer" fashions on her...then reality bites: The jeans are too tight and riding too low; the top is too short and yes, that's her belly button out for the world to see. Your three-year old is suddenly thirteen and has no interest in Dora...and you're the stunned parents of...an Adolescent!

  • In taking care of children, every parent will come across the situation of having to deal with a feverish child. As young children are unable to tell their parents exactly how they feel, it can be very frustrating to know what to do especially at nights when medical advises are not readily available. In order to manage this situation rationally and effectively, some understanding of the cause of fever is necessary. Fever is one of the defence mechanisms used by the body in dealing with invasion of disease causing organisms. Therefore it is important to realise that it is an important function helping to restoring the body to health. Having said this, it should not be forgotten that it is still one of the signs of warning indicating the existence of illness.

  • SMIC Private School art teacher, Ameet Gill, readily embraces the challenge of understanding Chinese culture through art.

    And she’s bringing that passion into the classroom.

  • Examination Damnation 2009-06-17 16:26

    I stepped out onto the outdoor patio of the Suzhou cafe to find a group of five young girls uncomfortably squeezed onto two wooden benches, the table between them crowded with Chinese workbooks, cups of coffee and glasses of tea. They chirped and chittered at each other, disgorging passages of memorized text and frantically flipping through worn pages of exercises.

    I asked them if they were studying for their college entrance examinations. They all called out, “Yes!” in unison, and tittered at the odd Westerner who took an interest in what they were doing. “When is the exam?” I asked.

    “This afternoon!” they responded in perfect cadence. The question seemed to remind them they had better get back to work. They buried their heads back in the workbooks and mumbled Chinese mnemonics to themselves, now self-conscious.

    Last week’s New York Times said of the examination system, called gaokao:

  • I will continue the topic around which school should I send Yifan to today. As I always did, I am trying to share the options I have, and the dilemma I am facing to help my readers to get some ideas about the tough decisions to make for people in this city. Again, I tried not to generalize it as a question people face in this country. For example, Shanghai and my hometown Luoyang is very different.

  • Education is important to China's future, and education reform has been a long drawn-out complex process, which people of all stripes agree has basically been inadequate. From the early days of Project Hope corruption to the current education spending that still hasn't reached the 4%-of-GDP target set by the central government, people have much to complain about. Among all the problems, one most depressing had to have been that basic primary/secondary education required all kinds of fees and therefore no universal access to education existed.