May I ask which minorities these teachers will be teaching? Are any of
the teachers themselves minority, or are they all Han Chinese?

A topic of great interest to minorities is the experience of other
minorities, and of even majorities subjected to foreign oppression, as
in the British-Chinese Opium Wars and the succeeding Unequal Treaties
period, or all of China under Mongol and Manchu rule. This is a
sensitive topic in China, so one would have to be careful not to let
it turn into anything the authorities would consider revolutionary, or
perhaps I should say counter-revolutionary. For example, on the
positive side one could look at the Swiss experience of cooperation
among groups speaking several languages (Italian, French, German, and
Romansch), and among its Catholic and Protestant populations.

I would assume that study of mistreatment of minorities in the US and
the Soviet Union, and of anti-imperial revolutions, particularly
liberation struggles against Spain, France and the UK, would be within
the acceptable boundaries. But I would check before taking anything
into the classroom unless it is already in the curriculum.

Can you ask your teachers what minority issues they are aware of, what
they are allowed to teach about them, and how much they listen to
their students on these questions?

I recommend the video Vis à Vis: Native Tongues on this issue. It
presents a series of teleconference sessions between a Native American
performance artist, James Luna, and an Australian Aborigine actress
and playwright, Ningali Lawford, exploring their work and sharing
issues that are at the core of their communities' experience. The
biggest is that both communities suffered greatly from forced
attendance at English-only boarding schools designed to destroy their
cultures. (Canada also, with the addition of massive, systematic rape
of students.)

What issues do minorities in China share, that they should be talking
with each other about, and what does the majority have to say about
this?

A separate issue: Although it is not time to teach teachers how to use
technology that is not yet available to their students, it is not too
soon for them to think about what will happen and what they will need
to do when that technology arrives, which will be during their active
teaching careers. I say this because

1) Computers are already less expensive than printed textbooks.

2) Several countries, from Bangladesh to South Korea, are digitizing
all of their textbooks.

3) China, more than most other developing countries, has a plan for
getting electricity, phone service, and Internet out to its remote
towns and even villages as part of its more general economic
development plan. (Compare US Rural Electrification, including the
Tennessee Valley Authority.)

Internet use in China went from less than 2% of the population to 36%
in the last decade. Extrapolating along a logistic curve indicates
that it should achieve well over 90% penetration in another decade or
so.

On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 05:29, Wong Leo <leolao...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear all ,
>
> I will be teaching a teacher education unit for about 400 middle school
> teachers to help them prepare for their future teaching job for minority
> people in remote china , i am wondering if anyone who have the similar
> teaching experience on teacher education program , the name of the course is
> called curriculum and teaching .
>
> i am thinking about trying something in wikieducator like involving each
> teacher to design a teaching unit , and asking them to put on wikieducator
> website
>
> however , i need the advices from you !
>
> something creative is the best !!
>
>
> --
> Leo Wong
> Teacher and teacher trainer
> --------------------------------------
> http://wikieducator.org/User:Leolaoshi
>
> 机构博客:http://helpsuzhou.blogbus.com
>
> 个人博客 http://blog.sina.com.cn/leolaoshi1  (在努力中)
>
>  Skype:leolaoshi
>
> Malaysia number +006 010 2718251
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> There is something very special and powerful about engaging directly with
> the real teacher and real Kids.
>
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-- 
Edward Mokurai (默雷/धर्ममेघशब्दगर्ज/دھرممیگھشبدگر ج) Cherlin
Silent Thunder is my name, and Children are my nation.
The Cosmos is my dwelling place, the Truth my destination.
http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/Replacing_Textbooks

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