Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Go West Young Man


While it was nice to be in DC, and to see all my old friends, I’m happy to have finally moved out to Denver. I didn’t really know much about Denver before I moved out here. I’d been to Boulder a few times, and I remembered that Colorado was very pretty, but I didn’t know much else. I got an apartment online, a risky proposition, but since I didn’t know anyone in Denver I had limited options. As soon as I got off the plane, I had to take a series of buses to the management company office to sign the lease and pick up my keys. Luckily, they were nice enough to give me a ride to the apartment so I didn’t have to take any more buses.

Denver has a pretty good public transportation system. It has a mix of buses that run on all the major streets and a light rail that is open very late. That being said, I’ve been surprised how much of a driving city Denver is. I guess it shouldn’t have been such a shock since the West is known for its sprawling cities. Still, I’ve been shocked how spread out it is compared to any city back east. I guess I’m just not in DC anymore.

My apartment is better than I had feared. It’s not that big, but I don’t need much room. It came unfurnished, though, which meant I’ve had to buy a ton of stuff. The apartment itself is nice if a little dated. The stove and counters look like they’re from the 70’s, and the shag carpet probably would have been pretty stylish then as well. I made so many trips to Target I think they now know me by name. Most of the larger furniture came from IKEA. I got quite a bit of stuff pretty cheap there including a couch. After I had all the necessary stuff, I turned to Amazon for the rest, since I didn’t need it immediately, and I was getting tired of carrying things all over the city.

The area around where I live is nice, and not surprisingly, very college focused. There are a ton of bars and restaurants that pretty clearly cater to students. The campus itself is beautiful. The buildings are red brick, and the style is a mix of southwest architecture and the more traditional look for a university. Many of the buildings are really nice and fairly new, so I wonder if the school came into a lot of money in the last 10 years.

The altitude is a lot higher in Colorado, but it’s not so high that you immediately notice the difference. The effect comes in things like getting dehydrated more quickly, since you breathe more when the air is thinner. I guess it might affect cooking a bit also, but I doubt that will be a huge problem for me.

Unfortunately, my wrist is still bothering me, which makes me doubly nervous with classes starting so soon. At least I’ll be back on a real health care plan in a few days. I tried to make my room as ergonomic as possible.

The weather has been good, but surprisingly hot. It’s drier than DC, but it has been in the mid 90s a number of times. I finally had to get a portable air conditioner so I could sleep. The weather is as sunny as they say, but there are also storms that seem to come out of nowhere. I’m sure I’ll get used to it eventually.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

The Good Ol’ US of A

It’s nice to be home. I’m finally back in the US after two straight years in China. It feels incredibly good to be home. My parents are still in China, and some renters in their house, so I’m staying with family friends. So far, it’s been incredibly hot in DC. I thought I had gotten used to the heat in Guangzhou, but I’m still suffering. I developed some heat rash on my legs. My wrist is also hurting more than it was a few weeks ago. Even with all this, it feels amazing to be home. I’ve been anticipating coming back for a while, but I didn’t realize how much I’ve missed the US until I finally got home.

People have been asking me what I missed most about the US, but I can’t quite answer the question because I have missed almost everything. The first day back, just walking down the street was a revelation. No one was pushing past me. The streets weren’t some sort of disgusting mess. No one tried to drive a car down the sidewalk. The weather, while blisteringly hot, was still amazing. Clouds not pollutions were in the sky, and no odd smells on the wind. It was so easy to go shopping since I didn’t have to work out what I was going to say beforehand.

It’s also been so much fun to see all my friends again. I’ve gone out to play bar trivia with Harry. I went to the old neighborhood standby, Cactus Cantina, with Andy. I went to a bar that specializes in incredibly fancy beer with Taylor. I saw Mike at his bartending job in Bethesda. I saw Jack and Matt at a birthday party for Harry’s girlfriend. For those who don’t know who these people are, they are all friends of mine since elementary school. I even saw Ken, who I taught with for two years in Changzhou. I’ve also had the chance to see a bunch of old family friends and neighbors. It’s been amazing. I’ve had so many people to see that I’ve eaten lunch and dinner out almost every day.

Even doing normal stuff, like going to CVS, is a treat. Their selection is amazing. They have real medicine, not the ground up twigs and sheep’s placenta I would find in China. Everything is so quick and well organized. The only downside is that compared to China everything here is amazingly expensive. I think I’ve already spent more money than I saved in my last two years in China. Still, being back is like being on permanent vacation from China. I loved being in China, but I didn’t realize how tired I was of the usual Chinese nonsense until I came back home.

One side effect of being thrilled by American efficiency and organization is that when something doesn’t work the way it should I find myself getting frustrated really quickly. I had a really hard time dealing with the people at the Verizon store, and by the time I was finished I was just spitting mad. After being in China for so long, and wanting relief from the insane way everything worked there, I just can’t stand to see my vision of a well run America contradicted. I think I’ll get on a more even keel over time. For now though, I just can’t stand to see the same, “well there’s nothing I can do about it,” excuse in America, that I was so sick of in China. Either way, though, it’s good to be home.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Visit

Harry just left after visiting me and my parents for a little over a week. Harry, for those of you who don't know is one of my oldest friends. I've known him since we were in first grade. We did a ton of stuff while he was here. Mostly we were in Beijing but we also went to Xi'an for a little while. In Beijing we went to all the tourist highlights. First, we went to Tiananmen and saw Mao's body and the Forbidden City. Mao is always fun to see and due to the time we went there was almost no line. I still can't tell if that really is Mao or some sort of wax replica. He looks pretty waxy, but I have no idea how someone who has been dead for more than 40 years should look. The Forbidden City was actually more interesting than the last time I went there since we had a good audio guide. Without the guide after a while all the buildings start to look the same.

The next day we saw the Bell and Drum Towers, as well as the Lama Temple, and the Temple of Heaven. They were all nice, the Temple of Heaven was one I hadn't seen yet, though seeing them all in one day was fairly exhausting. We also went out to one of the best duck restaurants in the city for my birthday which is always good. Next we went out to the Great Wall. The Wall is somewhat outside of Beijing so we decided to try and take a bus. I read online that you could get a bus from a bus stop near where my parents live. We did get the bus, which cost about $2 a person, but it took forever to get out to the Wall and back. It took almost two and a half hours each way. Mostly because the bus made maybe 60 local stops along the way. The Wall was really nice though. The section we went to Mutianyu was a section I hadn't been to. It's in a really pretty area high up on the crest of some hills. You can take a cable car up then walk along the Wall until you take a slide down. It's a really great part of the Wall and I highly recommend it.

We also went to Xi'an the city famous for the Terracotta Warriors. Our flights got pretty messed up both going there and coming back but we were able to see most of what we wanted to. The Terracotta Warriors themselves are really nice, but I think they're a little over hyped. I'm not sure anything could have lived up to how much people talk about them. The city of Xi'an itself though was a nice surprise. The city is one of the few in China to still have an intact city wall. That along with the remaining older buildings of the Muslim quarter give the city much more personality than you usually find in bland Chinese cities. I was very impressed by Xi'an and how much more Chinese it looked than most Chinese cities, which look sort of like Houston.

We also saw the Summer Palace before Harry went back. That was nice though once again I was there on a really overcast and foggy day. Everyone says the Summer Palace is much nicer when it's sunny out but I've never found out if that is true. All in all it was really nice to have someone visit me from the US before I go back. It was also nice to do some Beijing stuff that I hadn't done before and see Xi'an.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

School's Out

Well school is not exactly finished here yet I have a few more classes but it's mostly done. I've enjoyed being a teacher for the past five years but I'm ready to be a student again for a while. I pretty much just need to finish up writing the grades for this semester. I had four oral English classes, which went pretty much like they always do. I also had two writing classes. I'm not sure how well I did with those. I think I aimed too high for their level. I tried to being in various types of writing to keep it interesting, but they never seemed all that engaged. Also judging from the final essays their mastery of the basic five paragraph essay never got as strong as I would have hoped either. If I had a chance to do it again I think I'd be better at it. I'd focus much more on the elements of an essay, a whole class or even two just on writing a thesis or topic sentence may have been necessary. Oh well. At least I got them to turn in homework printed out and more or less formatted correctly. And as far as I could tell it wasn't copied from the internet. Or at least if it was copied form the internet they've gotten much better at hiding the fact.

But that's all pretty much done now. I have a bunch of fun stuff to look forward to this summer. First pretty much as soon as I'm done with classes I'm flying up to Beijing. Harry, one of my oldest friends, is coming to China to visit and tour around a little. He's only here about a week so we are just going to do Beijing and Xi'an. I've never actually been to Xi'an, a fact that is getting embarrassing after being in China for five years. It'll be great to get to play tour guide and show someone around. Besides Xi'an there is a ton of stuff to do in Beijing: Mao's tomb, the Forbidden City, the Great Wall, the Summer Palace, the Temple of Heaven, plus we're hoping to see some music and maybe a sporting event. After Harry leaves I still have about two weeks with my parents in Beijing. David who I used to teach with back in Changzhou, also said he'd come down for a few days.

David left Changzhou after one year to go to graduate school for physics. But after a term he decided he didn't like it. Later he joined the Peace Corps and was in Kazakhstan for two years. Now he just got into the Foreign Service and just got sent back to China. David learned a huge amount of Chinese in his one year here. Way more than I've learned in my five, but that is a pretty low standard.

I'm going back to the US on July 14th. I'm going to go to school out in Denver, but I wanted to have some time back in DC before I went there. Some family friends have very nicely offered me a place to stay. I'm going to be in DC for two weeks and I'm looking forward to seeing all my friends. It's been two years since I was in DC the last time. After that I'm going out to Denver around the 1st. I don't have a place yet but I'm hoping to have one by the time I get out there. I'm actually coming back to the East Coast once more after that. In mid August there is going to be a family reunion in Maine so I'll be going to that as well. All in all a lot of stuff to look forward to this summer.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Grad School Part Six: Decision

When it finally came time for me to make a decision I was mostly deciding in between SAIS and San Diego. I also liked Denver and Columbia, but I figured that San Diego was a little better than Denver at about the same price and SAIS was better for me than Columbia at about the same price. The decision then was whether SAIS was worth the extra 40 thousand or so dollars it would cost over two years. I looked at a ton of stuff. I went over every detail on the SAIS and San Diego websites. I asked question after question of the current students whose e-mail I had gotten. I compared every part of the school and went though the descriptions of every course.

I finally decided on SAIS. I really liked everything I had heard about their program especially the China related stuff. They had a number of great China professors and I could take quite a few classes related to China. I also thought that the more economic focused classes that were required there would be interesting. San Diego looked good as well, but the program didn't seem very flexible and some of the required classes didn't seem as interesting.

So finally having made my decision I was just about to tell SAIS, actually I had pretty much already told them, when Denver suddenly offered me a much bigger scholarship. I was shocked. I hadn't really expected to get any scholarships in the first place. The new offer was a full tuition scholarship and they would give me a research assistant position to boot. The biggest problem was I had basically no time to make up my mind. I had about three days to decided if I still wanted to go to SAIS or if this put Denver ahead. What was more since Denver wasn't one of the last two schools I had looked at I hadn't done as much research about the program there as I had about SAIS and San Diego.

I spent three days rushing to find out as much as I could about Denver. I e-mailed basically everyone I could think of. The people there were really nice about responding really quickly to my panicked e-mails. I looked at the list of professors and descriptions of the school and the classes. I posted about my situation on a couple of grad student message boards looking for advice. I think I called my parents about 100 times. I even e-mailed a couple of professors at SAIS to ask them what they thought about the situation.

One of the most helpful things was when I called a professor at Denver, who was nice enough to spend a few minutes talking with on a Sunday. Most people agreed that SAIS was clearly the better school, especially for China, but quite a few people in all sorts of positions recommended that I take the money and go to Denver. The cost over two years, when housing and everything is considered, could come to $100,000 more to go to SAIS. It just wasn't worth it at that amount.

On top of that Denver is still a really good school and has a lot of stuff I like. It does have some China focus, the program seems really interesting and quite flexible, and everyone I've talked to was very positive about it. The RA position was also a big plus. Since I wanted to go into academia, getting to do some research work is a great opportunity and will look really good on my resume.

I took a couple of sleepless nights, but I eventually decided to go to Denver. The whole processes was exhausting. From the time I started studying for the GRE to finally deciding where to go the better part of a year had passed. I was just glad to be finally done with the whole process. I'll talk a little bit about the University of Denver in my next grad school post.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Grad School Part Five: Accepted!

Applying was quite an intense process, but in the end so was getting accepted. To start with I didn't get into Harvard, Yale, Princeton, or Berkeley. Harvard and Princeton were the schools I was the most disappointing to not get into since Harvard was my first choice, and Princeton was one of the rare schools known for giving out great scholarships. Yale I wasn't so concerned with since it was one of the last schools I decided to apply to, and besides the name I wasn't really sure what made it a good fit. Berkeley I still don't understand. I got into a number of better schools and in some ways my application seemed like a really good fit there. But in the end I guess it's impossible to know exactly how each school evaluates the applications.

I also got wait listed by two more schools, AU and Tufts. The way wait listing works for these schools you basically have to forgo anywhere else. It takes them so long to decided if to take more people off the wait list that the deadline for decisions from everywhere else would have passed. I wasn't so disappointed to not get into these schools since by the time I found out I already had a lot of good options.

The first school I was accepted at, and the first to tell me one way or the other, was Denver. Denver was an odd one since I had added it to my application list late in the process, and mostly the only thing I knew about it was that Condoleezza Rice had gone there. After I got accepted I had a while to look at the school though, since they accepted me far before any other school, and there were a number of good qualities. They had at least one person who studied China, and they published a journal of China studies. The school also seemed to be an up-and-coming International Relations school. The best part though was that they offered me a scholarship. The tuition was about $40,000 a year, pretty much the standard price, and they offered me a $20,000 a year scholarship. It was definitely a good way to begin hearing decisions, with not only an acceptance but a scholarship as well.

I can't remember the order for the other schools. I also got accepted into Michigan with a $10,000 scholarship, and into Pittsburgh. I have to admit that I didn't really consider these schools to much though since neither were really better than Denver and Denver had offered me a better deal. The other schools I did consider were SAIS, San Diego, and Columbia.

SAIS or the School of Advanced International Studies is actually part of Johns Hopkins, but since it's in DC and Hopkins is in Baltimore people usually just call it SAIS not Hopkins. SAIS was a school that when I was first thinking of where to apply I had ruled out. It was considered one of the most policy focused schools, and I was more interested in an academic focus, and it was so highly ranked that I thought I'd never get in. I decided to apply in the end when I realized that it was one of the absolutely top places to study China. I figured with so many applications what was one or two more. I was pretty shocked when I got it. It jumped up pretty much immediately to be my top choice. Besides the great reputation I liked a lot of what I learned about the flexibility and the focus of the program. The biggest drawback was the money. Besides $40,000 a year in tuition living in DC is just massively expensive. $1200 a month even with a roommate was what I was thinking I was going to have to spend. Compared with maybe $600 a month alone in Denver.

San Diego was actually where I thought I'd wind up before I started applying. It was a good school but not so highly ranked that I didn't think I had a shot of getting in. It has a good China focus and San Diego itself is supposed to be amazing. Actually another advantage of the school was that with in state tuition, which I think I could have gotten in my second year, It would have been about half the cost of SAIS, or pretty much the same as Denver even with the scholarship. This meant that mostly when I was figuring out where to go it came down to San Diego and SAIS since San Diego seemed a little better than Denver and at a similar cost.

Columbia was the strangest one I got into. I know I said I thought SAIS was a long shot, but I thought Columbia was impossible. Not just because it was highly ranked, but because all the questions and stuff they asked for on the application seemed to indicate that they wanted a person not at all like me. On there website they said that they strongly preferred students who had taken economics, not me, and spoke a second language, not me either. In fact they required filling out a list of every math, economics, and political science course you'd taken in college. For me that list was two math classes I'd taken about eight years ago and nothing else. It seemed ridiculous. After filling out that form I almost didn't apply at all. But I figured I'd already filled out everything else I might as well. I still have no idea exactly why they accepted me.

Well this post is getting pretty long so I'll finish it next time with where I actually ended up going and why.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Grad School Part Four: The Application

With the GRE done I could finally get down to deciding where to apply to. I found a number of resources that ranked and described the strengths of the various international relations master's programs. My ideal program was something that had some focus on China, was highly ranked, and was at a school with a good PhD program. I couldn't necessarily find all those things in each school, but that was largely what I looked for. The problem was I had no idea how good a school I could get into. I had some really strong parts to my application, living in China for the last five years, getting great GRE scores, but I also had some really weak parts, a bad undergraduate GPA, not speaking much Chinese. There was also other stuff that I didn't really know how it would play. I hadn't taken a single political science or economics class as an undergrad, and had taken only a few math courses. My letters of recommendation were also a little bit all over the place.

On the one hand, I thought I might be able to get into a top program with my GREs and international experience, but on the other I worried that I wouldn't get in anywhere with my low GPA and no language skill. I also remembered that I ended up wishing that I had applied to more colleges when I was an undergrad. Not that I didn't like Wisconsin, just that I wish I'd given myself more choice. So I decided to apply to a ton of schools. I considered almost every international relations school out there. I removed some that were just too different from what I wanted, and ones where I didn't meet there entrance requirements. I was still left with 12 schools to apply to. I think my parents thought I had lost it when I told them I was going to apply to 12 schools. The fees for applying alone where pretty stiff.

The actual process of applying was also pretty intense. A lot of the application dates were fairly close together and I felt like I didn't have time to do anything other than write essays and fill out forums. Thank God not every school required totally different essays, but I still had to adapt the ones I had done already. I think there were 30 drafts of my "Why I Want to go to this School" essay. I took basically the whole autumn to write all the essays and fill out all the forums. Some it took so long that I finished applying with literally hours to go before the deadline. Some of the forums were so vague or confusing that I'm still not sure if I filled them in correctly. I owe my parents a huge amount for all there help looking at the essays and advising me about the more confusing questions on the forums.

To give you a sense of just how big a project this all was I'm going to list all the schools I applied to and why I applied to each one. The list is organized vaguely in the order I had ranked them in my head when I started, though by the end I had pretty significantly revised my opinion of some schools. You should also know that what I'm putting here is a very short version of the information I collected on each school. I made an eight page list of what I thought of each school that is too long to post here, and probably evidence of my insanity.

-Harvard-Kennedy School
Harvard has some of the absolutely top China scholars and ranks very highly for masters programs, plus it ranks first in PhD programs. This was basically my ideal school, though I'm sure the same could be said for a lot of people.

-Columbia-SIPA
Not specifically known for china, but a very highly ranked program with a good PhD program and some amazing professors, though the best are economists. I had heard this program was also supposed to be good for people who wanted to go on to get a PhD, which was a big reason I regarded it so highly.

-Princeton-Wilson School
Highly ranked with some impressive professors though not specifically know for China. The students tended to be more focused on policy careers, as opposed to academic, which wasn't what I wanted. Princeton though is known as the only masters international relations program to give out a ton of scholarships, almost every student gets one. Which considering the huge cost of these programs is reason enough.

-Johns Hopkins-SAIS
SAIS, as its usually called, is actually located in DC not in Baltimore with the rest of Hopkins. While it is also more focused on policy careers it is very highly ranked, usually number one or two. It also has one of the most impressive China programs with a number of great professors.

-UC San Diego-IR/PS
San Diego isn't nearly as highly ranked as those first four, it's PhD program is ranked a lot higher than its masters program, but it still ranks well. It also has a significant China focus and as a state school was somewhat cheaper than the others. At the time I applied I basically thought that this was where I'd end up.

-Yale-Jackson Institute
A very new program, but a highly ranked one. Mostly I wanted to go there because of how well it was ranked, and I thought they gave out some scholarships.

-Tufts-Fletcher School
Also a highly ranked program. Was also more focused on policy, as opposed to academic, but was supposed to be a great school.

-UC Berkeley-GSPP
This was actually a public policy rather than a international relations school, but they had a international relations focus and there PhD program seems to be specifically for people completing masters, which was what I was looking for. They had some notable China people in the past as well.

-American University-SIS
AU has a surprisingly highly ranked international relations school, I always remember AU as not a great school from when I was a kid. It's gotten a lot better and SIS is supposed to be really good, and being in DC is always a plus for international relations.

-University of Denver-Korbel School
Not as famous as some of there but had at least some China focus, which not all the schools did. It also had a few famous alumni the most notable being Condoleezza Rice, who even before she worked for Bush was a big deal professor at Stanford. DU also ranked pretty well 10 or 11 on some lists.

-University of Michigan: Ann Arbor-Ford School
Michigan was one the place to study China and still has some China focus. It also has a good PhD program and ranks well generally for political science.

-University of Pittsburgh-GSPIA
This one was definitely in the safety school category, though it was still one of the few universities to have a dedicated international relations school.


Given that this post has gotten really long I'll cover where I actually got into next time.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Grad School Part Three: The GRE

Once I decided to go to grad school the biggest obstacle was taking the GRE. One nice thing about going to grad school is it is a chance to do over things I wished I'd done differently when going to college. I've always been good at taking standardized tests, I think it is because when I was little they had us take a ton of them as the school district got paid extra to test out new tests. When it came time for the SAT I don't think I studied at all. They used to say that you couldn't really study for test like the SAT, but that's just not really true. They're not the same as normal tests where you learn the material in a class, but you can still definitely study for them. I did well on the SAT, but there was just no reason to pass up studying a little and doing better. When it came time for the GREs I really needed to study. I haven't taken a math class in about seven or eight years, or taken a test of any sort since I graduated.

Luckily I didn't have much going on during the whole summer so I could spend a lot of time studying. Often I'd go down to this one restaurant that was open almost all summer but pretty empty. I'd eat lunch then study for several hours. At first it was a lot of math review, but after a while it was just endless practice questions. Besides the math there was also the language section. Most of those were reading comprehension questions. I've done a lot of these over the years, but the GRE ones were particularly hard. They'd often come down to a very subtle interpretation of one word or phrase in the passage or the question.

Besides just studying the material I spent a lot of time just practicing taking such a long test. The GRE is a massively long test. It starts with an hour long writing section than five 30 minute long math or language sections. With breaks the whole thing takes about four hours. Just trying to concentrate for that long is exhausting. I had to practice just sitting there taking the test for that long.

My sister also took the GRE, though about two months before me. She got a really good score which helped kick my studying into overdrive. Just before I took the test I was doing really well on most of the practice questions, especially the math ones, but it was hard to know how much that translated into the actual test.

I had to go down to Hong Kong to take the test. They have it in Guangzhou but I could figure out how to register for it. The morning of the test I woke up with a really sore neck, and managed to make it much worse by trying to stretch it. I was in real pain. I could barely move at all without my neck spasming  The pain was really intense. It felt like someone was twisting the mussels in my neck as hard as they could. I couldn't even put my head level, I spent the whole day with it crooked over to one side.

I almost didn't want to take the test, but I'd spent such a long time studying I just couldn't stop so close to being done. If you had seen me during the test, which was at some Hong Kong school, you'd have thought I was a crazy person. Every few minutes when my neck spasmed  I'd have to stop and make this horrible grimacing face while trying not to cry out and bother everyone else. I basically skipped every break because I felt so terrible I just wanted to get it done. I took very little medicine because I was worried it would effect my performance.

One of the interesting things about the GRE is that it gives you your score on two out of the three sections as soon as you are done. The last section the written part takes a few weeks. I was terrified when I got to the last screen that says basically, "do you want to see your scores and make the whole thing official, or throw them out but never know how you did." I had studied more than I had ever studied for any test, but I'd been in so much pain all day I had no idea how I did. I didn't think I did badly but it was a hard test.

Having done all that though there was no way I could  live with not seeing my scores. Even if I felt I'd done badly I'd still have been dying to know. After all that I got a 170 out of 170 on the language part, a perfect score and 99th percentile, though interestingly I learned later that I didn't get a few questions wrong. On the math section I got a 168 out of 170, a 96th percentile I think. No matter how much better I feel I'm doing at math I always score higher on language on standardized tests.

I was elated, these were giant score which was just what I needed given some of the deficiencies in my application. I learned later that I got 4.5 out of 6 on the written. An OK score but not nearly like the others. The written section scoring is a bit nuts. It's in half point increments with the percentiles going 4-50% 4.5-72% 5-90% 5.5-96% 6-99%. A 4.5 was OK but not nearly as good as the other two parts. Still I was thrilled with how I did and it helped a lot in applying for schools. But more on that next time.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Grad School Part Two: A Combination of Things

So what made me want to go to grad school anyways. I think in the end it wasn't really any one thing, but a combination of things. First is the fact that I like to travel. Studying International Relations isn't really the same thing as traveling, though it might involve some, but it is related. My interest in different countries and cultures definitely ties in to the study of International Relations, which is after all just how countries relate to one another. Second, I've enjoyed being a teacher for these past five years. I haven't always wanted to be an English teacher, but being able to teach about something more related to what I'm interested in seems great. This would take more than a masters degree but I'm planning to go on for a PhD at some point after finishing my masters.

This isn't the most common path when it comes to International Relations of Political Science, I believe a majority of those getting PhDs don't get masters first, but since my undergraduate grades were not very good I don't think I'd get into a top PhD program right now. And with academia as tough as it is today, I'm not sure it's worth going for a PhD if you're not in a top program, since the graduates from the top programs get so many of the academic jobs.

Third, I am interested in politics but don't really want to work for congress or the government like a lot of people I know in DC do. I think getting a masters or possibly a PhD would open up a lot of jobs that are connected to politics but with a more international bent and not inside the government. Finally, even after living in China for a while I'm still always interested in all the strange and unusual things that go on around here. Living here has shown me a lot, but I want to be able to study China in a more academic setting.

Well that's mostly why I want to go to grad school. I think it will combine what I've been doing for the past five years with my interest in different countries and politics. Next time I'm going to talk about all that was involved in taking the GRE.

Monday, May 27, 2013

All About China

Inspired by an e-mail my dad recently sent out I've been thinking about what news and information sources I read about China on a regular basis. Basically I'm going to list a few publications that will keep you really up to date on China.

- The Wall Street Journal
The Journal does the most reporting on China of any western news source. The only newspapers to write more about China are the Chinese ones and they're not exactly reliable. The Journal does a pretty wide range of stories, though it still has more of a business focus, and has a very good blog as well. They've broken a few really big stories, they had a lot of the best Bo Xilia information.

-The New York Times
The Times doesn't write nearly as many stories about China as the Journal does, but pretty much every story they do write is really excellent. The quality of their China stories in the past year has been so high that I'm really excited every time I see a new one pop up on their website. They had a big story recently on the family money of former Premier Wen Jiabao.

-Sinocism
Sinocism is a newsletter and website, I believe I've mentioned before, that is one guys compilation of the best news and opinion about China from the past day. He gives an amazingly thorough overview of everything written about China. If you read every link in his e-mail you'd know everything happening in China, even just reading his short summaries is great.

-Caixin
 Caixin is the best Chinese newspaper and website I've seen. The publish in both English and Chinese, there is more in Chinese but it's pretty good in English too. It's really surprising how critical and direct they can be about China and even the decisions of the government. You do see propaganda puff pieces from time to time, but overall it's very much worth checking out.

-Xinhua
Xinhua is propaganda, literally, it's a creating of the Propaganda and Public Information Departments. That being said it can be good to see what the Chinese governments view on world events is from their perspective. It's also not quite as silly or overblown as People's Daily English version or the incredibly jingoistic Global Times.

-reddit.com/r/china
Reddit's subsection on China stands in here for pretty much any expat forum on China. The information on all of these tends to be a pretty similar discussion of the best from various small expat websites and other interesting things happening in China.

-The Economist
The Economist does a section specifically on China in every issue and tends to cover a lot of stuff related to China in its other sections as well. There writing isn't the best but it does have a lot about China and it's usually a fun read.

-Foreign Affairs/Foreign Policy
Both of these magazines have less about China than The Economist but what they do have is much better. When they do have stories on China they tend to be really interesting stuff that you won't find anywhere else. It's only a pity that they sometimes go a while without any China stories. A special nod here to Foreign Policies blog, I've seen quite a few short but good stories showing up there in the last few months. It's worth keeping an eye on.

-Books
There are so many books worth reading on China I couldn't make a complete list here. Almost everything in the China section of the Kindle store is worth reading. A special note here to River Town, the definitive book on teaching English in China, The Party, the best book on the Chinese government I've ever read, and Prisoner of the State, the amazing first had account of rise and fall of Zhao Ziyang one of China's top leaders in the Deng Xiaoping era. But there are many many more on every conceivable aspect of China. Generally if you are interested the Amazon reviews will set you right.

-CPOL
I wasn't sure if I should include this one here as I've never actually read it. CPOL is an e-mail list created by a UC-Berkeley professor. It has a number of notable academics and government people discussing issues related to China. The problem is that despite having more than a thousand members they don't just let anyone read it. They are incredibly snobby about who they allow on and they don't want the e-mails shared, as if a list with this many people is really secret. If you can get it it would be worth reading it, but I can't really help you there.

Well that about wraps it up. If anyone has anything they really feel I've missed I'd love to hear about it. I'm always looking for new stuff on China.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Home is Where the Heart Is

My time in China is drawing to a close, I'll be leaving in mid-July, and I'm getting pretty excited to go home. I've mentioned before on this blog that I think the that culture shock isn't just a one time thing but a feeling that comes and goes. Well, I'm feeling it right now. I really like China, but at the moment I'm just sick of all things China.

I'm sick of the people on the metro, the food, the weather, the pollution, the noise, the internet, and so much more. I can't wait to be back in the US where there is so much choice in the food, the internet runs so quickly, and people don't try to walk directly though you on the metro. For anyone who thinks they've seen bad public transportation behavior in the US, you have absolutely no idea how bad it gets. My plan right now is to visit people in DC in late July before going out to get situated for grad school. It has been nearly two years since I've been in DC, I didn't go home last summer. I can't wait to be back in the US for a while. I still love traveling, but I'm sort of China'd out at the moment.

I'm excited to see my friends and my family again, besides my immediate family it's been quite a while. I feel like I'm a little kid crossing off days on the calendar before his birthday. I still have a good amount of stuff to complete here with classes and whatnot, but it seems like it is almost done.

As for this blog I think it needs to end when I go back to the US. Even if I'd like to write about grad school I'm not sure it's such a good idea. Writing about things in China very few of the people I wrote about had any idea about this blog so I was free to say what I wanted, but in the US that won't be the case. Anyway the blog has had a good run and there are still a few more things I want to talk about. But for now I'm just excited to be going home.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Mystery Pants

In China no one has a dryer to go with their washing machine. I'm not really sure why dryers are so rare if washing machines have become pretty ubiquitous, but everyone here hangs up their cloths. To facilitate this all the apartments where I live have small balconies with places to hang your cloths built in. Yesterday I was out on my balcony doing my laundry, my washing machine is also out there, when I saw two pairs of pants that weren't mine. I figured they must have fallen from one of the cloths lines higher up. It's never happened to me but sometimes I see cloths on the ground around the building that have clearly fallen off someone's line. The way my balcony is positioned at the corner of my building there is no way these pants could have gotten there except to have fallen from one of the apartments above me. As I live on the eight floor of an eleven floor building that only left three apartments directly above me.

When I went up with the pants to talk to my upstairs neighbors none of them said the pants were theirs. The people above me, who I had been sure the pants belonged to since they had an extra cloths line coming off their balcony just above where I found the pants, repeatedly insisted that theses pants didn't belong to them. The people living two floors above me were also sure the pants weren't theirs. And as far as I could tell no one at all lives in the apartment on the top floor, or at least I think that's what the old people who were hanging out on that floor were trying to tell me. So the pants remained a mystery. One of my neighbors offered to take them downstairs and hang them up somewhere where people walking into the building would see them. So that the owner of the pants could find them. So far the pants remain hanging their near the elevator just as much of a mystery as ever.

Friday, May 3, 2013

My Wrist

I haven't really written much about it here, but as some of you know my wrist has been hurt for quite a while now. Nearly nine months ago my wrist started bothering. I'm not 100% sure what caused the pain initially, it could have been the way my mouse and computer were set up. At first I basically just ignored it figuring it would go away in a few days or weeks. But as it got worse I saw a doctor in Beijing. The doctor thought that it was Tendonitis and suggested some stretches and rest. Over the time since then it's gotten better and worse from time to time. I have some pet theories about why, but I don't really know. About a month ago I finally saw a wrist specialist in Hong Kong. He took an MRI to see if there was any serious problem in my wrist. The good news was that the MRI didn't show anything serious that would require surgery. The bad news was that it didn't really show exactly what was wrong. The doctor gave me a shot of cortisone, just like ailing baseball players get, but it hasn't helped much so far. I've done what the doctor recommended but my wrist just doesn't seem to get better.

I don't want to make it sound like I'm in crippling pain or anything. My wrist is just sort of sore all the time, or at least a lot of the time. I take ibuprofen sometimes which helps, though there's only so much of that stuff you can take. My real concern though is that it will get worse when I start grad school and I have to write all the time. Typing isn't that bad actually. It doesn't feel good on my wrist but there are things that bother me a lot more. I'm just worried that when I have to do a lot more of it than I have to do now that I will be in a lot of pain. Instead of just being excited to start grad school I've been pretty anxious because I'm worried about my wrist acting up more and more. It's not that it would be painful enough to stop me now, it hurts but I can deal with it. I'm basically worried that it'll get worst when I have to write all the time. Writing with a pen is actually a lot worse for me right now, but everyone seems to use laptops in school these days anyways.

Well that's what's going on with my wrist. I'm going to try some physical therapy, and I'm still hoping the cortisone shot I got will end up having a bigger effect, but there doesn't seem to be too much more I can do. I guess I'll just have to wait and see.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Water Water Everywhere but Not A Drop to Drink

I miss getting potable water out of the tap. In some countries the locals drink the tap water but most people advise foreigners to steer clear. In China no one drinks the tap water without at least boiling it first. As long as I've been in China though I've gotten my water from big water cooler jugs that the school has delivered to my apartment. I hadn't gotten any more in a while since when they last delivered them they brought 5 at once. A few days ago when I noticed my last jug of water was getting low I texted the foreign affairs guy here David asking for more water. He told me that he couldn't get any more because it turns out the water might be "dirty" as he put it. I'm still not sure what exactly "dirty" means, but it can't be good. What's more, when I talked to my students about this it turns out they've known for at least a month. No one though bothered to tell me. I don't blame the students, they probably assumed I knew, but no one from the administration or foreign affairs department thought to tell me that my water might not be clean. And I'm sure that if the students have known about it for a month it has been a problem much longer than that.

So now I'm stuck. The water in the cooler has some unnamed problem. On top of that my favorite brand of bottled water recently was involved in a scandal about its cleanliness. And I've ever heard that while boiling water kills the bacteria it doesn't really do much for heavy metals that might slip into the Chinese water supply. When my doctor said I should get more iron I don't think he meant and lead as well. So I've been reduced to going to the store every day and buying another brand of bottled water. If this one has problems also I don't think I even want to know at this point. I asked one of my students what she does about all this, her response was that she just drinks it anyways. I suppose that's always an option. Bottoms up!

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Grad School Part One: It Had Never Occurred to Me

As some of you know I'm going to go to grad school next year. I haven't really wanted to write about this before now encase it somehow affected the application process, I think I mentioned this blog in my application. Even though I haven't made a final decision yet there is a lot of stuff I want to talk about related to grad school. So over the next few weeks I'm going to do a series of posts about the different aspects of applying to grad school.

The first thing I should talk about is why I decided to go to grad school at all. When I came to China I really had no idea what I wanted to do besides travel. I had thought vaguely about grad school while I was still in Madison, but going for English didn't appeal to me and I had no idea what else I would study. Actually I never really considered that something like International Relations was something people studied in grad school. When I was an undergrad after I gave up studying Computer Science I considered a number of different majors but Poly Sci never really appealed to me. I think that had to do with all the Poly Sci students I knew in Madison either wanted to work for politicians, which I had no interest in, or didn't seem to know anything about politics. I've always been something of a news and politics junky but the vast majority of the Poly Sci students I meet seemed to have no real interest in it. It just turned me off from the whole major.

The first time I thought more about graduate school was while I was in Changzhou. Ken mentioned that he was planning on taking the GRE's and wanted to go to grad school for IR. That was the first time it occurred to me that International Relations was something people went to school for. It made a sort of immediate sense to me. I was interested in politics, and other countries. Ken never did end up taking the GRE, though he is in DC now. He went on to the Peace Corps in Costa Rica and now works for the Bureau of Labor Statistics in DC.

Next time I'll talk more about how I ended up deciding to go to grad school.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Raise

I got another raise at my school. So far I've made more money each year in China than I did the previous year. That's still going from a really small amount of money to another really small amount of money, but up is better than down. I'm making nearly double what I was making my first year in China. At this rate if I stay here another 20 or 30 years I'll really be raking it in. I'm probably not saving as much money as when I was in Alaer though since there was absolutely nothing to spend the money on in Xinjiang. Here in Guangzhou there are a lot more temptations. There is a nice foreign supermarket, but it's really expensive.

I also got my class schedule for the next semester which starts in a few weeks. I have some oral English classes with non-English majors, which means the level will be a lower but since I had had the same students for a year I'm happy to have some new ones. I liked the old students but I had run through every activity I know and it was getting hard. I also have a writing class. This is the first time I've taught anything like that. I hear it's actually fairly hard to teach, but I only have two classes of it so it won't be so bad. Some variety can be nice.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Winter is Over

Well it had a good run. Winter in Guangzhou started some time in December with temperatures during the day falling into the low 50's (the horror). Now, though, winter is pretty clearly over. It's 80 degrees today and I'm wearing shorts. The forecast calls for it to stay in the 70's and 80's for the foreseeable future. So that's two months of "winter" and now we head right back to 10 months of summer.