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Chengdu exchange students
welcomed
By Anita Stackhouse-Hite, The Porterville
Recorder
The cultural divide between China
and the United States narrowed Sunday as a cadre of students from
Chengdu Meishi International School arrived in Porterville for a
two-week stay.
Host families picked up those assigned to them
from the Porterville Unified School District office, and on Monday
morning teacher Xiong Yan and the 11 students were greeted by an
official welcoming committee at Monache High School.
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| One of the students visiting
from China documents his tour of Monache High School on
Monday morning. (Recorder photo by John Tipton)
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Anyone expecting the city's
young guests to look different than resident students was in for a
surprise: With the exception of the abundance of digital and video
cameras, all were dressed like Americans and could have been lost in
a crowd of students wearing jeans and T-shirts.
Anticipation
for exposure to new things ran high among the students, including
15-year-old Li Shuai.
His bright smile broadened as he spoke
in English about the joy of being in Porterville.
ˇ°The best
part of the trip is living with the host family,ˇ± he said. ˇ°I think
that is very meaningful. I think so because you can make new
friends, play together, I can improve my English and learn about the
American culture.ˇ±
After a few days in Los Angeles and a
morning in Porterville, impressions about America were already
formed. More impressions will come because the fast-paced two week
tour includes classroom time learning English, visits to the lumber
mill, Holy Cross Church, dairy centers and a cheese factory,
shopping, an Oaks baseball game, horseback riding in the mountains,
a visit to the giant redwood trees, SCICON and the Cystal
caves.
For now, the heat and the number of cars on the road
are high on the list of first impressions for Li.
ˇ°It's
hotter here,ˇ± Li said, ˇ°and there are many more cars than there are
pedestrians on the street. We have a lot more pedestrians on the
streets.ˇ±
Assembled in the student cafeteria, the eight boys
and three girls from China listened patiently to the welcomes and
proclamations by local dignitaries Supervisor Jim Maples, Mayor Cam
Hamilton, Mayor Pro-tem Felipe Martinez and Porterville Unified
School District board President Richard Morris.
District
Superintendent John Snavely hosted the welcome; about 200 Monache
civics and economic students gathered to greet them. A small group
of Monache students served as tour guides for their sister
students.
Encouraged by Snavely, Porterville students asked
questions of their counterparts, including:
Do you like
American movies, and if so what is the favorite? - Yes, ˇ°Pirates of
the Caribbean.ˇ±
How were students chosen to come? - Students
decided for themselves.
What is the time difference between
China and America? Fifteen hours.
Had they tried American
Chinese food? Yes. It was OK.
Do they like sports? Yes.
Baseball and gymnastics are among them.
Maples was among
those who said they are ˇ°very happyˇ± to have the exchange students
in Porterville.
ˇ°I think it's a tremendous thing that the
school system allows for international student exchange at this
age,ˇ± Maples said. ˇ°My daughter Vickie went to South Africa at age
16. She went as a girl and came back as a woman. As a former
educator, I think this is just a tremendous experience for students
to be able to share their thoughts and their cultures.ˇ±
A
host family
Johnny and Kay Barber are among those who
volunteered to become a host family for a visiting
student.
ˇ°It was something we should have done a long time
ago when I had kids at home,ˇ± Kay Barber said. ˇ°Now it was good
thing because it gave my granddaughter a chance to learn about a
person from another country. Our expectations were to have a student
that was as eager to be here as were are to have her.ˇ±
Vivian
Xing, meet Brittany Starr Mendoza. The 14-year-olds were born a
month apart.
Mendoza is a student at Porterville High
School.
ˇ°I'm really excited,ˇ± Mendoza said.
ˇ°It's a
new experience to meet someone from a another country and learn
about their culture. The language barrier is a challenge, but we're
finding ways to communicate. I'm more interested in what the average
day is like there, how different or similar it is to our average
days.ˇ±
The Barbers plan to take Xing to the coast this
weekend.
ˇ°We want her, and all of the students, to have an
experience that's memorable and different so they can enjoy our
culture,ˇ± Kay Barber said. ˇ°With us, we have two cultures because of
our Hispanic background. We will share that with our family
closeness and with our cooking.ˇ±
Contact Anita
Stackhouse-Hite at 784-5000, Ext. 1043, or astackhouse-hite@Portervillerecorder.com
This
story was published in The Porterville Recorder on July 18,
2006
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