Chinadaily.com.cn sharing the Olympic spirit

Contest brings Beijingers to learn English
By Guan Xiaomeng (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2007-07-30 17:18

 

In front of a studio audience and cameras, 11-year-old Liu Yuxin began to cry. The young girl failed to guess the English word "credit card", a banking concept a child her age wouldn't know. As a result Liu was eliminated among the 12 final contestants who were competing at the "I am the hero - Olympic English TV contest" taped by Beijing TV last Friday.

The other contestants tried to console her by comfort her, while the audience applauded her efforts. Ren Tianmin, a middle-aged contestant tried to soothe her before his own test, but he also lost when he couldn't think of the word "yoga".

This contest is part of the English learning campaign Beijing citizens are undertaking to prepare for the 2008 Olympic Games. They hope this event will encourage people to become more comfortable speaking English regardless of their age, occupation and education.

And the caliber of their English, from the contestants to the audience was impressive.

An elderly gentleman was directing his cheering group in the audience. They all wore T-shirts that said "Olympic Volunteers" and I approached them. Although I greeted him in Chinese, he insisted on speaking to me in English when he heard I was from China Daily. "I can speak English!" he exclaimed with excited eyes.

Xia Fengzhi, a retiree living in Tuan Jiehu residential area in Beijing's Chaoyang District is keeping busy as the head of the community's English Association for the Olympics.


Xia Fengzhi talk to chinadaily.com.cn after the contest.

"All of us here can speak English because we are all registered Olympic city volunteers," he said as he introduced his peers sitting in the audience.

They are some of the 400,000 city volunteers the Organizing Committee for the Beijing Olympic Games (BCCOG) needs for non-Games services outside venues around Beijing before and during Games next year.

He said the community had more than 100 members participating in the English learning class and they learned English from a self-educated volunteer English teacher for four years.

"How many English courses do you have every week?" I asked.

Xia thought for a moment. "Uh…how many students…." He didn't understand the word "course" and a middle-aged woman nearby helped him: "She asked you how many English 'lessons' do you have every week."

The lady was none other than the group's volunteer teacher - Zhao Jingrong, also a retiree. She was awarded as the "special contributor to the Olympic English learning campaign" that night because of her work volunteering to teach English to ordinary citizens and armed police in the city.

I was still amazed by this energetic group of English-speaking seniors when the TV host explained Ren motivated his family to learn English.

"I will never regret taking part in the contest though I lost," he said in his farewell speech. "I have my wife and daughter here, supporting me with their hard efforts to learn English." His daughter praised her father as a hero.

Meanwhile, at the end of the contest, the first place was indisputably given to an English major policeman, who had spent one year in Britain. Yin Ning, a police officer from Beijing Public Security Bureau staged a flashy presentation, talking about his experience in London when the bombings happened two years ago.

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