Just Take A Hint, You.
People who know me know my flaws. I am so comfortable with making conversations with people I know, with people I just met, and even strangers who were just chatting with their stranger friends.
I always thought I was good at taking hints. Well, I’d like to share with you some things that tell another story.
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After two months of interviewing with a company round by round, I encountered another around of everyday small talk.
“Um, I see your resume here. You went to college in California, right?”
“Yes, thanks for asking. I did. In San Diego.”
“So you want to move all the way back from Pittsburgh?”
“I look forward to it.”
“Since you went to college in California before, it means that —“
Long pause.
“Where Is the Predicate?” — My English Learning Journey with Dad
While growing up and studying English at school, I was able to get by without much effort: I became the teacher’s classroom assistant and remained in this role for eleven years. Meanwhile, the most effective English language education I received was from my dad, the most diligent self-taught English learner around me.
Dad is a successful salesman with English skills playing to his advantage. He didn’t start learning English until he graduated from the naval academy, when he realized how important English was and decided that it would help his career. He bought himself the four-book textbook series of New Concept English — a popular series among Chinese learners in recent decades. He recited every passage one by one and over and over again, along with studying thoroughly music lyrics and lines from classic films. He crashed some courses sitting in on classes at an ESL-immersive university. Within a year, he even started to make a little money on the side as an amateur translator during the city-wide annual trade fairs. At some point, he started to use his skills to build connections with potential clients and win them over by volunteering to tutor their kids in English.
To people who don’t know him well…
Let's Talk about Rejection Letters Like We Talk about...
Seven years ago before I came to the US, as an ambitious high schooler in Southern China, I applied for 12+ undergraduate college programs in the United States. Rejected by most of them, I was surprised to have spent some good amount of time studying the language of rejection letters. I quickly drafted a piece where I quote statements in the rejection letters and interpreted each statement in the form of a relationship rejection. It then went rogue in the college application BBS. Seven years later, I wonder if it is still relevant to me. Absolutely. I am applying for jobs, no?
I hope you find some joy & peace in my writing below.
The admissions selection committee has reviewed your application for admission for the fall of 2011.
I received your love letters the other day.
"You know you can mute your phone, right?"
A classmate in my class kept snapping photos of the professor’s PowerPoint slides during class. Without muting her phone.
From Respect to Repetition: Crafting an Inclusive ESL Experience
I was very moved in my first class teaching at the Community English Program when I invited my students to write on a large poster about what they think the classroom should look like. The first student who came up put two words down in bold, “To respect.” I asked: “Can you elaborate on this word you wrote?” This student responded with something that had I never expected to bring up myself: “to respect each other’s accent.” I added these words onto this poster, and said to the class: “Yes, only to laugh with; never to laugh at.”