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EbS to Air Long Special on EU-China
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Australian Sniffer
Dogs Join Chinese Drug Fight
Sex Culture Festival Opens in Guangzhou
Guangzhou Embraces 3rd Sex Festival
Carnival Fee Cut to Lure Players
Lethal Container Blast: 5 Critically
Injured
Carnival Completes Its Spin
Growing Up Hard for Single Child
Generation
Growing up Hard for Single Child
Generation
Skies Open to China's New Jet Set
Cat Dropping Experiment
Stirs Pet Welfare Concerns
China to Intensify Toys'
Quality Control
The Daur Ethnic Group
Substandard Toys on Display
Child Safety Cited in Call for Better
Toy Quality
Boy Returned to Parents
House Seekers Search for Dream
Young Panchen Lama Sees 'Great Historic
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Avant-garde Desinger Showcases History
on T-shirts
Migrant Workers Call the Shots
Migrant Workers Call the
Shots
Indonesia Is Crying
Stone Lions Tell of a Tradition's Rise and Fall
Nation Lacking Laborers
Export Mix Adjustment Urged
Faye Wong's Love: To Be or Not to Be
Toys Tariff Lifting to Spark Fierce Rivalry
Gift Makers Witness 'Chilly Christmas'
Scientists Find 178 New Species
in Oceans
Beijing Olympiad: Profit or Loss?
Scientists Find Prehistoric Dwarf Skeleton
Taiwan IT Sector Loyal to Mainland
Music Fans Tune up for Beijing Festival
Magic Masters All: the Elite Eight
Set to Puzzle Beijing
New Standards to Improve Toy Safety
Quality of Sex Products Sparks Concern
Factory Closed for Using Child
Labor
Largest Birthday Teddy Bear Adds to Fun
to HK
Beijingers to Embrace Disney on Ice
Animated Life
A Painter and His Panda Complex
Inferior Toys Threaten Children's
Health
Loved Woman Police Chief Mourned
Grisly Toys Face Market Ban: Official
Toy Safety Standards to Be Tightened
Safety Standard for Toys to be Tghtened
Sassy Girl Gets Back to Business
Kitchen Hand Scores High in TOEFL
Red-hot Passion
Kitchen Hand Scores High in TOEFL
Guide to Cancer Prevention
Women in the Workplace: A Great Leap
Backward
Vanessa-Mae: Flirting from Classicality
to Popularity
New Toy Quality Standard Set
Lord of the Rings Sweeps Oscars
'Rings' Sweeping Oscars with 10
Iraq Shi'ites Say Late Polls Will Lead to
Violence
Tony Leung Born to Be An Actor
Toy Dolls For Valentine's Day
Airport Service Overhauled
Fingers Do the Talking
Robot Wars Come to Beijing
Preparations for Christmas with Mass Toys,
Gifts Exports
Director Zhang Yang Prepares for His
Latest Flick
UNICEF Helps Needy Kids in China
Taiwan Makes an Entrance
International Toy Makers Try to Solve
China Market Puzzle
Youth Joins DIY Bandwagon
Toy Makers Prepare for Certification
Process
2nd International Toy Fair to Be Held
in Shanghai
Toy Export to Exceed US$10 Billion
in 2003
Pottery Pooches a Lasting Legacy of Han
Dynasty
Culture of the
Three Gorges Area in Paleolithic Era
Alleged Kidnappers Arrested in Southeast
China Province
Ministry to Safeguard Export Growth
China's Pretty Ghosts from Hell
Toymakers Face Bleak Future
The Creative Magic of Bamboo
Short War to Have Limited Impact
on HK's Exports
Lawmakers, Political Advisors Concerned
with Oil Security
Chinese Lawmakers, Political Advisors
Concerned with Oil Security
A Lifetime of Juggling Diabolos
Chinese Buy Wool, Cashmere
to Cheer Year of Sheep
Beijing Court Hails IPR Protection
Adult Toys, Under Regulated, Overpriced
and Over Here
Adult Toys, Under Regulated, Overpriced
and Over Here
Go Gaga for The Goat
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Kitchen Hand Scores
High in TOEFL
It would not be easy for an outstanding student at a prestigious university
to score as high as 630 in the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL).
But a young chef at Tsinghua University, one of the top 10 universities
in China, scored 630 the first time he took the test.
The maximum TOEFL test score is 670. How did a chef who prepared three
meals a day for university students manage to get such a high score. It's
a long story but it was no miracle. Like all success stories, this one
is also the fruit of perseverance, hard work and a strong will.
Learning English from packaging boxes
Zhang Liyong, 29, is from a remote mountainous village in east China's
Jiangxi Province and has worked as a migrant worker in Guangzhou and Beijing
for 10 years.
Like many country boys, Zhang dreamed of going to college when he was
a senior high school student.
But, in 1994, he had to quit high school because he could not afford
to continue, even though he had just one more year left before graduation.
He made a bold decision to move south to make money to support his family.
When he left his village, his mother put a dozen high school textbooks
in his travel bag, saying: "Mom and Dad are so sorry we were unable
to support you in finishing high school and going to college."
"Don't be upset, Mom," Zhang replied. "I just want to
put off my dream of going to college until later."
On arriving in Guangzhou, Zhang first entered a bamboo artifact factory
and then moved to an export-oriented toy factory.
Almost everything in Zhang's workshop was printed in English. The order
was written in English, and the toys and packaging boxes were all printed
in English.
Zhang took out his English textbooks and bought a small English-Chinese
dictionary to find out the meaning of English words on the boxes.
One day, the factory received a number of foreigners and he saw a young
Chinese interpreter in a neat suit talking freely with them.
Although he did not understand a single word, Zhang perceived his ambition
was stirred.
A special student on campus
With the help of his uncle, Zhang, 21, moved north in June 1996 to work
as a chef in the No. 15 dining hall of Tsinghua University.
When he first arrived at the university, Zhang felt the university's
students were lucky.
But after walking around the campus, he began to understand that it was
not too late for him to improve himself.
He decided to pursue English studies. He bought some teaching materials
and began to teach himself English.
On a low salary, he could not afford a teacher but he did buy a second-hand
radio.
He had to get up at around 4 o'clock every morning to prepare food for
the students and worked at least eight to nine hours a day.
He stayed up late to study. Since there was only a bulb light in the
dormitory, the 10 roommates had to get used to sleeping with the light
on.
After a while, he decided he did not want to disturb them so he rented
a five-square-meter room in a flat.
It was not easy to stay awake after a day's hard work. Zhang tried different
ways to keep awake and finally decided the most effective way was to drink
hot water.
On the wall in front of his desk, there is his written motto: "In
a young man's dictionary there is no such word as failure."
For the past eight years, Zhang has spent almost all his spare time studying
English, setting aside his other interests playing cards and watching
TV.
There was no heating in his room in winter and no air-conditioning in
summer.
When he first entered a classroom at the university to read books, he
was worried about being recognized, but was later able to feel comfortable
mingling with other students.
After about six months of learning by himself, Zhang still did not feel
confident about speaking English.
One evening, he decided to try at the English corner on the campus.
One boy student approached him and said hello. However, Zhang found he
had no control over his tongue. He could not speak a complete sentence
but only one word after another.
"Well done, I can understand what you're trying to say," the
student said. "Never give up, and you'll become fluent little by
little."
With the student's encouragement, the migrant worker became a frequent
visitor to English corners at different universities in Beijing.
He made it a habit to go to English corners at least once a week. He
grasped every chance to speak with native or non-native English speakers.
"Like brushing teeth, speaking English has become second nature
for me," Zhang said.
"When you want to brush your teeth, you must first open your mouth.
It is the same with speaking English."
Speaking English as second nature
Creative young people often like to collect things that others ignore.
Zhang had a sense of the more unusual. He kept things such as wrappers,
bags, and boxes or other containers. To him, these things looked cool.
Zhang does not make the slightest attempt to pretend that these collected
materials are art. He instead uses the collection in his quest to improve
his English and tries to memorize everything in English.
"To study English you have to be really crazy." This is Zhang's
observation of someone who knows how to learn a couple of words from a
bag of instant noodles while he's waiting for the noodles to boil.
Zhang made a name for himself in 2001 when he started using English to
sell food to students in the dining hall.
On that day, the window where Zhang served was packed with many hungry
students because they had been dismissed from class rather later than
usual.
"Would you please wait a while?" was the heavily-accented,
bookish, overly-polite expression that greeted students.
That seemed to stun the students, especially when they themselves found
English a headache.
Calming down, the students began to line up in a queue although many
still wondered how a chef from the countryside could speak English with
some kind of authority.
"Thank you for your patience," Zhang said with a smile.
From that day, Zhang's service window was called the English Service
Section.
Once, when two students were arguing about why there was the word "bread"
in English vocabulary but no equivalent for the Chinese word "mantou,"
Zhang interrupted them saying: "Hi, guys! It is 'steamed bun' in
English."
Another time, students waiting at the window were discussing whether
the word "bean" could stand for the Chinese word "wandou"
(pea).
Zhang jumped in saying: "No, the English word 'bean' is a collective
noun for any plants bearing seed in long pods while the Chinese word 'wandou'
is called 'pea' in English."
With Zhang starting to serve food in English, the queue in front of his
window became longer each day. Even students who usually did not eat steamed
buns joined the queue because they wanted to practice spoken English with
Zhang.
Some students went so far as to recommend the university's English Department
offer Zhang a position as a teaching aid.
Zhang had no chance to become an assistant teacher in the university
but many high school students began to ask him to be their private teacher
at home.
Last summer, the university's catering center decided to offer English
training courses to all its employees. Zhang was designated as the sole
English teacher.
Zhang's high TOEFL score prompted him to pursue a Bachelor's degree in
International Trade at Peking University.
After he finishes his studies, he plans to continue his studies abroad.
"English is more than a language," Zhang said. "It has
provided me with more opportunities, more information, more friends and
a will to overcome difficulties."
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