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Monday, October 24, 2005

 

CBS News | Smurfs Bombed In UNICEF Ads | October 12, 2005�17:30:07

The smurf video I mentioned before can be seen here.

CBS News | Smurfs Bombed In UNICEF Ads | October 12, 2005 17:30:07

Friday, October 21, 2005

 

The Good, the Bad, and the Students

Another week has gone and finally it is Friday and can rest my weary head by.... writing more!

Organizational Behavior I - This course is split in two and Friday a week ago we had our final exam for part I, focusing on the organizational behavior of companies as a whole. The actual class itself was good, involved lots of cases and the "learning out to think" style of learning rather than rote memorization. However, the final exam we took, well, I'll just say it was NOT an MBA level test (and I'm not saying it was too hard). So as a result, there has been a shit storm of mass emails going around school to discuss it. It didn't encompass the spirit of the course we had been taking over the last 6 or so weeks. Anyway, we now have a new teacher for the second half of this class.

Organizational Behavior II - The newly arrived professor for part II comes from Canada and is going to give our accounting professor a run for his money as the best professor here so far. This section of OB is more about individuals and groups than the organization as a whole. He seems to be one of those professors that is great, friendly, and approachable but also highly demanding of his students, which is probably the best kind. Only problem is that he's Canadian :p
Financial Accounting - We had the midterm for this class on Tuesday and of course the part I knew the worse, building cash flow statements, is the biggest part of the test! D'oh!

Elections - We finally had student elections this week and boy was it a surprise. The int'l students didn't have much expectations for high representation since we only make up 20% of the class (same as last year that only had one int'l on the committee), including the first ever int't Class President at CEIBS. However, in a huge upset, int'l students took nearly half the positions! First meeting should interesting.

Chinese F1 Grand Prix - I would be hard to say the track was IN Shanghai, since it was a good hour (free!) shuttle ride out there but alas, technically it is. The facility, although already falling apart a bit and is only 2 years old and only has 3 events a year, is quite impressive. I finally got to compare the Montreal Grand Prix to something else, and well, overall Montreal pretty much wins hands down, if only for the way F1 transforms Montreal for a weekend. Since Shanghai is so big, when F1 comes to town its more like a medium size event while in Montreal it is THE event for the weekend. The constructors championship came down to this, the last race of the year, between Renault's Alonso and Fisichella and Mclaren's Raikonnenn and Montoya separated only by 2 points. However, Renault was all but guaranteed the championship when Montoya's car was damaged by a loose drain cover on the track (see falling apart note above). The vendors selling fake merchandise and binoculars were everywhere and sometimes separated by the official vendors by a fence and 20 feet. Another plus, the food and drinks were *cheap* for an international sporting event. For what you'd pay for one hot dog at Yankee Stadium, you could get a hot dog, hamburger, and two Fosters. Not bad!

Innovation Challenge - We finished the innovation challenge paper just in time on Monday afternoon. A little stressful, especially since it was the accounting exam couldn't be ignored, but I think it came out great. Ok, our idea was great, if our actual paper is up to snuff remains to be seen. But unfortunately, I cannot reveal our task since we signed an NDA and our work is now all property of the sponsor of our question, Hilton. If we make Top 10 out of 150 or something groups, we go to Arizona and compete for 1st place and US$20,000!

I'll post some more various pictures once I can figure out why my website is refusing to let me login.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

 

China Builds Its Dreams, and Some Fear a Bubble - New York Times

SHANGHAI, Oct. 16 - Move over, New York. This year alone, Shanghai will complete towers with more space for living and working than there is in all the office buildings in New York City.

That is in a city that already has 4,000 skyscrapers, almost double the number in New York. And there are designs to build 1,000 more by the end of this decade.
Once again, if you ever want to be astonished by numbers, China never fails.

China Builds Its Dreams, and Some Fear a Bubble - New York Times

Monday, October 17, 2005

 

Unicef bombs the Smurfs in fund-raising campaign for ex-child soldiers

If anyone downloads this, I demand you email it to me immediately.

Telegraph | News | Unicef bombs the Smurfs in fund-raising campaign for ex-child soldiers

 

Classes in Chinese Grow as the Language Rides a Wave of Popularity - New York Times

Classes in Chinese Grow as the Language Rides a Wave of Popularity - New York Times

Thursday, October 13, 2005

 

Finally! Real New Post!! Plus Good News (for me)

Due to the schedule of school and since it is just getting started and we all have to get used to the unusual workload, I've been a little, uh, negligent regarding the blog. Anyway, I have a far more vocal readership than I expected so if I ever want to return home, I'd best start writing. And its not for a lack of material, either.

Onto the good news. The Chinese government as UNBANNED blogspot.com so I can now view my own blog from China! Now, if that's not social progress, I don't what is!

Onward.

Innovation Challenge
There are all sorts of business school competitions in various locales around the world all with different themes and I've signed up for one with four chinese classmates called the Innovation Challenge run by the Thunderbird business school in Arizona. Basically, four companies that want free and cheap labor all submit a "case" or problem to this program. Thunderbird distributed it to all the teams last Saturday and they give you a week to work out a two page plan. Some judges then pick the top 10 tens and invite them all to go to Arizona where there is round two, except you only have like 24 hours or something, then you give a presentation. The companies involved are IBM, Hilton, American Express, and the USPS. Now, you must be thinking, well, if you have time to do this EXTRA work, how could business school possibly be keeping you so busy? Well, the answer is, we don't have time for this at all! The week we have to prepare includes one midterm, one case study report, a group project report, plus the regular course load. I'd tell you all about the questions in we got, but I agreed to some confidentiality agreement regarding the material, which I didn't read (Hey! This is China! It's easy to forget about intellectual property and binding legal agreements here), and I don't want to disqualify my group before we've even finished.

More CEIBS MBA Class Info
Business Writing and Presentations - This class was only two weeks, although an intensive one, and really added to the "shock and awe" of the first two weeks. After it was over, at least the daily schedule of classes became more manageable. The teacher in this class, a relatively young guy called Mark, was quite a good teacher. This class was more for the teacher since many, although they have decent english, haven't ever written a business report in english or given presentations in it. Anyway, despite this, I'm the last person to say that I couldn't use a little practice in these either. So, until about 2 weeks ago, most of us had a quite favorable view of the class. That is until we got our grading sheets back (one for a group presentation and one for an individual report). We were told that content would play a big minority role in these items since content was not the point, but rather presentation and proper format/structure/logical flow/etc. The grading sheets said about 20% content based grade for each. So our presentation seems to have been graded at about 40% content and the same with the individual reports. And not a single native english speaker was in the top 20 reports. And not to bash the Chinese since its no fault of their own that they can't write perfect grammatical english (ask me how many chinese characters I can write!), but judging but the quality of writing I get (more on that later), it seems a little strange. But, I'm probably sounding a little overly critical now since this is only a 1 credit course and we're really all here to learn and not lose sleep over our grades, but it's a little frustrating when the rules of the game change after you've submitted a report.

Statistics - This course continues on its very useful and entertaining tack (yes! I said entertaining!). Although the chinese have some trouble understanding the teacher, as well as some of the non-english speaking international students, since he's from the south. The most entertaining part of class is when he cracks jokes that only Americans would really understand I'm the only one that busts out laughing (my fellow American and Canadian classmates apparently have better control over themselves) . I think the class has now learned to ignore me. However, I did found out today that this happens in every class where only one or two people laugh out loud at his jokes.

Marketing - We had a really interesting group case project due today about Brita water filtration. Ok, so it doesn't sound interesting, but it was in that nerdy, business school kind of way. Anyway, this is where many of the tensions inside groups started to reach their breaking point. Although all the international students are pretty cross-culturally minded, being in a group of 4 or 5 chinese who work in a totally different manner than we're used to can be a frustrating experience. Part of the reason we're here yes, but I'm not sure if we all expected this. The int'l's past time has become complaining and telling stories about our trials and tribulations in the group meetings, if for no other reason than to vent. Some examples:
A bit of cultural sensitivity in the approach to group meetings goes a long way. And this is not to say that all the chinese get along perfectly either or that the foreign students are perfect either, its just that since no group really has more than one int'l student, its hard to these stories. In fact, in the second case above, it was pretty much all the int'l students fault he was cut out. However, this is the most trying experience of being here so far, it really is an expected inital result. There are entire companies, studies, and reports about cross cultural differences and especially in societies as different as the West and China, they are bound to play a central role.

Anyway, part of being a native english speaker means that I'm the final proofreader (or, editor is probably more appropriate) for all written reports. And this isn't just changing an "a" to a "the" but more like translating one form of english to another. Not that I mind necessarily, since I'm not about to turn in something with sub-standard english since its so easy (but time consuming) to correct.

Financial Accounting - Mr. Xu continues to somehow making account funny as hell and interesting. Well, since I'm familiar with accounting, sometimes I have trouble keeping my eyes open (especially after a 3am night), no matter how hard I try. Although I do have a finance compatriot who I can count on being on as bad shape as I am. Coffee here is critical! The professor spares no one in his little accouting tirades (US GAAP? Stupid! Chinese GAAP? Stupid!). But the pace has been pretty quick, and even I'm a little worried about the upcoming midterm on Tuesday. The other students state of confidence can be more aptly described as alarm, despair, anguish, terror, panic, and gloom. And I may be underestimating. Accounting is one of those things that seems pretty simple on the surface with clear rules and theories. But its all the little details, and there are tons, that get intimidating. We have a group project (a different group's is due every class) due at the beginning of November on *warning accounting speak* the effect of capitalizing research and development expenses (OK, calm down accountants, this is just for demonstration purposes only!).

Organizational Behavior - We have a midterm... ah... tomorrow but its not one of those classes where there is anything to memorize but supposed to be learning "how to think." We basically get a case to do individually for 2 hours that we have to analyze.

So, I think that's all of them. Oh, no Economics, but nothing especially interesting to report there expect that I aced the first quiz, which was a nice mental boost considering I suck at micro-economics. So in general, classes here at CEIBS are moving along and it seems we've been in them for half a year when its only been 6 weeks. It's a little tricky managing the workload, which is intentionally higher than we're able to deal with since we also have to learn to prioritize and set time tables, etc.

Culture Points
There is so much to say under this general heading so I'll just say a couple of things. China is the land of contradictions. You can't generalize the Chinese, as easy as it is to do physically, it can't be done across regions and provinces and even cities. The culture is incredibly diverse so your impression of China will hinge greatly on where in China you go.

One the more frustrating things you experience here is that you can go to a store, restaurant, or other business and ask a question to four different people and get four entirely different answers!

The students in the group meetings tend to be a little more more generally political than in the US. What I mean is not political in the overall sense of government issues, but in the group setting. There are definitely subtle strategies going on all time and I'm guessing this results from the sense of face and status. Hopefully, more on this later.

Fireworks at on the Huangpu River
Last week was National Week, as I've mentioned and one night I happened to be at an apartment on the Pudong (east) side of the river having dinner on a balcony (where we inadvertantly ate snake. I've always wanted to try it but getting 2/3rds of the way through a meal before realizing you're eating snake was a little anti-climatic. I was hoping to experience it by going to one of those specialty places where they skin it in front of you and serve you four dishes all based on that snake finished off with a glass of snakes blood!) when a ferry stopped in the river (and by no means a big one) and it just started firing off fireworks in an impromptu display which went on for 10 minutes. They really do fireworks right here! Not to mention that during the week holiday you could hear fireworks going all night long, but officially organized and by individuals.

The Language
Still making what seems like slow progress but I'm at the point where I can go about the easy and daily things in life without looking bewildered 100% of the time. More like 95% of the time. But that's a step!

F1
And finally, F1 comes to Shanghai for the 2nd Chinese F1 Grand Prix. We'll see how it benchmarks against Montreal.

And a final note in order to end on a good one, I really love it here. If I sound critical, its not entirely intentional but, the difficulties are a little easier to talk about than the great things. But I'm quite satisfied with the school, the students (all of them!), and Shanghai. I don't think I've said it yet, but if you ever have the opportunity to make it here (here being anywhere in China), don't pass it up!

Sunday, October 09, 2005

 

Shanghai, a Far East Feast - New York Times

Shanghai, the new restaurant town. I can't say that I've been to any of the places mentioned in this article, being that there are tons of restaurants here, but the local chinese places seem worth a shot, if for no other reason that a NY Times restaurant reporter went there.

Shanghai, a Far East Feast - New York Times

Monday, October 03, 2005

 

Lax

I've been a little lax posting here since school really got into swing, but I have the week off here for National Day (or more appropriately Week) I will do some updates.

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