You need to change your strategy, to get access to the right people. It sounds like you are approaching this head on. This is China, it doesn't work like that.
Someone from your uni should be helping you build these contacts. Unless of course someone is blocking you. Either way you should contact your American sponsors, who should be able to oil the wheels at least.
Ask people in your dept. at Yunnan Uni for help. If anyone says 'impossible' that just means they have not worked out how to do it. However, if someone says 'that is difficult', it means that there is a reason it can't happen. Although they will not be at liberty to tell you.
All of the schools involved in these programmes have a Chinese partner school. The protocol is that the Chinese public school is in the lead position in the relationship. The Principal of the public school should also be contacted. Not only is this courtesy, but they are also a part of the jigsaw and may be able to provide another point of view for your research. They do not need to be your gatekeeper however.
There are also the schools owners (international side). These should be contacted. Without this you will only be able to access foreign teachers who are willing to give you their time. Local staff will be unwilling to talk. Either because they don't have permission or they don't have to. If you take a top down formal approach, this can get you a much better result in China (hierarchical and context specific culture). That way everyone will be obliged to talk to you, if you can get the owners to participate. You may also be able to access some data, rather than just anecdotal evidence.
You also need to bear in mind that foreign teachers are more likely to be critical of local management. Consider the situation back home where staff are also very likely to be critical of management. Sometimes criticism comes because not all of the facts are known, despite more transparent management style. Then compare China, where there is both the language barrier and more opaque management.
Additionally, consider that local staff are unlikely to critical of anything that may reflect badly upon superiors and/or peers. Even if they feel strongly that there is a need for change
Rote memorization is really important for some subjects, learning language included. It has a bad rap, but is a valid learning skill, often neglected. If you go out and talk to most of the population, anywhere in the world, you won't hear 'good sentences' all of the time.
The real success is being able to communicate with others. Find yourself some local friends who don't speak English. Chat to old people in your neighbourhood. Shop at the local wet market, and ask about the produce when you do so. Not just 'how much?', but what is it called, where is it from, how to cook it (even if you know) etc.
I would be very careful collecting this data for a number of reasons.
Firstly, I have seen students who fail because they don't work, don't attend, or do not have some other study skills. Others are just running away from failure in the Chinese system, i.e. they were destined to fail anyway. These students and their parents will often refuse to take responsibility and blame the school or the teachers or both.
Secondly, universities in many countries already complain that their home grown students are ill-prepared for university study. Common Core (US) and the National Curriculum (UK) are often blamed. Not the fault of the school or teachers.
Thirdly, some parents/students will ignore the guidance of the school when choosing their university/college or course, and so are may be setting themselves up for failure. Include choosing schools they cannot get into, or courses they are not prepared for. Some universities will accept anyone who can pay the fees, for any course.
Fourthly, the drop out rates from colleges are very high for all students. This is a fault with the system, not individual schools or their teaching.
Biased though it might be. Asking those students who have since graduated from university overseas how well their school prepared them, and what they think might have been useful in preparing them better could give more useful information. But you must also bear in mind, that you are asking questions from non-educators who are often uninformed about learning practices.
Perhaps the best people to ask would be the overseas universities. They see the gaps students have that really need to be filled. Again, not all of these gaps can be filled by preparation at high school level.
The contract has been in limbo.
I wonder if it all went tits up last year, during the YNBY fuss, they would have honoured the contract and taken the money.
PR 101. Apologize, then find out what happened. It is hard to apportion/accept blame if it is too early to have the facts. If you don't know what happened don't speculate, because if you are wrong it will only come back to bite you. But it is never to early to apologize.
If you don't know what has happened an apology is not an admission of guilt.
From the looks of things OSI have taken action, and are fully cooperating with the authorities to make sure this does not happen again.
As for McD and KFC, they are paying the price for the actions of an unscrupulous supplier. It is unlikely that McD Corp or Yum Brands are in any way culpable. They do not appear to be the villain in this case.
Responsibility ultimately rests with OSI, for poor supervision. There is also the Chinese practice of 'open inspections' (the government inspectors tell you when they are going to visit), and the problem of a legal system where the penalties are not hard enough to be a real deterrent.
A reasonable choice of lumber that has improved over time. Fancy hardwoods like walnut, and mahogany are in abundance. There are some plywood and rubber-wood boards available. There are also some kiln dried imported softwoods and merbao available. Some of the lumber is very green, so look for the kiln dried if you need stable timbers.
Echo everything said by others.
Breakfast great and the serve from 8am. Most other places say 9am and they still are not ready.
Sandwiches are cheap 22-32, and really packed full of filling. We got some sandwiches for a day out, the only mistake I made was ordering two, as this was too much. These are seriously good sangars, and they are wrapped in alu foil.
In fairness to Metro, they are a wholesalers, and not really a supermarket. Hence the need for a card, which can be got around.
They have improved in the year I have been away. They now carry a more consistent range of imported foodstuffs and they also seem to have sorted out the mported milk supply.
They have a wider range of electrical appliances now, there is a coice of more than one toast. There is also a better range of seasonal non foods, like clothes, shoes, garden furniture and camping gear.
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Fujian billionaire loses Yunnan Baiyao lawsuit
发布者The contract has been in limbo.
I wonder if it all went tits up last year, during the YNBY fuss, they would have honoured the contract and taken the money.
China's fast food scandal grows, extends to Yunnan
发布者PR 101. Apologize, then find out what happened. It is hard to apportion/accept blame if it is too early to have the facts. If you don't know what happened don't speculate, because if you are wrong it will only come back to bite you. But it is never to early to apologize.
If you don't know what has happened an apology is not an admission of guilt.
From the looks of things OSI have taken action, and are fully cooperating with the authorities to make sure this does not happen again.
As for McD and KFC, they are paying the price for the actions of an unscrupulous supplier. It is unlikely that McD Corp or Yum Brands are in any way culpable. They do not appear to be the villain in this case.
Responsibility ultimately rests with OSI, for poor supervision. There is also the Chinese practice of 'open inspections' (the government inspectors tell you when they are going to visit), and the problem of a legal system where the penalties are not hard enough to be a real deterrent.
New provincial museum nears completion
发布者Well the artist's impressions are complete.
China's fast food scandal grows, extends to Yunnan
发布者Trying to defend or explain it away would be worse PR, as it would look like the old shift the blame game. A favourite tactic in face cultures.
In fairness to OSI, on Sunday they started recalling ALL meat products and withdrawing them from this market.
Fishing on Dianchi Lake banned once again
发布者"4,000 fisherman pulled an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 tons of fish from the lake"
Either a major achievement or govt statistics.