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As a Foreigner in China, I Enjoy Being Part of it
The life for a foreigner in China can be everything but boredom. If you like travelling, you can go to mountains, rivers, temples, gardens, deserts, wherever you want, for China is a definate tour country. If you are a sports amateur, you can find all the sports types in China. If you like music, which is a wonderful thing, China can provide you all the music around the world. If you like taking part in public activities and enjoy being part it, you can have many chances. The following one I am going to mention is right there waiting for you.
Steve Dowler comes from the United States and is a senior student at Shanghai University. He is helping with Shanghai World Expo 2010 already - just like an IT worker for a major chemical company and a road sweeper from the Shanghai South Railway Station.
Dowler is a volunteer teacher for 30 policemen in the city's Luwan District. Three times a week, he teaches the policemen language and culture so that they can better serve the 3.5 million foreign visitors expected during the Expo next year.
The Expo organizer's official recruitment for volunteers for the 2010 world fair has yet to begin, but there are many people, from all walks of life and different nationalities who, like Dowler, are already working for the Shanghai event.
Dowler's lessons started in February when he was recruited as a volunteer by the operators of Shanghai Expo Exhibition Center on Huaihai Road M. This is one of the two major exhibition areas for the 2010 event in the city, the other being at the Expo headquarters in Pudong.
Although he has been working for only three months, he said his "students" have not only had few problems talking to foreigners in English, but also acted as professional consultants for foreign visitors on Expo tours.
His lessons are mostly based on an English textbook and an Expo knowledge handbook written by the Expo organizer. But during his classes which last for up to three hours, Steve will add extra details like discussing the designs of foreign Expo pavilions with his students.
"I like the job because all of my students seem to enjoy my lessons," he said.
Dowler will finish his studies in China and go back to the States next month, but he said he would take part in the organizer's recruitment drive which starts on May 1. "If I am recruited, I will return to China next May to work for the event."
The organizer plans to recruit about 70,000 volunteers to work inside the Expo site and another 100,000 to work at the 1,000 or so service centers around the city during the event. The criteria for volunteers is quite simple - they should be in good health, ready to work at least 14 days and agree to take part in training.
The organizer said it kept the criteria simple to let as many people as possible join as volunteers.
Gao Jiafeng, an IT engineer at Dow Chemical Co, said he would be a volunteer. These days as well as his 9-to-5 weekday work, the 26-year-old goes to the exhibition center every weekend to guide visitors.
He said he took the volunteer work in the center as a way of becoming an official volunteer for Shanghai Expo.
"I am fully prepared to be a volunteer to work on the Expo site and will apply as soon as recruitment begins," he said.
Sweeper volunteers
Forty-one-year-old Li Guihong has a quite different job from Gao. She is a road sweeper in the city's South Railway Station Square. But she has the same ambition as Gao - to be an Expo volunteer - and the same confidence.
Li is the leader of a sweeper volunteer team established two years ago, which was comprised of 80 female road sweepers from the square. During their rest times at noon, they carried luggage for the elderly and reminded people about good manners. Now, they have a new task - introducing basic Expo knowledge to passers-by.
The women, aged from 35 to 45, begin work at 6am every day, but all of them rise an hour earlier now to learn English. After their work ends at 5pm, they study English for another hour. Li said the team has been taking English lessons for nearly a year, and they can now speak simple English to give directions to foreigners.
Volunteers who work inside the Expo site will be used as information consultants, assistant receptionists, helpers for physically challenged people, event coordinators, assistant guides, interpreters, media coordinators and management assistants.
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