Keystone Magazine 3rd Issue | Page 53

are required to compare Chinese and English poems or other literature on similar themes. “Once, we used English and Chinese poems to study cultural interpretations of insects and to help students appreciate them culturally and temporally. So we used On the Grasshopper and Cricket by John Keats, The Summer Day by Mary Oliver, It’s That Cricket by Liu Shahe, Zhongsi (long-horned grasshoppers) and Qi Yue (July) from The Book of Odes and Hymns,” says Ms. Song. From a daily curricular perspective, Director of Libraries, Kenneth Kozel, notes that the libraries staff work closely with teachers to incorporate the Chinese Thread consciously and innovatively whenever and wherever possible. Experiencing Knowledge in Practice The culmination of education is in practice – the use of knowledge, not only its reproduction but also, sometimes, production and innovation. This is a philosophy that underlies Chinese education, and it goes, “Walk ten thousand miles, read ten thousand books.” So it is important for students to see knowledge in practice. The Keystone Middle School Library organizes trips that not only embody the Chinese Thread, but also align with the curriculum in an effort to cultivate students’ critical thinking and creativity. Such trips foster a deeper understanding of China, and make students think about how to act on behalf of China in the future. One such trip was to the Liyuan Library in Wisdom Valley, Huairou, where students experienced the blending of community, Chinese culture and nature. The library also makes good use of local resources to serve the community. Another trip took students to the Guanfu Museum and 798 Art District, where students were required to study the art exhibits closely. They learned to appreciate the development of the arts in China through the details, and to recognize the fusion of arts from all over the world. “I was most impressed with one secondary school student, Evelyn Huang, who wrote a story based on one of the paintings that caught her attention. It was the story of how jeans, from the world beyond China, ended up in a market in rural China and excited the local women into wanting to wear them,” remembers Ms. Song. So if “you are what you wear,” as the old adage goes, then Keystone’s graduates proudly wear this magical, never-fading gown woven with the Chinese Thread. It will be like a tartan pattern that distinguishes Keystone graduates wherever they may roam. Primary school students enjoy a book in the library www.keystoneacademy.cn 49