PEOPLE |
Dr. WONG, Ho-put, Jonathan
CLC Best Teacher Award 2013-14
Head, Putonghua Programme Division, Continuing Education Section |
What challenges did you encounter after moving
in HK from mainland China since childhood?
I was born in Qingdao and my ancestral home is
Fujian. My whole family moved to Hong Kong and I studied from secondary one
in Hong Kong. I was being called “Ah Chaan” 1. I experienced
struggle and change in my identity and language. For example, upon arrival
in HK, I had wished not to be able to speak Minnan dialect. Until the time
when I studied Japanese as minor in the university, I had discovered that
Minnan dialect has most of the pronunciation in Japanese. I was delighted
that I got the edge. That was a meaningful adventure in my recollection.
Being a graduate of Business Administration,
why have you become a teacher?
It was my aspiration since childhood to become
a teacher like my father. Yet, my parents had gone through the Cultural
Revolution and the tragic outcome of some teachers had brought them
lingering fear. So, my mother changed my enrolment preference, from Chinese
language, fine arts and biology into marketing, accountancy and general
business management respectively. After my graduation, however, I entered
into the teaching profession by chance and completed my fond dream since
childhood.
You were an exchange student for 1 year. Any
impressive story?
At the end of my year 3 study, I went to Tokyo
and studied as an exchange student in Asia University. I worked as a waiter
in some Japanese pubs (Izakaya) and went to Hokkaido for homestay in summer.
After I returned to Tokyo, the host of the homestay (a Japanese mother) sent
me an air-ticket inviting me to spend the New Year vacation in her house for
one month. Apart from practicing Japanese, I could taste fully a frosty
winter at -30℃ (I had no childhood
recollection of the winter in Qingdao anymore). After getting married, I
revisited that mama and she also came to HK to see me. It is interesting to
see that, the mama started to learn English after our acquaintance and she
is now able to do basic social conversation. During the CLC’s 50th
anniversary, Prof. Ambrose KING, the former president of CUHK, has given CLC
an inscription – “On the Path of Language and Culture”. That theme struck a
deep chord in me and was exactly the description of my personal experience.
What inspired you
in your Ed.D study?
My doctoral dissertation
was
about
formulaic
sequences (FS) in students’ oral tests.
Research findings
could be used in
teaching and
eventually
combined learning
and work
together. My master thesis
was
about
vocabulary
acquisition and memory. The
research
focused on
how
graphic impact on the
memorization
of
vocabulary and this research direction was
also inspired by my
actual
teaching.
I
regarded combining
research interest and work a healthy
interaction.
What is the satisfaction in working on
academic administration?
My first time taking administration
responsibility was in 1999. Throughout the decades as a division head, I am
delighted to walk together with some new teachers who had zero experience
and see them shine. Tried my best to solve problems for students in need is
another source of my satisfaction.
Being a 3-time winner of the CLC Best Teacher
Award 2, what do you think about the special quality needed for a
good teacher?
First, I would like to thank the director of
the Centre who has given me the opportunities, and to my fellow colleagues
who are supportive. Receiving the award does not implied that I am qualified
to give “good teacher” a definition. I just want to share my personal
thoughts (mainly from the angle of administration and my understanding of
the students): firstly, team spirit and good character. They are
indispensable to relate harmoniously with most of the students, colleagues,
superiors and subordinates. Secondly, is to love the job. The other
requirement will be the understanding of the need of the students and to
adapt the teaching based on their level. Regarding the interaction with
students, I am still learning how to arouse students’ motivation; to kindle
their interest in learning; to strictly spur them to work hard without
hurting their faces and self-esteem.
Someone said that one can self-learn a
language and single-private class is even better. What is your viewpoint?
To self-learn a language, apart from
motivation and self-discipline, you have to consider whether you have the
other favorable factors. For example, whether you are living in a Chinese
family and having a spouse who is a Chinese, and the sole language used at
home is Chinese and not the other foreign languages. If that is the case,
self-learning of daily oral conversation is certainly easier. However, even
if you own the conditions above, but you want to advance your reading and
writing skill to a level of good comprehension of TV news and newspaper, or
to discuss professional content, I am afraid that only professionally
trained teachers can teach you. I met students who self-learned elementary
level and came to our school. They mentioned that they faced a bottle-neck
in self-learning and could not advance anymore. They wanted to follow a
curriculum and to learn progressively.
Single-private class may not exactly reap good
learning outcomes. It is because in the actual operation, the teacher will
usually accommodate the student (usually deceleration instead of
acceleration). The pace of a school curriculum is basically fixed and to
learn systematically will give one healthy pressure which is favorable to
learning.
What is your most unforgettable profession-related social service?
I have been a voluntary
instructor
in
the
Hong Kong Mandarin Society for
more than
twenty years and now I am the
president of the society.
Back in forty some years, the
founding member
of this
society was a group of Hong Kong local students who
wanted to
sustain their
Mandarin learning after the end of their programmes.
A few ones persisted
to support the young members
even until
today! Many senior members
dedicated
not only their money, but also their
energy and time
in helping new members. This
is very touching
indeed.
Apart from serving as an
examiner
for
Hong Kong Examinations and Assessment Authority, I had also been the
consultant of the Putonghua programme
in Radio Television Hong Kong (mainly
to edit scripts and
monitor the on-site video recording). I appeared as a programme
host as well.
Monitoring
the
recording process
was unforgettable
and tough. It
was
because
the programme
recording was
often
done
in midnight
and
overnight. I could deeply feel the
hardship and
stress an
actor had.
How
did you spend
your spare time?
I haven’t got
much spare time
as my work is
busy.
During
weekend, I would
treasure my
time
with my family and
to
go to church. The
2-hour
commuting between home and school
is what I treated
as spare time. I would correct
test
papers, read books and newspapers, and daydreaming too.
Occasionally during
lunchtime,
I played
shuttlecock with my students and
to train their oral skill.
I am also very interested in
the area of
mind-map and
attended
relevant courses. I have been
regularly
thinking
on
how to apply it
i
Special
thanks to Ms. Dolly WEI, Teaching Assistant and Miss. HO Cheuk Yan, student
from the School of Communication and Journalism in assisting the interview
production.
-------------------------------
1
“Ah Chaan” is
originated from a well-known Hong Kong TV drama in the late 70s. It was the
name of a new immigrant from mainland China featured in the drama. The name
had been eventually used as a contemptuous term or ethnic slur for some
years against the new immigrants from mainland China.
2
Dr. Wong was the recipient of CLC Best Teacher Award in academic
year 2001-02, 2007-08 and 2013-14 respectively. According to the regulations
of the Centre, a teacher can at most receive the award for 3 times.
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