The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast

Patricia Liu

There are so many -- SO MANY -- people learning Chinese these days, but there’s so much more to learning Chinese than just, like, memorizing characters. Taiwanese-American millennial Patricia Liu is an actual, living, breathing high school Mandarin teacher here to help you make sense of it all. This podcast is where you’ll find frank, honest discussions about Chinese learning and teaching, as well as how language shapes people’s identities and stories.

  1. 03/09/2020

    #19: April Zhu Talks Coronavirus and Sinophobia in Kenya

    On air March 9th, 2020. Recorded March 7th, 2020. This week, I sat down with my good friend April Zhu to talk about her recent article for The Elephant on sinophobia and the coronavirus. Both of these topics have been discussed to the point of exhaustion in recent months (including on this very podcast), but April’s unique position as a Chinese American, Nairobi-based journalist who fluently speaks three languages (English, Mandarin, and Swahili) brings to the table some new points to consider: namely, what does anti-Chinese sentiment actually mean when Chinese people are the ones in power? Where do localized and derogatory-but-maybe-not-actually-racist terms like chinkuu come from, and how do we reconcile with their actually-racist (and actually-Western) roots? And how is a person like April — a person with a Chinese face and name living in Kenya — supposed to feel about it all? I had such a great time catching up. and picking the brain of one of the smartest people I know, and I hope you enjoy our conversation as much as I did. If you’ve ever wondered what anti-Asian racism looks like in a place where Asians are the oppressors, this episode is a must-listen. April Zhu (朱萸) is a freelance journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya. Her work focuses on gender, urban inequality, and China-Kenya as seen from the margin. Her byline has appeared in the South China Morning Post Magazine, CS Monitor, African Arguments, The New Humanitarian, VICE, BRIGHT Magazine, The Elephant, and others. She reports in Swahili and Mandarin and has designed a curriculum for foreigners learning Kenyan Swahili called Swahii, available as an online course. She holds a B.A. in Environmental Studies and Studio Art from Wellesley College. Connect with her on Twitter (@aprzhu) and at her website (aprzhu.com). Show notes and links to all previous episodes at badchineseteacher.com. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, leave a comment, and rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and YouTube. Connect with us on Instagram (@badchineseteacher), Twitter (@badchinesepod), and Facebook. Follow Patricia’s personal account on Instagram (@patricialiu), and check out her writing at blog.patricialiu.net. New episodes of The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast are posted every Monday at 8am Eastern.

    1h 17m
  2. 03/02/2020

    #18: Ask Me Anything!

    On air March 2nd, 2020. Recorded March 1st, 2020.   You had questions, and I answered them. This episode features some very unqualified responses to topics like:   - What’s the best way to study Chinese when you’re stuck in a non-Chinese speaking environment? - What is “Taiwanese language,” and who actually speaks it? - How do you deal with coronavirus-fixated racists? - How do you talk to a partner who strongly disagrees with you about Taiwan independence, Hong Kong, and Uyghur concentration camps? - Why is this podcast called The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast, and not The Bad Mandarin Teacher Podcast?  T here wasn’t enough time to cover the many, many questions that were submitted for this AMA, but keep the questions coming — I’ll be sure answer them over DM or feature them in a future episode. For now, join in on the continuing conversations on all these topics by connecting with us on social media! Follow us on Instagram @badchineseteacher or on Twitter @badchinesepod.   Show notes at badchineseteacher.com.  If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, leave a comment, and rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and YouTube.   Connect with us on Instagram (@badchineseteacher), Twitter (@badchinesepod), and Facebook. Follow Patricia’s personal account on Instagram (@patricialiu), and check out her writing at blog.patricialiu.net.  New episodes of The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast are posted every Monday at 8am Eastern.

    1h 4m
  3. 02/17/2020

    #17: It’s Been A Hard Week, Vol. II

    On air February 17th, 2020. Recorded February 13th, 2020.   Well, folks — it happened. This week, I hit one of the most important teaching milestones of my career: crying in my classroom for the first time.   It’s been a hard week, but hard weeks rarely exist in vacuums. Like many other professions that deal in the business of vulnerable people, teaching often carries a moral weight that builds and builds over time — and it’s a weight that many teachers often find themselves bearing alone.   What makes teaching hard is not delivering content and writing lessons; it’s being expected to take responsibility for the actions and circumstances of others as if they were your own. It’s looking at the crazy, uncontrollable circumstances swirling around you and thinking, “How am I supposed to fix all of this?”   I found myself alone in the middle of a tornado this week, and I didn’t know how to fix it. Coming face to face with the very tangible, very costly consequences of my own inadequacy wasn’t just hard; it was excruciating. But through this, I also learned something important: how to ask for help.   Show notes and additional links at badchineseteacher.com.   If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, leave a comment, and rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and YouTube.  Connect with us on Instagram (@badchineseteacher), Twitter (@badchinesepod), and Facebook.  Follow Patricia’s personal account on Instagram (@patricialiu), and check out her writing at blog.patricialiu.net.   New episodes of The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast are posted every Monday at 8am Eastern.

    1h 7m
  4. 02/03/2020

    #16: Yes, Coronavirus is a Concern. Please Don’t Be Racist.

    On air February 3rd, 2020. Recorded February 2nd, 2020. No news item has dominated international airwaves than the coronavirus outbreak that originated from Wuhan, China late last year. With more cases emerging outside of China each day, the world seems to be holding their breath — both literally and figuratively. Adjacent to the media chatter about death tolls and rates of infection is an equally tense discussion regarding xenophobic reactions to the coronavirus outbreak. Having likely originated from a wet market in China, the coronavirus has spawned numerous alarmist hot takes that come at the expense of racism against Chinese people. This is problematic, but it offers an interesting case study on how otherwise rational, non-bigoted people might begin showing (or tolerating) curious xenophobic tendencies when their personal health and safety appear to be threatened. After all, is there any real harm in moving to another subway car after seeing an Asian person wearing a face mask? One can never be too careful, after all. This episode takes a critical look at this line of thinking, as well as the progressive reaction against so-called “widespread” xenophobia that, only one month into this pandemic, honestly isn’t really all that widespread — yet. Are we preaching to the right choirs? And how do we get people to listen? Show notes at badchineseteacher.com If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, leave a comment, and rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and YouTube. Connect with us on Instagram (@badchineseteacher), Twitter (@badchinesepod), and Facebook. Follow Patricia’s personal account on Instagram (@patricialiu), and check out her writing at blog.patricialiu.net. New episodes of The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast are posted every Monday at 8am Eastern.

    1h 1m
  5. 01/27/2020

    #15: On Chinese New Year and Finding Home

    On air January 27th, 2020. Recorded January 26th, 2020. I’m not gonna lie: if there was ever a Lunar New Year equivalent of the Grinch, I’d probably be it. It’s not something I like to admit, but I’ve come to terms with the fact that despite being ethnically Chinese, I don’t have much emotional attachment with a holiday that I didn’t really grow up celebrating — and truth be told, a big part of me just finds Chinese new year traditions to be incredibly hokey. Becoming a Chinese teacher didn’t do much to help my Grinchiness towards the one holiday that all Chinese language classrooms seem to revolve around. Making dumplings and tangyuan? Cutting up red paper into indiscernible angular shapes? Singing this really annoying song? Not. Into. It. Thankfully, in the past few years, I’ve figured out a way to teach Chinese New Year in a way that doesn’t grind my gears and also feels more culturally authentic and engaging than a random arts-and-crafts activity. But honestly, it doesn’t make teaching Chinese New Year feel any less awkward to me. How do you teach a culture that feels to be very much yours, and also very much not? This episode is about Chinese New Year, but it’s really about being a part of the Chinese diaspora and how for us, home is not a country or a culture — it’s amidst people who are just as homeless as we are. “Whenever I find someone who grew up in a different country than me but they’re speaking Mandarin with a Taiwanese accent, I’m just like — we are friends; we are family.” Show notes at badchineseteacher.com. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, leave a comment, and rate us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, and YouTube. Connect with us on Instagram (@badchineseteacher), Twitter (@badchinesepod), and Facebook. Follow Patricia's personal account on Instagram (@patricialiu), and check out her writing at blog.patricialiu.net. New episodes of The Bad Chinese Teacher Podcast are posted every Monday at 8am Eastern.

    58 min
5
out of 5
22 Ratings

About

There are so many -- SO MANY -- people learning Chinese these days, but there’s so much more to learning Chinese than just, like, memorizing characters. Taiwanese-American millennial Patricia Liu is an actual, living, breathing high school Mandarin teacher here to help you make sense of it all. This podcast is where you’ll find frank, honest discussions about Chinese learning and teaching, as well as how language shapes people’s identities and stories.