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Jun
02
2008

Picture This: A China Photo Contest

An update for new readers and a reminder for long-time fans: we regularly publish photos from our readers and group members who want to show others the interesting, curious, creepy, unusual, mysterious, elegant, odd, lovely, frumpy, and otherwise fantastic China that they have found from behind the lens.  We publish work from beginners to veterans of photography, and our only requirements are that you only send us photos you have taken.

Some examples:

These first photos come from the China Photo Contest group on Facebook and were posted by Robert DaBoss.

china photo pagoda

China photo Hong Kong

These next photos come from our Facebook group A Million People Who Love China and were posted by Elisabeth Rowley Mitchell.

china photo shanghai

china photo man in fountain

To see your photos here, post your photos first on the Blog of Dreams’ associated groups on Facebook: China Photo Contest and A Million People Who Love China.  We will feature weekly photos on the blog from each group and from any part of China and its autonomous regions.   Stories, anecdotes, notes about context, and information about the location where the photo was taken are more than welcome.

All money raised as a result of views of these photos and click-throughs on ads for these sites go directly to the Library Project and the Library Project Earthquake Relief Fund, a China charity now leading a campaign focused on helping to rebuild libraries and schools.

Share Your Dream
Apr
06
2008

China Photo Contest

Here are three more photos from our friends at the China Photo Contest:
Xian Shaanxi temple
This photo from Ricardo Duarte comes from Xian in Shaanxi Province.

Guangzhou architecture
This photo from Robert DaBoss was taken in Guangzhou.

guangdong villa
And this photo from Joew Huang was taken in Guangdong Province.

We’ll announce more photos and contest winners in the next couple of days.

Share Your Dream
Feb
26
2008

Cal Poly: the Movie

Cal Poly, home of one of the best international MBA programs, and a great China MBA blog, has arrived. On youtube, at least. The video offers a peak at the ten-day trip the 40 intrepid MBA students and professors took across China and into Beijing, Macau, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou and features such places as the forbidden city in Beijing, the Sands Casino in Macau, and Shenzhen and Shanghai factory visits.

Thanks to Steve Rodger and Kooltree productions for putting this together.

Share Your Dream
Jan
07
2008

The China Dreamblogue Golf Tournament

 The Dreamblogue Golf tournament will be held at the incredible Mission Hills golf course to benefit the China Dreamblogue Internship program.
Mission Hills GolfThis will be a 2 and 4 player Best ball tourney with prizes for longest drive, closest to the pin, straightest drive, hole-in-one, and more including random door prizes…

Caddie, Cart, Tournament Balls, tournament fees and Lunch are included! We will play one of 12 championship courses at Mission Hills: Home to the world’s largest golf facility designed by golf’s greatest players: The Golden Bear, Singh, Norman….

   
   
   
 
Date:

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Time:

11:00am - 9:00pm

Location:

Mission Hills Shenzhen

Street:

MHGC

City/Town:

Shenzhen, China

View Map

We will be joined for instruction and play by Paul Surniak: PGA Professional and 6-time Colorado Long Drive champion from America…Paul Surniak Interview (mp3)

Golf China
Dinner, Entertainment, transportation from the airport and reduced rates for those who wish to stay overnight, use the clubhouse, spa or stay on to play night golf…

Facilities for families accompanying, but not playing: kite flying, driving range, pool, sauna….

Leave a comment and we will provide you the link later to registration forms, reservation and transportation details for those who will stay more than one day….Your email address will not be published or distributed nor used beyond this tournament.

The tournament venue is only 90-minutes from HK, Guangzhou, or Macau…

Total cost for eighteen holes, dinner: and show: RMB 1800.

Share Your Dream
Dec
25
2007

Olympic Torch Auction for China Dreams

beijing olympic torch

Here is the place where you can bid for the coins and pins we are currently offering to raise some much-needed funds for our students. To bid, just list the item and amount you want to bid in the comments section. You are free to use an anonymous screenname. Please check the comments to be sure you are not accidentally underbidding anyone…and remember, all of these funds go to our help our students on the Dreamblogue.

You can see our video about the items here!:

DAVID AND the TORCH TAKE 12!
Or if you can’t stomach eight minutes of Dawei talking to Yanzhi’s disembodied voice, or if you don’t have a facebook account, you can always just look here to see the items available:

Lenovo pins

These are the commemorative Olympic pins Lenovo sent me. They are an extremely limited edition of six pins featuring little children using computers, and we’d really like to auction these pins to raise some money in support for Coffee and helping her leg.

Next are the landmark coins:
beijing olympic coins

This set of coins is limited to 80,000 and features famous landmarks acrosss Beijing and China, including the Summer Palace, the Forbidden City, and the Great Wall. The coins come with a certificate of authenticity that they are licensed official Olympic Beijing products.

The last set of coins we are offering are the flower coins:
china olympic coins

This limited set of 30,000 coins features a number of plants and flowers with a special meaning in Chinese culture, including bamboo, orchids, plum blossoms, and chrysanthemums.

And while you are here, remember to add the China Dreamblogue to your Technorati favorites!

BID HERE!

Share Your Dream
Dec
23
2007

The Library Project

china charity project
Recently, I was able to complete an interview with Thomas Stader, founder of a Chinese charity organization that helps to build libraries. Here are his words about some of the latest work the Library Project has been working on.

Can you tell us a little bit about the Library Project?

The Library Project provides books and libraries to under-financed countryside elementary schools in China.

I founded The Library Project because I found that most countryside elementary schools in China were lacking books that the children could physically read. What I mean by that is, most books in a countryside elementary school were written for university and high school students. They also lack any kind of reading area for the children to curl up with a book. What we do is very simple, we donate colorful, relevant, hi-quallity books to countryside elementary schools, while also ensuring that they have a safe and fun area to read the books in.

china library

I understand that often children’s libraries in China aren’t often stocked with good children’s books and are often cramped or uncomfortable. Can you tell us more about that?

In general, we have found a complete lack of children’s books with PinYin for young learners. A child absolutely needs PinYin to read during grades 1 - 3. So that is our first obstacle that we must overcome. Our second is a complete lack of a comfortable library for the children to gather as a class and read a book. Most schools have a room set aside for a library, but they don’t have the funding to fill the room with furniture.

What we have found is, once we bring books that the children can read, along with tables and chairs for a library, the children love it.

china library charity

Cool. I understand you’ve made a lot of big developments in the past year, right?

Yes we have. We have provided our first ten libraries, with plans of reaching a goal of over 80 by the end of 2008.

That sounds like a big commitment. Isn’t it costly to build a library?

The cost is quite low. Most libraries will cost between 4,000 and 8,000 RMB. This includes hi-quality Chinese language children’s books, colorful chairs, sturdy tables, globes, plants, posters, and all logistic costs such as trucks.

What all goes into the building of a library? What kind of cost is there in terms of money, time, and other resources?

From beginning to end, it takes about one month. That includes our Pre-Assessment, purchasing of books and furniture, and final delivery of the library. We usually have a group of about 5 - 15 volunteers helping with the final delivery. Once we set up the library, we introduce the children to their new library and play games. It’s a lot of fun for both the children and the volunteers.

I also understand that you cooperate with local charities to create community support and interest for your project. Have you found that local communities and organizations are helpful and willing to be involved?

That is true. We have partnered with the Xi’an Charity Association to provide libraries to the regions of the ShaanXi Province that they are working in. They are a huge help. We also run community based book collections through Aston English of China. They are one of the largest private English language schools in China, with schools in over 40 cities. We hope to hold book drives in each of those cities annually, and then take those Chinese language children’s books and get them into countryside elementary schools. Aston English has made a major commitment to giving back in China.

I understand you recently made a trip to Shanghai and had some exciting opportunities crop up for you there. How exactly did all of that come about?

That is true. The University of Maryland’s Smith School of Business in Shanghai has been absolutely amazing. On November 24th, the Smith School of Business hosted a charity fundraiser in Shanghai that raised enough funds to provide twelve schools with full libraries. They got Black and Decker, Microsoft, Storm Case, Grainger, Grace, Under Armour, The Children’s Place, Jaguar, Avon, and Land Rover, among many others, involved.

China EMBA

The University of Maryland’s Smith School of Business in Shanghai and their China EMBA program have really made a difference in the lives of thousands of children living in the countryside of China.

Where will the funds you raised in Shanghai go and how will they be used?

The funds raised in Shanghai will go toward providing libraries to the Ba Qiao School District in the ShaanXi Province. Each school will receive 500 Chinese language children’s books, and a comfortable child-safe library for the children to use.

China e-mba

To date, what do you think has been your biggest success?

That’s a tough question to answer. There have been so many successes to date. But if I were to pick on success, it would be the creation of our School District Program. This program makes the kind of impact that we all like to see. True impact is hard to make, and I’m confident that providing every countryside elementary school in a single school districts improves the level of education that each and every child receives.

What are the next big plans for the Library Project? How do you see the project growing? How can people in China and abroad help you and support you?

The Library Project has a very clear plan for our future. We will have over 80 libraries provided to countryside elementary schools by the end of 2008. We’ll have over 200 by the end of 2009. We’ll continue that aggressive growth plan until every elementary school in China has children’s books for every child to read.

We have a ton of volunteer opportunities, both in China and abroad. The best place to begin is to check out our website at The Library Project.

All donations are greatly appreciated. Small and large donations really do make a difference. Each book that we provide to schools only cost $1 USD, or 8 Yuan. Adopting a school costs only $1,000 USD. Both of these really do make a huge impact on the lives of literally thousands of children.

Share Your Dream
Dec
03
2007

China Search Engine Marketing and CultureFish

Cultural SEO

There is a new kid on the China SEO Block! Well, actually it is a group of old hands who have pooled their talent to create a powerfully needed new company: Culture Fish Media. CFM supplies work for the internship program that enables the Dreamblogue, in addition to the generosity of folks like the Cal Poly Business School, to continue on its way.

A bit about CultureFish:

CultureFish Media personalizes their China-US business partnerships with emerging and established companies to create recipes for growth in new market media using language and approaches sensitive to local tastes. CFM is a talent trust of friends dedicated to introducing ethical and passionate ideas effectively and sensitively into any cultural medium through Cultural SEO (CSEO) and SEM.

CultureFish has secured many solid connections like the one we are fostering with Baidu and  Madhouse, China’s leading mobile advertising group as well as Alibaba the world’s largest B2B portal. All of them   understand that CultureFish not only knows the Chinese market, but the sub-markets inside of China, so we will create higher ROIs and higher return advertsing rates.

So, as a result: a new standard in digital advertising in and from China has opened for business: CultureFish Media has joined together the world-class talents of an artistic and tech-savvy team to create culturally sensitive SEO (CSEO), SEM,Branding and Identity Management, Social Media Marketing & Tracking, Content Creation and Management in multiple languages, Ad Campaign Management: Print, Film, Digital,Interactive and Conventional (PPC, Banner, RSS, CPM…) Marketing while providing cost saving analytic Reports and ROI Maximization for emerging and established companies.

News Image

CSO, a new approach in on line content management and advertising and involves: Culturally Sensitive and Appropriate Keyword Programs for Countries and Targeted Regional Campaigns, language specific writing and editing, native translation and foreign language content management like website translation services,

CultureFish, whose clients include pizza parlors, camera shops, vacation clubs universities such as Cal Poly and Fortune 500 concerns like Oracle, can: Design Logos, Banners, CSS, and Total Campaign Management including China Web Design and other International Set-up, Email Campaigns, Feed Management, PR Releases and Optimization and Interface and partnerships with country portals and ISPs like the above mentioned Baidu, Naver, Alibaba, and Madhouse.

CultureFish (文化鱼), via its slogan, “如鱼得水” (Like a fish in water), implies skill and dexterity at a task. Our English slogan, “Making Digital Waves,” speaks to our use of sophisticated content management, cutting edge networking, interactive and visual media, paid ad campaigns, organic search empowerment and public relations to pursue excellence through new media that will best reach consumers in their native tongues. The team, together fluent in more than 10 languages, offers world class services to bloggers, SMEs and multinationals in any geographical region.

Each member of the diverse CFM team, hailing from America, Canada, China, Israel, and Singapore, is ethically and socially bound to best practices in SEO/SEM, and all aspects of business. Some profits are set aside for environmental and humanitarian causes: The , Charity and Overseas Education site The Blog of Dreams, our digital internship program, the online Olympic Souvenir Store for shopping online in China are three such projects. CultureFish will always provide generous time and talent to nurture promise, especially in individuals or enterprises facing socially difficult challenges or, through an affiliation with the China Business Network, SMEs doing business in China and other important digital markets.

Share Your Dream
Nov
30
2007

China Photo Contest

China Photo Contest Winners

 

We are pleased to announce the winners of this week’s China photo contest here! This week’s winner is Joew Huang with this photo of Da De Lane.

Da De Lane

This runner-up photo from Sunny Lu, taken in Jiuzhaigou, Sichuan of the practice of 藏家乐, or zangjiale, making a home hospitable and welcoming to travelers.

Sichuan China

Finally, we have this photo from the Hong Kong Dance Company, taken in Wuhan, Hubei Province:

Hong Kong dance

Thanks to all who contributed. Check again soon to see our next winners. To see your photos here, send them to [*dawei@blogofdreams.com*] or [*photos@blogofdreams.com*] or just post them on Facebook.

Share Your Dream
Nov
24
2007

China Doll

中文
china doll

Today’s picture comes from Cyphen, a member of the Photography Association of Sun Yat-Sen University. It was taken at West Street in Yangshuo, Guilin. By showing wooden dolls in kimonos instead of a traditional Chinese folk costume, the photographer wanted to gives us a picture of how commercialization and internationalization have changed this hot tourist spot known for its natural beauty.

West Street is one of the oldest districts in Yangshuo and hosts over 100,000 visitors from abroad annually, and its well-traveled cafes can deliver foods and flavors from around the world. Yangshuo has become a hospot for intercultural interaction.

To see your photos here, send them to [*dawei@blogofdreams.com *] or [*photos@blogofdreams.com *].
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