Word: reined
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...addition to preparing for a second installation, Rein would ideally like to hit the talk show circuit and travel around China as a guest lecturer. His real love, however, is teaching. “Education is the key to everything. I don’t know what I would do if I couldn’t teach,” he says. In summer 2001, he taught English to children in China and lectured on English literature in the Philippines as a guest professor at the University of Manila. At Harvard, he worked as a TF for Professor Eileen Cheng...
...Rein earned his masters at Harvard in regional studies, focusing on American, Chinese and Japanese trilateral political and economic relations. Harvard was appealing for graduate school because in Rein’s opinion, “it has the best program for studying China’s political economy.” “I also wanted to come to Harvard to become one of the leaders in America to help bridge the gap between America and China. I find a shocking level of ignorance about China, even at the highest levels of American government,” Rein...
...Rein acknowledges that not all the essays are equally well-written. Some were included because they presented various ways of expressing a point. “They weren’t all my favorites,” he admits. Nonetheless, the criticism can be read between the lines. For example, Rein advises, “This might not be a good idea for you to do because it’s hard to do well,” and “This person uses a lot of metaphors, but in your essay you may not want...
...Rein is convinced that the book will succeed because the Chinese are mesmerized by the Harvard name and want to know what it takes to gain admittance. At present, Rein’s book has a 30,000 initial copy distribution. The book is ready to go to press, but he is waiting for Zoujin Publishing Company in China to agree on a title. He expects that the book will appear in bookstores in China in early...
...Rein also dreams of having his book showcased alongside Harvard Girl Yiting Liu, a publishing phenomenon in China that remained on its bestseller list for over a year. In Harvard Girl, the parents of Yiting Liu ’03 share their approach to parenting and their educational theories. Projecting into the future, Rein has begun collecting essays for a second book, which may include essays from other top colleges within the United States...