| Non-stop sleepless English class a lame showBy Lu Jianwei (Shanghai Star)
 Updated: 2005-10-17 10:12
 
 A student with a sallow complexion squinted at the now blurry chalkboard and 
scribbled on a little scrap of paper. 
 The classroom was so quiet you could hear a pin drop until the teacher 
shifted his weight and attempted to utter a sentence. The student shot him a 
reflexive glance before slumping back into his seat as if calmed by a lullaby, 
otherwise known as his instructor's voice. 
 
 
 
 
 |  A mastery of 
 English can be a strong pusher on one's career ladders in big cities like 
 Beijing, Shanghai and Xi'an. With the number of English learners expands, 
 The English training has grown into a promising business in China. [file 
 photo]
 |  As time wore on, the brightly lit 
classroom was host to a sea of sleepy heads, sluggishness setting into every 
pore of the students as the minutes ticked by.
 BAM! Earth to Joe! 
 It was finally over! A shadow of a smile flickered over his face, the first 
genuine expression he had in hours. 
 The belaboured student groaned to the camera: "I'm worn out, I think the 
class might have harmed my health." 
 Moments later, he trudged off. 
 This was the scene at a rare 72-hour vigil between September 9 and 12 in 
Shanghai. Apart from eliciting a good round of yawns and arm-stretchings, this 
was no ordinary vigil. It was a marathon English course, sleep free. 
 The stunt was put together in a bid to sew up a Guinness World Record for the 
longest non-stop English course. 
 But what was intended to be a record-breaking event turned out to be nothing 
more than a lame show. 
 A Guinness record is deemed to encourage the re-definition of human confines, 
pushing the envelope, or more literally, outdoing oneself. It celebrates human 
endeavours, marking historical and glorifying moments. 
 Fundamentally, it carries a positive connotation. Whereas in this case, the 
only benefit one can possibly come up with is the significance of English, which 
has been a cliche for a great number of years. It virtually blasphemed the 
principle of the record in this regard. 
 Behind its facade of record-breaking lies the almost blatant thirst to stir a 
major media buzz. 
 Promising to award whoever hangs in there till the last minute with a 
handsome amount of money and a bonus trip to England for one student, the 
organization practically bought the success of this show. 
 Although it went out on a limb and ended up drawing tides of criticism, it 
finally got all it needed: a publicized brandname, a Guinness record, and 
subsequent discussion, which I am now doing, too. 
 As the saying goes: Rome wasn't built in a day. Learning English calls for a 
great deal of time and devotion. In a nutshell, it is no cakewalk whatsoever. 
The three-day ordeal wrote the sole message that the students involved could 
actually manage to grasp the language simply, in a flash. 
 Today, information floods our brief lives with an abundance of useless 
distractions. To counter this, the media should sift its offerings by leaving 
the dregs out. More time, I think, should be given to the underprivileged and 
disadvantaged. 
 Still, I'm wishing those who attended the class a quick 
recovery. 
 
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