埃德蒙顿华人社区-Edmonton China

 找回密码
 注册
查看: 1518|回复: 0

美国纽约时报关于中文教育的新闻

[复制链接]
鲜花(0) 鸡蛋(0)
发表于 2005-10-18 09:27 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
老杨团队,追求完美;客户至上,服务到位!
October 15, 2005% I! A. q7 n) }" Y4 W
Classes in Chinese Grow as the Language Rides a Wave of Popularity
1 d1 S- T' [) X- c3 w0 _6 h: T  p% C9 I8 P1 o+ n
By GRETCHEN RUETHLING
2 |, i% v" G5 T8 G
( Q& G% b# {6 L1 O2 s& ]CHICAGO, Oct. 14 - The future of foreign language study in the
/ c' ~+ x* [% p+ D" {0 L1 kUnited States might be glimpsed here at Louisa May Alcott Elementary
' _, e  W) u+ H4 b. v( FSchool, in a classroom where lanterns with cherry blossoms and pandas6 b2 C& S* f; ~+ y$ m8 _  \9 b
dangle overhead, and a paper dragon, an American flag and a Chinese
) e- |% y8 ?4 m6 K/ x( p; T! hflag hang from the wall.! P" p5 a) C  T; \% @
( q9 ^- K# I( [  G1 ?( k
One recent morning, a class of third graders bowed to one3 z/ y: o; e% t' l5 e: U
another and introduced themselves in Chinese, and a class of fourth graders
0 e% k6 \# k" y  Gpracticed writing numbers in Chinese characters on marker# e' T  t7 n# S8 V9 u
boards. Chinese classes began at Alcott in February, but more students
! N9 N. L4 Z- g/ H( B, f0 Fare already choosing it over Spanish.1 s5 y+ z, w$ R( P7 A9 j
5 y, M0 Y7 M6 `) t
"Chinese is our new baby," said David J. Domovic, the principal3 {9 O+ X$ Y5 c( w4 d) a
at Alcott, on the North Side, one of 20 public schools in the city
3 C( N. U5 T! }* Y6 Foffering instruction in Mandarin. "Everybody just wants in."
; A1 |" }+ B9 W6 \2 ]3 S: `# K) Y7 q# }% A2 b) @/ k
With encouragement from the Chinese and American governments,
# c, _+ M1 K: |. r3 W- `schools across the United States are expanding their language offerings
7 D' N& t* K6 X% J* }to include Chinese, the world's most spoken tongue, not to mention, l+ g% @! e) e+ ~) x+ b4 J
one of its most difficult to learn./ h9 B0 x9 O7 `- _+ l
% W" s0 Q/ u3 U2 y2 J3 I8 w
Last month, the Defense Department gave a $700,000 grant to+ i$ P. E# d, o: U+ U( @% ]5 f
public schools in Portland, Ore., to double the number of students
4 L& L  }' Z# G+ a/ P3 rstudying Chinese in an immersion program. In May, Senators Joseph I.0 ]) v; `* ?  z* X0 o
Lieberman, Democrat of Connecticut, and Lamar Alexander, Republican of
) X5 ?; f7 T% ~, V8 nTennessee, introduced a bill to spend $1.3 billon over five years on- R# o4 Y% e; E& s6 z% y4 U& J/ o
Chinese language programs in schools and on cultural exchanges to
, i& R3 G9 F% Z3 R1 z! x5 Y7 g6 Iimprove ties between the United States and China. The bill has been referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
* V1 \. V+ ^# W, L# t" l' ^  G- @7 `1 N# q# @
After 2,400 schools expressed interest, Advanced Placement2 A" p" X& V! A
Chinese classes will be offered in high schools around the country
9 @  {6 _9 M- {+ V5 C! Jstarting next year. Beijing is paying for half the $1.35 million to
( D- d+ U: _8 C2 k( q( m" P8 fdevelop the classes, including Chinese teachers' scholarships and developing/ Y% }  l! d. m$ V1 i
curriculums and examinations, said Trevor Packer, executive director% O" w+ Y3 L, }7 N4 C1 o/ g; m
of the Advanced Placement Program at the College Board.
' f& D2 W7 y' i  O
8 x9 D! `0 u: a3 B4 v% Z, }"Many Americans are beginning to realize the importance of, [3 B! |% Z  }7 ]0 x( A8 ^
speaking Chinese," Zhu Hongqing, consul at the Chinese Education
& |3 j% @  m) |1 _& vConsulate here, said. "We need to provide as much powerful support as we) M1 ^( [7 _: k9 r
can."
; x6 h9 k, B7 F& X! \" I
) R1 l# g) R) f- q7 P2 yThe number of Chinese language programs around the country, from! J( D! w4 n3 x, D
elementary school through adult programs, has tripled in 10# d5 c0 u  y* {+ @8 n
years, said Scott McGinnis, an academic adviser at the Defense Language, }+ K4 s) T5 c% D
Institute in Washington.
; }' s& ~0 z" P' \/ z$ s, T) c  c  U
"Chinese is strategic in a way that a lot of other languages7 K! @& t& S# m
aren't," because of China's growth as an economic and military force, Mr.
& E) y: h, g7 B8 X& oMcGinnis said.
. v4 P: V: u' D- L# f# b; r$ O: t
"Whatever tensions lie between us, there is a historical! z( R+ a' ^$ |7 e6 Y
longstanding mutual fascination with each other," he said. "Planning to be
! J; {" l# U5 b- v: q4 a9 z4 A- wready to engage with them rather than only thinking of them in terms of a; C  c8 j2 U9 z. V/ f
challenge or a competitor is the smart thing to do."
! g- M7 }1 |3 M( |! @5 _6 s7 V9 j( ]: x" t! K- }- M' h
Up to 50,000 students are studying Chinese in elementary and
+ G3 C% j4 }( h0 ^  r( s; R' _3 Z" Lsecondary schools in the United States, experts estimate. Many are in7 d# X5 J; R9 ]0 p- \/ j4 J
cities like New York and San Francisco that have large numbers of
/ @  n, l6 Z. ]+ tChinese-American students, and many take lessons after school or
. O5 e5 J- q% Q" }. x5 \  Gon weekends.  s7 Q  Q. f! P

% F; H2 F9 H; @7 }9 S& M4 zThe Chicago program stands out because it is entirely in public
* {5 s$ u# E( E7 a8 g  Nschools during the regular school day and primarily serves* \+ Z& w2 t; z/ |
students who are not of Chinese descent.
1 y6 R% d6 M: |6 g8 \6 i9 r  L) j! @6 X3 X6 o2 V2 P; W. b* d/ r
Mayor Richard M. Daley, a vocal supporter of the program, said7 s7 T8 U& A+ V6 A* ~6 J* A
proficiency in Chinese would be critical in understanding the* T! X8 {; i/ z- X2 M
competition.
" {7 u* r. C1 A7 J- @$ ]2 s" Y( }7 H6 J/ I
"I think there will be two languages in this world," Mr. Daley2 o1 W! v, u; }) g
said. "There will be Chinese and English.": |; s. F4 h, L8 l

5 P* A6 d: N6 u7 _6 }: }9 G1 sFrom an all-black elementary school on the West Side to a nearly
5 S" \4 k' F, Y  z" _  |all-Hispanic elementary school on the South Side to more diverse
& J8 [6 q0 R- O) q6 Cschools throughout the city, some 3,000 students from
- v4 r0 Q1 G, f# G2 g3 {, @kindergarten through high school are learning Chinese. The Chinese Education Ministry has called the program a model for teaching students
6 P% O0 Y6 l( C1 ]( Zwho are not of Chinese descent. The ministry donated 3,000 textbooks to
* o$ n! U( U6 j+ u) g( K' t. s  Ithe school system last year.
/ o( x: m+ o2 ?; s$ B) [( O7 w9 b) x7 O) o3 F0 u- f4 ]# y# C
The program has expanded from three schools in 1999 to 20 this
6 i5 t: ^  T  Y# U, {/ i- Pyear and is scheduled to add five by the end of the school year.. N1 U9 p% L/ L( k2 T
* w3 C! ]% `, C% m/ D
"They have a great international experience right in their own9 [% N1 Q3 O* R& X
classroom," said Robert Davis, manager of the district's Chicago, K3 ^+ h' y  ]$ x1 P$ @6 x  u
Chinese Connections Program, which seeks to develop skills to# ]6 |$ \5 L+ q6 X1 u: m5 f5 ?
help students compete in the world marketplace. "We want them to meet
6 v" b$ J5 ~# L/ ton an equal playing field."
" c7 b5 t7 B$ L! }: w' U; b1 J5 a. k1 G
Some parents here worry at first about how relevant the Chinese
$ j- Y: [+ W+ q. \! |! `, Lclasses are and whether they will be too difficult. The Foreign3 x; O! F# ~2 @: f
Service Institute, which trains American diplomats, ranks
# G8 P0 d; L& `( X  Z; g' fChinese as one of the four most time-intensive languages to learn. An0 b1 Q6 @# ?6 I2 U8 P
average English speaker takes 1,320 hours to become proficient in
% {% M$ x0 c+ `3 s( JChinese, compared with 480 hours in French, Spanish or Italian, the
& E5 C+ R+ y7 Z  d" ^institute says., n6 r1 v0 S9 {, |

9 `- G) A1 k  W5 R4 ISevtap Guldur, 31, said she and her daughter Sahire, a fourth! B4 E) Q6 P& F
grader at Alcott, looked over the unfamiliar Chinese characters before  L- |  V) u% `0 a8 m
deciding whether to take the class.! K0 h( G8 W; L7 I

; u( S, ^  B+ Y* f"If you're ready to learn that, go for it," Ms. Guldur said she' X/ H* u. h( C' {3 O9 E4 ~) P
told her daughter./ N3 Q) S) f$ p2 F- @% H

& u( l: `5 c0 |- ISahire, who is fluent in Turkish, said it was her favorite
+ n0 Z, Y# @" ~2 Y5 w2 yclass.
! ?9 K6 T2 ^8 B9 z$ q' j$ ^$ w# ~  {& P* c
At Alcott, 160 students from kindergarten to fifth grade are) l4 n1 A# G4 x2 z' W
studying Spanish, compared with 242 taking Chinese, although not without3 Y3 {+ V. Q6 E- d" G! F5 j# o* r
occasional frustration.
5 A5 M* e0 n) l% b6 L( U
* N1 |0 [, C$ Z/ J4 @: e. C! a"Do we have to do it in Chinese?" a third grader asked during a
+ z4 [+ X% |6 K  L) nrecent exercise, perhaps missing the point of the class.
7 q) h+ g# A9 T3 R; s. ^& W3 r8 V  q) N9 _2 ~, y3 g! T7 i
Raul Freire, 9, a fourth grader fluent in Spanish, said he  c5 C: a7 H) O# Z7 h3 V
taught words to his mother so she could better communicate with
& h7 F0 W* F7 T0 J1 ^* \3 |& `& nChinese-speaking customers at the bank where she works.. @" e8 t0 a6 @0 o; P. j& K

' P* e$ p( x* R) L"Mostly everybody in the school wants to take Chinese," Raul
' K, G9 h  ]) \% ksaid. "I think about being a traveler when I grow up, so I have to learn: e/ I5 F- c( r
as many languages as I can.": u4 ?, N* I8 K6 O& @

+ c+ g/ c$ f; V: }  xAdriana Freire, 33, Raul's mother, who is from Ecuador, said the0 @+ _& T( _/ ]& V
skills would help her son be a better competitor in the job
& e% M( S' @& U& `- t# n( t( emarket. "I never thought that he was going to be able to do something like
' ~, L! A7 _8 ~' ]& o( l+ @  ^/ Mthat," Ms. Freire said.5 M# t+ |2 i8 A8 o0 q0 a8 I; x
) h/ T) u! p: \
Most of the 10 elementary and 10 high schools in the program; C8 U  y/ q' d6 O- N
here offer the language four times a week for 40 minutes a day. Each% ^5 I$ X. }& A. T% @
school decides how to fit the class in the school day, with some taking
7 P, B* l' h8 U1 @, p, O  Ytime from classes like physical education, music and art to make) _2 [* |/ U( I0 ?8 P% w: \
room.) @! i$ `! E& k, b- \
$ a# z+ }! k  B& y( G0 i9 z
Chicago has a waiting list of schools that want to offer
0 H, A2 W2 j; Y4 q' k- wChinese. The main obstacle is a lack of teachers certified by an American
: |/ `3 Y+ ~% ?- B7 E% |. ]( B. qcollege, a requirement of the No Child Left Behind law, Mr. Davis said., I; R5 d' v; Y" r8 T$ _; J
7 K2 g( t1 v2 [% V& o2 _  m0 _* R
"It's hard when we can't hire a teacher that is qualified
) A, M* U! Q* b) s: @because of that missing certification," he said.
. F: i2 }' W5 a( I- G3 ^9 {7 ], m8 D
The shortage of teachers is common throughout the United States,, g- I/ U7 [: {8 E: u2 P. [
said Michael Levine, executive director of education at the Asia
8 V2 W5 T- i1 O. cSociety in New York.
. [, n6 S! a3 {1 C' O# z# @  \+ |+ g! [: P
Six states have signed or plan to sign agreements with the
/ d) A0 j* z- u: j1 _9 c; FChinese government to import teachers from China and send teachers from
2 z9 R4 D( o: Wthe United States to China for training, Mr. Levine said.3 [. E, p7 L) |+ C5 W
+ [; e4 Z9 N$ U$ u* G
"Eventually," he said, "we're going to have to homegrow our$ b" V) ^- F$ n4 D
own."
  y( `! A5 M9 E# Q+ y# T' S, w$ @- o5 x+ `
Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

本版积分规则

联系我们|小黑屋|手机版|Archiver|埃德蒙顿中文网

GMT-7, 2026-4-20 12:58 , Processed in 0.118792 second(s), 10 queries , Gzip On, APC On.

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表