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美国纽约时报关于中文教育的新闻

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发表于 2005-10-18 09:27 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
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October 15, 2005
" C; E& ?# O0 |Classes in Chinese Grow as the Language Rides a Wave of Popularity
$ q% [5 R( C! m) I6 Z- q- \3 E* q. M+ K
By GRETCHEN RUETHLING
  m. h3 X% l2 O3 C! j
! d) T* A- Y: ?* F' ECHICAGO, Oct. 14 - The future of foreign language study in the
9 K& [0 O7 T, r/ F5 k$ CUnited States might be glimpsed here at Louisa May Alcott Elementary
! n2 J3 E& T% x6 R" ]+ sSchool, in a classroom where lanterns with cherry blossoms and pandas7 G: `4 F; B/ G! e% b! w9 r' t$ M
dangle overhead, and a paper dragon, an American flag and a Chinese$ \# b, Z3 M: \& u' W6 S
flag hang from the wall.! j2 ]( G4 U1 L5 ?% p5 ?5 ]1 Y
6 [. q8 }9 f) @5 o3 ]  z
One recent morning, a class of third graders bowed to one
( P4 Q; X- f$ E) X3 {another and introduced themselves in Chinese, and a class of fourth graders0 t+ K/ b- L" D9 h1 S9 ]4 k
practiced writing numbers in Chinese characters on marker3 ]$ R& C! M* l- g; p! A4 E# Q* k
boards. Chinese classes began at Alcott in February, but more students$ @; }; f, U$ v8 F" B$ W! l9 d
are already choosing it over Spanish.+ a/ U* |! C0 P+ d& Y* {

/ v  T" w* T% f& T* I"Chinese is our new baby," said David J. Domovic, the principal( B2 B: Q( @/ v$ ~* ^# k( N
at Alcott, on the North Side, one of 20 public schools in the city& ]; o% P+ j5 x9 ^8 C
offering instruction in Mandarin. "Everybody just wants in."5 Y7 Q2 Y8 d$ v/ d

( S9 u' Q  g; hWith encouragement from the Chinese and American governments,  o1 v9 v& h- O+ x: Y
schools across the United States are expanding their language offerings3 a4 T5 z$ a' {
to include Chinese, the world's most spoken tongue, not to mention
/ z  H  U( R0 ~% Y5 Q  P* {) ?6 Tone of its most difficult to learn.
- Z* x8 z) O" g
7 @5 ]$ P4 d1 J! o" HLast month, the Defense Department gave a $700,000 grant to
6 n: j, x. m8 P3 q/ Mpublic schools in Portland, Ore., to double the number of students1 X1 [0 |- n4 v* u8 L3 D
studying Chinese in an immersion program. In May, Senators Joseph I.
6 F" p  g5 l6 i, y9 qLieberman, Democrat of Connecticut, and Lamar Alexander, Republican of  m7 n' H$ f- m) P
Tennessee, introduced a bill to spend $1.3 billon over five years on$ K- r9 l- j$ _
Chinese language programs in schools and on cultural exchanges to: X) Y* ?0 ~) |
improve ties between the United States and China. The bill has been referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.  l# j  _% v0 t* C1 j

+ o1 }0 l4 H$ c# ?  ]& VAfter 2,400 schools expressed interest, Advanced Placement2 t  o# a8 O  m- T0 S
Chinese classes will be offered in high schools around the country
9 E& q  ~1 G% n2 W" d0 h, r+ w3 J; k* Y& dstarting next year. Beijing is paying for half the $1.35 million to
" Z8 z& X1 N  Y0 s" x2 V" I( Q7 Qdevelop the classes, including Chinese teachers' scholarships and developing
0 F3 @& J$ \9 A; M4 B/ D2 l: E. P: [curriculums and examinations, said Trevor Packer, executive director8 P9 E/ `- m, V5 L
of the Advanced Placement Program at the College Board.
# P+ L) y  j' H% s5 o& s; l, ?3 z4 n  l" v
"Many Americans are beginning to realize the importance of! H3 u7 `. `0 v! W  q; |' h; X
speaking Chinese," Zhu Hongqing, consul at the Chinese Education
/ `6 ^; \3 ]  K' Z% dConsulate here, said. "We need to provide as much powerful support as we9 Q0 \2 X) g( w; d2 D/ O
can." . U  m7 R3 ]- ]& S
2 g/ L/ W7 Q1 i
The number of Chinese language programs around the country, from4 Q& y& U5 s3 Y  m
elementary school through adult programs, has tripled in 10) L* Z8 y8 Z( B- k
years, said Scott McGinnis, an academic adviser at the Defense Language
$ j( M7 |6 ]4 J1 Z$ u9 N( hInstitute in Washington.
6 u# e4 \# V1 m. R/ U2 q. E
9 s$ w6 y  Y5 D0 y7 s5 v# B"Chinese is strategic in a way that a lot of other languages0 G$ ~, A! d  H- e
aren't," because of China's growth as an economic and military force, Mr.  g* G5 t; b/ v$ Z- O. W! {
McGinnis said.
- Q* [& d; b$ y9 v7 ^6 V# v+ B$ Y  L' g! h0 E) Y  t7 e
"Whatever tensions lie between us, there is a historical5 A) S2 q7 R" ~$ X& i
longstanding mutual fascination with each other," he said. "Planning to be
8 ]8 Z/ l1 s/ p! gready to engage with them rather than only thinking of them in terms of a
2 B/ K4 I/ L- \$ T) c& ichallenge or a competitor is the smart thing to do."
0 V/ Y7 ^7 X0 A4 U" G& c. O; o: s, w: ^) u
Up to 50,000 students are studying Chinese in elementary and) ]' ?) [  M, n0 r. u; F7 i$ n
secondary schools in the United States, experts estimate. Many are in' j6 j( F$ x7 x+ O! s" H5 l
cities like New York and San Francisco that have large numbers of
0 T% f; L; }% n+ g/ C. ZChinese-American students, and many take lessons after school or' H+ F- U. o% o; F
on weekends.# Z) M; K  h* B! ^$ ~- |- w3 m9 o

" A2 B: s; u* o4 L( f; ^8 MThe Chicago program stands out because it is entirely in public3 s# G) H1 e4 T
schools during the regular school day and primarily serves
  H# j9 \8 H, I$ L" Mstudents who are not of Chinese descent./ U" T- `: n" ^% @4 X8 |; r
& J0 l7 D' E& G' x6 I
Mayor Richard M. Daley, a vocal supporter of the program, said: t2 R. ~% r0 R! q5 `
proficiency in Chinese would be critical in understanding the
+ ]- F+ z7 m/ w7 v& j( _- X( Icompetition. ' `( e: {, Z: h6 M
" ?8 \+ `" b! }2 O9 ]" l4 i" o9 L, Z  t
"I think there will be two languages in this world," Mr. Daley3 \3 V; m7 T3 {' a1 \+ Y# V
said. "There will be Chinese and English."8 k* V) N0 X( B' D& `( @9 c

5 h! c7 p! h. K+ _+ O8 K7 nFrom an all-black elementary school on the West Side to a nearly
8 `( J5 Z5 b% f8 Q5 j& q* Uall-Hispanic elementary school on the South Side to more diverse
' ]+ k* N7 x6 C. R; G/ u/ {schools throughout the city, some 3,000 students from6 _; q/ [  f) K+ L' @8 w5 f) C; q
kindergarten through high school are learning Chinese. The Chinese Education Ministry has called the program a model for teaching students: r9 u. K. `- C! B* a  Y% Z& e
who are not of Chinese descent. The ministry donated 3,000 textbooks to0 ?& D2 O$ U) y7 }& D
the school system last year.
, u, w! O3 w. z) I3 v) Y4 n0 e& i$ X
The program has expanded from three schools in 1999 to 20 this, \  T; M/ s9 [& Y3 Y
year and is scheduled to add five by the end of the school year.5 M; D/ U/ m& p1 h  y' p# P4 E
9 _, _2 p& A$ F0 j
"They have a great international experience right in their own/ x$ d+ w* b3 H4 L
classroom," said Robert Davis, manager of the district's Chicago, @# [2 u4 X2 D+ p9 z
Chinese Connections Program, which seeks to develop skills to
9 Z- S8 t  @" {3 H5 Ohelp students compete in the world marketplace. "We want them to meet
* A8 s8 j/ I; r' d; mon an equal playing field."2 U: W# D- C: ^" g; A
( Q8 J8 S( K4 p; a
Some parents here worry at first about how relevant the Chinese, E7 s" o" n4 K3 T8 t4 q4 f0 O
classes are and whether they will be too difficult. The Foreign
' Y8 \6 g  d( E: b0 S+ Z9 vService Institute, which trains American diplomats, ranks0 K+ ?/ R. R/ W, w. e7 m
Chinese as one of the four most time-intensive languages to learn. An
6 X2 j; Q4 `# `average English speaker takes 1,320 hours to become proficient in
8 T  l# B9 H4 i; [' O. lChinese, compared with 480 hours in French, Spanish or Italian, the. n; B8 A  G4 G$ p9 t, K
institute says.
6 {, s( T1 r, e$ [# I) v3 \. p) d: t
0 y4 q: j: `, k+ T4 Y3 lSevtap Guldur, 31, said she and her daughter Sahire, a fourth; r4 Z% [& S5 b# a, p+ Z
grader at Alcott, looked over the unfamiliar Chinese characters before
# v7 F; S$ e( Y" ?& h* N& h, Pdeciding whether to take the class.
. F. H/ \: f. _( Z( C5 r# c7 m$ u1 s0 W' a! Q6 ~% m0 ]
"If you're ready to learn that, go for it," Ms. Guldur said she
. a$ M+ U* E. X8 p% D, C6 J) Ctold her daughter.- E0 Q+ d" |0 k0 n/ {
% B8 e0 u1 n2 J2 W/ D- I
Sahire, who is fluent in Turkish, said it was her favorite
& A' T  V  Z1 ~0 P% xclass.
6 U5 `* S1 l! T) `* m* F. _# e. x3 P8 G5 n9 W
At Alcott, 160 students from kindergarten to fifth grade are
# p" O8 ], N+ G( I3 a/ m0 |8 b/ Ystudying Spanish, compared with 242 taking Chinese, although not without- k* ^8 T- A; m
occasional frustration.8 [# l' ]% `% J6 n
; o+ Q  X8 i' T% N
"Do we have to do it in Chinese?" a third grader asked during a
( V. n' B5 R4 m7 V. orecent exercise, perhaps missing the point of the class.( y% \/ S' A- W6 X: w( |* Y

# h1 s4 B/ A8 A% a& {/ y5 |; @Raul Freire, 9, a fourth grader fluent in Spanish, said he' y2 s4 _% A  M
taught words to his mother so she could better communicate with
# _% Q: L0 @4 L- {) Z6 l+ @Chinese-speaking customers at the bank where she works.
5 X3 Y- I3 {8 H6 O+ }5 F4 N
' \& N7 r1 c' L  W" K8 i& C; b1 Z"Mostly everybody in the school wants to take Chinese," Raul
0 p# }0 y* C+ ~6 m: jsaid. "I think about being a traveler when I grow up, so I have to learn  ?2 s8 d; C, H0 t, K" b4 ?% @
as many languages as I can."
' ?' g, \2 Q. Z  h* V7 ?& u7 e: F4 d6 `! S- ]- R7 g0 r
Adriana Freire, 33, Raul's mother, who is from Ecuador, said the
  l% f  l6 `: H( P  wskills would help her son be a better competitor in the job9 v, f; H0 K- Q0 E! s1 ^$ _
market. "I never thought that he was going to be able to do something like
0 y! K$ ]0 s* F' ]0 p6 Dthat," Ms. Freire said.
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Most of the 10 elementary and 10 high schools in the program0 j& M% S; ?' |7 ^1 K) H
here offer the language four times a week for 40 minutes a day. Each; U- i! W; ?# U# Y6 t
school decides how to fit the class in the school day, with some taking/ f0 @6 z% ^& v* v9 h2 D$ g# s4 l
time from classes like physical education, music and art to make, Y' r7 Y; E- e% n
room.
0 u: ~& G+ M7 t% f8 H( f* r3 g" d/ ?8 `6 ~7 _
Chicago has a waiting list of schools that want to offer
; k# ]3 t: o$ \Chinese. The main obstacle is a lack of teachers certified by an American
& N* e: N0 B3 qcollege, a requirement of the No Child Left Behind law, Mr. Davis said.
4 L: \, a4 N4 L/ t# p( h, G0 I6 X0 K' S
"It's hard when we can't hire a teacher that is qualified
& S6 X3 H" H- I! K* e0 t& n! sbecause of that missing certification," he said.
4 `/ a: b1 W5 c, h( v/ ^5 o
( W7 {/ Z' i$ w$ M8 f, X4 J: mThe shortage of teachers is common throughout the United States,( x: Z7 w" E7 t+ v" J
said Michael Levine, executive director of education at the Asia
3 X: N) y- f( j" w+ ^6 ^Society in New York.
% F4 }% ]3 \: }. r  m1 ]9 ]9 j8 b% |/ G) h: c0 ^$ F
Six states have signed or plan to sign agreements with the
) L1 ?# l. F* c0 RChinese government to import teachers from China and send teachers from5 G4 Q1 C; ^0 F% Q  r# `  N
the United States to China for training, Mr. Levine said.
% k0 c" y* ~% o9 o8 A, R' S% b% i1 n
"Eventually," he said, "we're going to have to homegrow our. F; m# ?8 T+ K1 n/ S
own."+ S3 q! K6 F7 ~' L) w% ~
% J8 a4 r1 ?" \/ w6 }, d% N% ^' i
Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
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