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October 15, 2005
- W5 |" V& e& }3 u4 |Classes in Chinese Grow as the Language Rides a Wave of Popularity
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) I2 T- Z- I' i2 j+ N9 ?+ O" CBy GRETCHEN RUETHLING4 G4 P2 c) N1 V$ w/ ^
5 t' A) K ?$ }6 j+ O: ?* r D" ECHICAGO, Oct. 14 - The future of foreign language study in the5 b& X+ d% K1 e$ ^# P5 q. a2 F3 ^5 N
United States might be glimpsed here at Louisa May Alcott Elementary3 }7 z6 Q& i. F ~
School, in a classroom where lanterns with cherry blossoms and pandas- J, ^8 o7 q0 P1 c s
dangle overhead, and a paper dragon, an American flag and a Chinese
1 ~9 ?; T+ y6 l; |$ jflag hang from the wall.
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One recent morning, a class of third graders bowed to one
/ y G j4 K) a" }: Ganother and introduced themselves in Chinese, and a class of fourth graders$ {6 J8 A) D% N7 r
practiced writing numbers in Chinese characters on marker
/ ^/ C8 J( H% Y1 Wboards. Chinese classes began at Alcott in February, but more students
w( j+ h; a8 Y4 uare already choosing it over Spanish.
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( A1 V k. P7 M4 J' ^"Chinese is our new baby," said David J. Domovic, the principal
+ U* m# U8 ]( ^' j- m3 a- kat Alcott, on the North Side, one of 20 public schools in the city
$ U ^% m( S n7 z& S! k) Ooffering instruction in Mandarin. "Everybody just wants in."
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+ J _# x+ y! O" K5 W, n' e9 G' |' _With encouragement from the Chinese and American governments,. t0 l; L; a0 I& _. A" T
schools across the United States are expanding their language offerings
$ }$ e5 X) @5 C9 @+ Zto include Chinese, the world's most spoken tongue, not to mention0 e( |" `: `' |, S$ r
one of its most difficult to learn.9 _. V* N' \) J; Q- q( c- Q- y
* u$ ?( k% R/ G2 E6 |Last month, the Defense Department gave a $700,000 grant to# {8 D3 l' P% b% N. V5 w
public schools in Portland, Ore., to double the number of students+ B5 T2 w' B/ `( d$ J
studying Chinese in an immersion program. In May, Senators Joseph I.
0 z9 K/ O4 R- w7 S2 ^0 X" `Lieberman, Democrat of Connecticut, and Lamar Alexander, Republican of
- m3 _# `* Y% |# o1 fTennessee, introduced a bill to spend $1.3 billon over five years on) } G% P' n' }$ k8 X
Chinese language programs in schools and on cultural exchanges to/ H1 ~9 m( h! n7 t9 { o% f
improve ties between the United States and China. The bill has been referred to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
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After 2,400 schools expressed interest, Advanced Placement
" w9 t9 c' M' iChinese classes will be offered in high schools around the country8 p* H, B" k. l/ J# g" O% [
starting next year. Beijing is paying for half the $1.35 million to' M" x8 c1 P$ r9 g' N0 }1 ~
develop the classes, including Chinese teachers' scholarships and developing5 D. V, Q& M' W( u7 Q
curriculums and examinations, said Trevor Packer, executive director; m( j1 Y1 m: n
of the Advanced Placement Program at the College Board.
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( N" W! \0 }- G! \* _: s! l"Many Americans are beginning to realize the importance of5 l; V5 r( V5 Q( {5 a" B! R
speaking Chinese," Zhu Hongqing, consul at the Chinese Education6 j7 q6 L/ {* p( b' s% H
Consulate here, said. "We need to provide as much powerful support as we) k& j n& k+ J& k
can." 5 Q$ P3 N: B5 v* Q8 T7 Q
& N% ^4 I3 L4 a7 X/ p: uThe number of Chinese language programs around the country, from
& K& ^" S$ o7 Z xelementary school through adult programs, has tripled in 10) H# Z( B/ v! ~) m" x# c
years, said Scott McGinnis, an academic adviser at the Defense Language) v; L; e; q8 w: j5 g* i
Institute in Washington.) @( S; I' s o6 Z! `
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"Chinese is strategic in a way that a lot of other languages
, z3 M3 K5 d0 |) o& Zaren't," because of China's growth as an economic and military force, Mr.
& U d* B4 C2 z9 eMcGinnis said.
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"Whatever tensions lie between us, there is a historical8 ~7 C. K* H% c9 J$ v) W6 \3 q6 S
longstanding mutual fascination with each other," he said. "Planning to be# K. `% |5 ?) d' P, h: r
ready to engage with them rather than only thinking of them in terms of a2 ~+ i' X9 N) |0 i) c" Y' h6 u
challenge or a competitor is the smart thing to do.": K- P* `: p! X+ Z
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Up to 50,000 students are studying Chinese in elementary and
" H! x' s, X; S9 B( M& Y5 n" Asecondary schools in the United States, experts estimate. Many are in8 x5 j' d& o! v! E/ x
cities like New York and San Francisco that have large numbers of2 r& Q# e8 y$ \3 K: C* S
Chinese-American students, and many take lessons after school or* v3 b; B/ n8 D9 ~) `5 j8 d/ M
on weekends.! d) d, C$ Q1 }
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The Chicago program stands out because it is entirely in public" s$ x Y- x M' Z: q* b4 M. l
schools during the regular school day and primarily serves
3 d( p. R* `" M' N$ ]- u4 Rstudents who are not of Chinese descent.
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, |5 `- y/ J2 r& _: QMayor Richard M. Daley, a vocal supporter of the program, said! Z- |0 k! q2 |1 S
proficiency in Chinese would be critical in understanding the
4 h# m( y; S4 V- ~- W5 L- H+ E' |0 Ycompetition.
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"I think there will be two languages in this world," Mr. Daley$ c0 W7 L8 l7 y/ H+ j* m
said. "There will be Chinese and English."2 q- e: |- q( `, Y* F1 ~5 z
9 x0 p& I' A% j* s8 O( {) b% hFrom an all-black elementary school on the West Side to a nearly7 R/ A8 a1 f0 O- h. ^# f X# E% W' {
all-Hispanic elementary school on the South Side to more diverse
& n4 w; q, J, j; Y" Lschools throughout the city, some 3,000 students from
7 d8 s2 p @1 B! Ukindergarten through high school are learning Chinese. The Chinese Education Ministry has called the program a model for teaching students' Z& k+ Y) p+ e9 l* t+ p7 [1 ~! F5 z. G( f
who are not of Chinese descent. The ministry donated 3,000 textbooks to
$ j1 w+ p+ y+ g* u2 M$ B+ qthe school system last year.
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* B% f4 @% P- ^! \, sThe program has expanded from three schools in 1999 to 20 this
3 e1 w0 B* k% j/ S6 _5 iyear and is scheduled to add five by the end of the school year.: C9 ]* u) R4 m
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"They have a great international experience right in their own7 @% F" h8 L1 Q- ?" L4 [/ `2 h
classroom," said Robert Davis, manager of the district's Chicago$ K9 U9 H+ d6 Z# m9 q( U
Chinese Connections Program, which seeks to develop skills to/ D- L u" q7 C5 q6 y1 F
help students compete in the world marketplace. "We want them to meet8 i H9 @5 T! g; C5 q
on an equal playing field."
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Some parents here worry at first about how relevant the Chinese
( v; H5 n6 O" F: T9 M0 Zclasses are and whether they will be too difficult. The Foreign# ~8 ~7 L: k! O5 G8 E
Service Institute, which trains American diplomats, ranks
/ ~( Y( i; [3 LChinese as one of the four most time-intensive languages to learn. An
# b4 t! H* D9 u, waverage English speaker takes 1,320 hours to become proficient in; }' K1 N- D1 R* @* j' ^
Chinese, compared with 480 hours in French, Spanish or Italian, the( U i' _) H& l3 v* {9 J5 k
institute says.- y0 B# W+ o$ V7 r6 r& I
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Sevtap Guldur, 31, said she and her daughter Sahire, a fourth+ }7 ?. J) `5 B0 O- r
grader at Alcott, looked over the unfamiliar Chinese characters before
+ t' y8 p4 B/ E0 Ndeciding whether to take the class.6 l- I% I- G% ?0 [
3 `! j7 }2 R6 c, D, {"If you're ready to learn that, go for it," Ms. Guldur said she: j( p2 L0 R/ W% ? S6 e- z Y1 E
told her daughter.
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# x% {; ]6 l4 L& YSahire, who is fluent in Turkish, said it was her favorite
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+ s# X9 L/ ] B% R0 W- b1 hAt Alcott, 160 students from kindergarten to fifth grade are! ?7 X& _6 w% \7 E' E1 A" T8 v
studying Spanish, compared with 242 taking Chinese, although not without
& E4 Q) H. ?( O: K* k) W6 q! Y. F& |occasional frustration.1 M5 P: b7 O3 L& q' U
: C/ Z$ {8 x, c. w"Do we have to do it in Chinese?" a third grader asked during a
/ u& ^, {& K8 y" v7 R7 `0 C/ arecent exercise, perhaps missing the point of the class.
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Raul Freire, 9, a fourth grader fluent in Spanish, said he9 A) b/ Z" h& ?0 h
taught words to his mother so she could better communicate with
, o1 ]4 |: G+ D7 }8 R9 LChinese-speaking customers at the bank where she works.* ~$ w; Z6 g/ V2 p# Z
3 n0 F" G' u4 N i8 X" v n0 Q"Mostly everybody in the school wants to take Chinese," Raul& k u1 z/ |4 j- V9 [- _
said. "I think about being a traveler when I grow up, so I have to learn
- D# j$ a3 o% X# Y3 ras many languages as I can."
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2 o& k9 q) V: R; [, t& d+ mAdriana Freire, 33, Raul's mother, who is from Ecuador, said the* O- b2 M, q, l3 t4 [
skills would help her son be a better competitor in the job# m _! O2 c4 R' A4 H' C: v* Q
market. "I never thought that he was going to be able to do something like
. X3 e7 Y6 c+ O0 ?$ Tthat," Ms. Freire said.
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! m: z* v P4 S% `- D" O9 O4 ~Most of the 10 elementary and 10 high schools in the program
, W0 u- z+ G% c# B3 phere offer the language four times a week for 40 minutes a day. Each7 }/ F8 m8 U% f5 O2 f- {
school decides how to fit the class in the school day, with some taking% \8 k* `% I, R: W. S$ ?
time from classes like physical education, music and art to make( H! g; n& @ a4 [9 t
room.; i1 H O1 U4 i8 l- b$ @
* r& c U/ D3 G! F E6 j' ^( b3 aChicago has a waiting list of schools that want to offer
8 G, S3 q$ [4 r, aChinese. The main obstacle is a lack of teachers certified by an American
) O" ~5 [' U( ]6 y2 _. ncollege, a requirement of the No Child Left Behind law, Mr. Davis said.4 q3 D/ }8 X& s. ], L5 d
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"It's hard when we can't hire a teacher that is qualified
2 R5 c5 D* i- X3 u2 lbecause of that missing certification," he said.% @& J5 o, k E" o; T( K0 k
' D2 w2 H% l5 g) ?# M% H5 ?8 PThe shortage of teachers is common throughout the United States,6 G: D6 E1 K5 z% r @
said Michael Levine, executive director of education at the Asia
$ P( K; X2 G6 t P9 D. m$ }Society in New York.
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Six states have signed or plan to sign agreements with the3 C, v6 h* f, V; T) n
Chinese government to import teachers from China and send teachers from0 b. M" _" j# I j9 T
the United States to China for training, Mr. Levine said.. X( E1 M) ]6 Z3 h/ i
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"Eventually," he said, "we're going to have to homegrow our
" b$ \- T3 e0 A& n3 _5 mown."
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