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Source: Asia Society
Amid Growing Interest U.S. Schools Unprepared to Meet National
Demand for Chinese Language Instruction
New Asia Society Study Highlights Best Practices to Expand Chinese
Language Capacity
NEW YORK, July 12, 2005 (PRIMEZONE) -- The rise of China,
dramatically documented in recent months as its impact is felt
economically and culturally, is driving new demand for Chinese
language speakers across business and social sectors. Yet schools
throughout the United States are largely unprepared to meet this
need, lacking qualified teachers, programs, or creative uses of
modern educational technologies, according to a new study released
today by Asia Society.
The new report, entitled Expanding Chinese Language Capacity in the
United States, calls for a national commitment to new investments in
teaching Chinese language and culture. Created by Asia Society's
education division, the pre-eminent international education leader in
the K-12 field, the report documents a growing consensus among
national security and business leaders, educators, and foreign
language experts. Its analysis of the current status of Chinese
language instruction concludes that the current infrastructure to
support recruitment of students and teachers as well as the growth
of high quality programs is woefully inadequate. The study suggests
short- and long-range strategies to address the question: What would
it take to have five percent of American high school students
learning Chinese by 2015?
The release of the report comes at a time when leaders from across
public and private sectors are recognizing the growing importance of
Asia as one of the central facts of the 21st Century. China, with
its tremendous economic growth -- total trade with China exceeded
$230 billion in 2004, second only to trade with Canada and Mexico --
and emergence as a social and political leader in the region, is
fundamental to this shift.
As China rushes toward superpower status, America's schools and
government officials are growing increasingly concerned by the lack
of expertise in a language considered critical to national
prosperity and security. The most recent data show only 24,000
students in grades 7-12 study Chinese, a language spoken by 1.3
billion people worldwide. In contrast, more than one million
students learn French, a language spoken by only 80 million people.
"Our nation's schools are locked in a time warp. By ignoring
critical languages such as Chinese and the essential cultural
knowledge needed to succeed, our school systems are out of step with
new global realities. This report urgently highlights the need for
an expanded national commitment to world languages and international
studies," said Charles Kolb, president of the Committee for Economic
Development.
The U.S. State Department has designated Chinese a critical language
and in late May, U. S. Senators Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) and Lamar
Alexander (R-TN) introduced the United States-China Cultural
Engagement Act, proposing $1.3 billion in federal funds to provide
for Chinese language and culture instruction in American schools.
"Interest in learning Chinese among American youth and their parents
has grown dramatically in the past five years," said Vivien Stewart,
vice president for Education at Asia Society. "But schools don't
know how to start and sustain a Chinese language program and there
is an acute shortage of certified teachers."
Between 1998 and 2002, the number of college students studying
Chinese rose 20 percent to just over 34,000. And in a fall 2004
College Board survey of high schools, 2,400 schools expressed
interest in offering the advanced placement courses in Chinese
language (Mandarin) and culture when it becomes available in 2006.
"We expected a few hundred schools to express interest in offering
the Chinese AP, so these results were eye-opening," said College
Board president Gaston Caperton. "Americans have been the world's
most successful students and entrepreneurs for the past century. We
have to envision a new set of global skills that include
understanding world languages and cultures to retain our edge in an
increasingly interconnected economy."
Besides the new AP course, other new developments include the model
Chinese K-16 Pipeline Project of the National Security Education
Program and CHENGO, an online games-based program for beginning
Chinese, developed by the U.S. Department of Education and the
Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China and
available free of charge to pilot schools.
But these alone will not address the critical capacity issue. Among
the recommendations made in the report to expand Chinese:
-- Lack of qualified teachers is the key bottleneck in building
capacity. Higher education institutions should create
fast-track or alternate route certification programs for U.S.
Chinese speakers. States should expand visiting faculty programs
for teachers from China, similar to those in other languages,
and should create certification procedures to make it possible
for U.S. teachers to become certified teachers of Chinese.
-- In order to translate the current interest into high-quality
school programs, schools will need technical assistance in
learning from the best practices of current programs. We need
to start earlier, use more intensive research-based approaches,
and include the communities of heritage language learners.
Beyond this, public education campaigns to raise awareness
among educators, students, and parents of the growing importance
of Chinese will be needed and competitive seed funds to make
programs available in less affluent school districts.
-- Innovative ways of using media and technology, such as distance
education, online courses, and connections to students in China
should be given high priority to complement classroom programs
and broaden access.
Ultimately, the creation of significant capacity in Chinese will
require innovation and investments similar to those in other fields
deemed important to the nation. In 1958, the National Language
Defense Education Act, passed after the launch of Sputnik, supported
a range of strategies to meet the science and foreign-language needs
of the day. Today's realities will require proficient speakers of a
wider range of world languages, including Chinese, a language we as
a nation can no longer ignore.
About Asia Society
The Asia Society is America's leading institution dedicated to
fostering understanding of Asia and communication between Americans
and the peoples of Asia and the Pacific. A national nonprofit,
nonpartisan educational organization, the Asia Society develops
cultural, policy, business, and education programs about Asia for
the public and influential leaders.
CONTACT:
Asia Society
Public Relations Department
725 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10021-5088
Phone: (212) 327-9271
Fax: (212) 794-1332
E-mail: pr@asiasoc.org
www.asiasociety.org |