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Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) Releases Global Education Policy Statement
Website
This statement identifies five major
education challenges being faced in the 21st century. It also recommends strategies to
address these challenges.
Department of Education "News Parents Can Use" TV Program to Feature Foreign Language Learning
Website
"Teaching Foreign Languages: Understanding the World and Helping Our Students Compete," aired on November 21, but is archived on the site above.
Press Clippings
[ARCHIVE] [CHINESE
LANGUAGE ARTICLES]
What Makes Finnish Kids So Smart?
(Wall Street Journal, February 29, 2008) | full
story
Excerpt: "The academic prowess of Finland's students has lured educators from more than 50 countries in recent years to learn the country's secret, including an official from the U.S. Department of Education. What they find is simple but not easy: well-trained teachers and responsible children. Early on, kids do a lot without adults hovering. And teachers create lessons to fit their students. "We don't have oil or other riches. Knowledge is the thing Finnish people have," says Hannele Frantsi, a school principal."
Language-Immersion Elementary School Coming to South End
(Seattle Post-Intelligencer, January 17, 2008) | full
story
Excerpt: "Building on the popularity of the John Stanford International School, Seattle Public Schools will start a second international elementary school for students wishing to become bilingual."
World's Schools Teach U.S. a Lesson
(Christian Science Monitor, November 14, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Susan Zelman, head of Ohio's education department, has visited classrooms in China, India, and Japan. She's
met young people with whom her students will potentially be competing – and collaborating – when they start
careers. And she's impressed.
In Ohio, "our economy is in the tubes," she says, "so there's really an economic need to think about, How can we
build the workforce?... How can we build a world-class learning system?""
Tongue-Tied: Learning a Second Language Can Boost Your Career, But Its Costly
(RIS Media, September 18, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt:"Especially in jobs in finance and sales, learning key languages — such as Mandarin, Arabic and Japanese — could make sense. Workers who depend on commissions or are looking to introduce products overseas could also benefit, experts say.
But bilingualism doesn’t come cheap. You’ll have to spend anywhere from $1,500 to $3,000 or more for classes that will give you proficiency in a second language."
The Mythical Million
(Newsweek International, August 20, 2007) | full
story
Beijing Bureau Chief Melinda Liu and Special
Correspondent Sudip Mazumdar report that while China produced more than
600,000 engineers in 2005 alone, and India nearly 500,000 technical grads
annually, underfunding and a lack of reliable universities is producing
serious educational crises that could soon wreak havoc on their economies.
English for Everyone
(Newsweek International, August 20, 2007) | full
story
Special Correspondent Jonathan Adams and Special
Correspondent Max Hirsch report that even though some 40 million non-native
speakers now study Mandarin worldwide, in cities from Brussels to Beijing,
English rules. It is now the common language spoken in multinational firms,
top universities and the scientific community.
Babies Offered Language Classes
(LA Daily News, August 11, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "A Santa Clarita company will offer Spanish, German, French and other language lessons to infants at a time when a study has criticized "Baby Einstein" and other learning tools for the very young. Early exposure to foreign tongues plants a seed that blooms later in life, says Tara-Anne Johnson, owner of A Small World in Saugus."
Column: Schools Committed to Global Literacy
(Tomah Journal (WI), August 9, 2007) | full
story
Op-Ed by Wisconsin Superintendent of Instruction Elizabeth Burmaster
Excerpt: "Across the state, Wisconsin educators are using the Department of Public Instruction curriculum guide for international education, the first of its kind in the nation. They are listening to world literacy recommendations from Wisconsin movers and shakers-leaders in business and government who engaged with the International Education Council that Gov. Jim Doyle and I formed in 2003."
High School is Thinking Globally
(Boston Globe, July 22, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Hoping to broaden students' knowledge of the world, Needham High School is launching a global competency program that will combine travel abroad, community service, and foreign language programs...Under the program, students would travel abroad, perform community service involving another culture (either abroad or locally), show foreign language competency at a fourth-year level, and engage in side projects from reading books to preparing dishes from other countries. Those who complete the requirements will earn a certificate in global competence."
Educators Appeal For More Global Teaching
(Voice of America, July 4, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Top U.S. educators and prominent business leaders say Tuesday, more than ever before in U.S. history, the nation must provide students with a good international education. They say if the United States is to continue competing in an increasingly interconnected world, its next generation of leaders need to be internationally savvy. In New York, VOA's Mona Ghuneim has the story."
State Board Refuses to Require Foreign Language Studies Because of High Cost (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 25, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "To meet the needs of today's global economy, some states are now requiring that all students learn a foreign language. But Pennsylvania has decided that such a mandate would be "irresponsible," because it would cost too much and because there are too few certified foreign language instructors, said state board of education Chairman Karl Girton.
Special Section in the Cincinnati Enquirer: Overcoming Our Language Barriers
Including:
Speaking the Language of Globalization
(Cincinatti Enquirer, June 17, 2007) | full
story
Op-Ed by John J. Castellani, president of Business Roundtable: Excerpt: "The business community has long called for stronger math and science programs and the need to double the number of science, technology, engineering and math graduates with bachelor's degrees by 2015. But as a 2006 report by the Committee for Economic Development notes, businesses require "employees with knowledge of foreign languages and cultures to market products to customers around the globe and to work effectively with foreign employees and partners in other countries." It's time for business leaders and concerned community members to sound a new clarion call that will wake up policymakers and educators to the importance of teaching foreign languages to our children."
'Soft Skills' in Big Demand
(Education Week - Diplomas Count, June 12, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The approach to learning is one response to national concern among policy and business leaders that teenagers are emerging from high school without the set of skills they need to thrive in college and the workplace. Some experts refer to those competencies as “soft” or “applied” skills. Some call them 21st-century skills. In an increasingly global, technological economy, they say, it isn’t enough to be academically strong. Young people must also be able to work comfortably with people from other cultures, solve problems creatively, write and speak well, think in a multidisciplinary way, and evaluate information critically. And they need to be punctual, dependable, and industrious."
Global Competition Forces New Learning
(Carolina Channel 14, June 11, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: ""Other countries are catching up to us and doing better, and they are creating a much more robust higher education system," says Holly Kuzmich of the U.S. Department of Education. Experts say Chinese is the new Latin, and most agree that knowing a foreign language is critical to a student's future success. Surprisingly, only 44 percent of high school students are enrolled in a foreign language program even though many are given a wide variety of language courses to choose from."
School Focuses on International Studies
(KPRC Houston Channel 2, May 18, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The Houston Academy of International Studies, which opened in August, is not your typical high school. Students such as Autumn Dickens attend because they want an education that guarantees a better understanding of the world, of other cultures and of languages."
Education Bill Proposes New Global Outlook
(Herald Tribune (FL), April 27, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Lawmakers are hailing a plan to overhaul the state's education standards and bring experts from around the world to weigh in on what Florida's students should be learning."
China, U.S., Taking Notes on Education
(LA Times, April 8, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "In many ways, China and the United States represent the yin and yang of international education. Whereas China's top-down system places supreme emphasis on tightly structured, disciplined learning, the United States has a highly decentralized system that places greater importance on critical thinking and "student-centered" learning.
Still, in recent years, the Chinese and American systems have been taking baby steps toward each other, learning and adapting what the other does best."
Becoming Citizens of the World
(Education Leadership, April 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The new skill set that students will need goes well beyond the United States' current focus on the basics and on math, science, and technology. These skills are necessary, of course, but to be successful global citizens, workers, and leaders, students will need to be knowledgeable about the world, be able to communicate in languages other than English, and be informed and active citizens.
NRC Sees Deficit in Federal Approach to Foreign Languages
(Education Week, April 4, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The U.S. Department of Education should have a more visible presence in directing efforts for international education and the teaching of foreign languages, particularly in K-12 education, concludes a report sent to Congress last week by the National Research Council."
Hasbro's Gift of Education
(Providence Journal, April 3, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "University of Rhode Island President Robert L. Carothers: “We’re trying to internationalize the curriculum in all fields,” Carothers said in an interview. “We want to have more and more of our students in international programs.”
Education Bill's Global Focus Would Add Rigor to Classes
(Palm Beach Post, April 2, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Leaders in the Florida House agree and are poised to act on legislation they say will better prepare the state's K-12 students not only for college but to compete for jobs with students from Singapore and China, instead of Mississippi and Georgia. A bill scheduled for debate this week in a Florida House council could open the door for longer school days, more foreign-language classes and increased emphasis on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test."
World History and Geography Gain Traction In Class
(Education Week, March 21, 2007) | full
story (free registration may be required)
Excerpt: "A recent federal study shows that the percentage of American students taking world history and world geography in high school has risen faster than enrollment in any other social studies classes over the past 15 years."
Asian Educators Looking to Louden for an Edge
(Washington Post, March 19, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The scientists had come thousands of miles from the island nation of Singapore to the Academy of Science in Sterling in search of ways to improve their teaching. This could be considered surprising, given that Singapore's eighth-graders rank No. 1 in science and math globally and those in the United States rank ninth in science and 15th in math, according to the 2003 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study."
Committee: Languages Offer Key to the World
(Rutland Herald, March 11, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: In the process of updating the standards, the question of world language instruction for seventh- and eighth-grade students came up, explained Gail Kilkelly, the state's coordinator for fine arts and foreign languages. The board decided one goal needed further study: that children begin learning a foreign language in the primary grades and have a "novice middle proficiency" by the end of eighth grade. The board created the present committee, which includes school administrators, school boards, language teachers and college and university leaders, and charged it with developing strategies for implementing the K-12 language goal."
Tough Choices in Education
(Boston Globe, February 28, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "I sit on the Commission of the National Center on Education and the Economy, and we tackled this issue in a recent report, "Tough Choices or Tough Times." In it we recommended dramatic steps not just to reform our schools, but to reinvigorate our system of education so that children learn more and graduate ready to compete with their peers from around the world."
Learning to Compete
(News & Observer, February 28, 2007) | full
story (free registration required)
Excerpt: Teachers are rightly skeptical about the pressure to take on yet another burden. Many are already reeling from the demands of No Child Left Behind, to cite only the latest. Now comes yet another new task: teaching global knowledge and skills. But promoting global knowledge and skills is not an add-on -- something related to a few courses or an after-school program. Global perspectives must be built into everything that students and teachers do, from math to literature to social studies to science. This means new curricula. It also means serious professional development for teachers."
Pentagon Ramps Up Training to Cut Language Gap
(NPR, February 9, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "There are 27 newly minted Arabic speakers in this graduating class, just a small portion of the more than 1,000 Arabic-language graduates who passed through the Defense Language Institute last year."
Impediments to U.S. Push on Languages
(Inside Higher Ed, January 26, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "In their opening remarks Thursday during a Senate subcommittee hearing on the federal government’s efforts to develop a foreign language strategy, Sen. Daniel K. Akaka (D-Hawaii) and Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio) were in bipartisan agreement: The United States needs to significantly improve its citizens’ foreign language skills.The problem, of course, is getting the funding and creating a national strategy to be implemented over the long term."
Measuring Up in a Flat World
(Technology & Learning, January 22, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The Asia Society curriculum broadens core subject skills and content for increased relevancy in an international workplace. "For example," says Jackson, "a biology class might focus on the nature of disease, and issues of wellness, exploring the spread of disease, migration trends, and the globalization of transportation, [which increases] human contact."
Schools Need to Keep Language Programs
(Times Argus (VT), January 17, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "But cutting languages is not the way to go.
Vermont's students no longer only compete with their peers in New Hampshire or New York for jobs; they now face graduates from China, India and other corners of the world. It has never been more important for Vermont's children to learn to live and work in a world community – making language courses an imperative."
Global Perspective Needed in Vermont
(Burlington Free Press, January 6, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt:"We can and we must embed a global perspective within our K-16 curriculum. A year ago a group of Vermont policy makers gathered to talk about ways to implement the recommendations of the Governor's Council on International Education. A month ago a group of higher education leaders representing 18 of Vermont's institutions of higher education gathered to discuss ways to bring a global perspective to their campuses. The momentum for requiring the study of other countries for students is building and expanding fast. Vermont can and should take its place as a leader of this initiative."
For Baby, the More Languages, the Better
(NBC Nightly News, January 3, 2007) | full
story
Except: "And the studies show that the ability to switch from one brain section to another allows some babies actually to perform better at certain tasks — mental dexterity brought on by a bilingual world."
Student Makes Splash with Award-winning Video
(Minneapolis Star Tribune, January 2, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "As a Minnesotan, Elyse DeLaittre is surrounded by water...That's why she chose the subject over some sexier global issues to feature in the video she submitted for a national competition sponsored by the Goldman-Sachs Foundation and the Asia Society. "
Dramatic Plan for Language Programs
(Inside Higher Ed, January 2, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "A panel of some of the top professors of foreign languages has concluded that the programs that train undergraduate majors and new Ph.D.’s are seriously off course, with so much emphasis on literature that broader understanding of cultures and nations has been lost. The panel, organized by the Modern Language Association, wants to jettison the traditional model in which language instruction is followed primarily by literary study. In its place, the panel would like to see departments merge study of language and literature while adding more study of history, culture, economics, and society — in some respects turning language programs into area studies programs."
Learning to Keep Learning
(New York Times, December 13, 2006) | full
story (Subscription may be required)
Thomas Friedman's column. Excerpt: "I recently attended an Asia Society education seminar in Beijing, during which we heard Chinese educators talk about their “new national strategy.” It’s to make China an “innovation country” — with enough indigenous output to advance China “into the rank of innovation-oriented countries by 2020,” as Shang Yong, China’s vice minister of science and technology, put it.
I listened to this with mixed emotions. Part of me said: “Gosh, wouldn’t it be nice to have a government that was so focused on innovation — instead of one that is basically anti-science.” My other emotion was skepticism. Oh, you know the line: Great Britain dominated the 19th century, America dominated the 20th and now China is going to dominate the 21st. It’s game over.
Sorry, but I am not ready to cede the 21st century to China yet."
Young U.S. Students Present Ideas for Solving World Problems
(Voice of America, December 11, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "The Excellence in International Education awards are sponsored by the investment firm Goldman Sachs and the Asia Society, a non-profit organization dedicated to broadening American understanding of Asian cultures."
How to Bring Our Schools Out of the 20th Century
(Time Magazine, December 7, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Competency in reading and math—the focus of so much No Child Left Behind testing—is the meager minimum. Scientific and technical skills are, likewise, utterly necessary but insufficient. Today's economy demands not only a high-level competence in the traditional academic disciplines but also what might be called 21st century skills. Here's what they are: Knowing more about the world. Kids are global citizens now, whether they know it or not, and they need to behave that way. Mike Eskew, CEO of UPS, talks about needing workers who are "global trade literate, sensitive to foreign cultures, conversant in different languages"—not exactly strong points in the U.S., where fewer than half of high school students are enrolled in a foreign-language class and where the social-studies curriculum tends to fixate on U.S. history."
Forum Hunts Ways to Advance Education
(People's Daily, November 15, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Education reform in the Asia-Pacific region must speed up if it is to keep pace with rapid globalization, the head of a major non-governmental organization (NGO) said yesterday.
"The inter-connected nature of the world, the world economy and citizenship demands that we actually respond to these changes. Education provides common ground for us to work together to respond," Vishakha Desai, president of Asia Society, said at a press conference in Beijing.""
Seattle School District to Expand Worldly Offerings
(Seattle Times, November 10, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Eight more Seattle public schools soon may offer international-education programs along the lines of those at John Stanford International School and Hamilton International Middle School. At a fundraising breakfast for the two schools Thursday, Seattle Public Schools Chief Academic Officer Carla Santorno announced the district's intent to expand its international programs to five more elementary schools, one more middle school, and two high schools. Locations have not been determined, she said."
An Experience of a Lifetime
(Central Kitsap Chronicle, October 28, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Miss Washington Kristen Eddings returned home to Silverdale this week after spending 14 days immersed in the culture of India.
As a spokeswoman for Bridges to Understanding, Eddings — who was crowned Miss Washington three months ago — traveled with the organization to Dharamsala, India where she participated in workshops with the Tibetan Childrens’ Village.”
East West School Opens for Students in Flushing
(Queens Chronicle, October 26, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Ben Sherman is probably the only principal in New York City who says hello every morning to his entire student body in Korean, Japanese and Mandarin.
He performs this linguistic ritual during “morning muster” at the brand new East West School of International Studies, a public school in Flushing that opened its doors to nearly 150 seventh and ninth graders this fall."
Policymakers Get Cross-Border View of Immigration
(NPR, October 23, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Back in 1998, Rick Givens was chairman of the Chatham County Commissioners in North Carolina, and he was frustrated at mounting illegal immigration. Worried about the cost of health care and social services, Givens made local headlines when he wrote a letter to federal immigration officials, asking them to come to his state, round up illegal Mexicans and send them home.
Then Givens took part in a program called the Latino Initiative, which was then just getting under way. It's run by the University of North Carolina's Center for International Understanding, and the highlight is a weeklong visit to Mexico. That's when Givens says his "aha" moment came."
Broader Education Gains Appeal in
Asia
(International Herald
Tribune, October 16, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Across
Asia parents are choosing to send their children to international schools
on similar grounds. Many Asian school systems provide teacher-led instruction
rather than student-centered interactive learning...Schools like the
International School of Bangkok still cater primarily to children of
expatriates and employees of multinationals like Nike, Ford and Chevron.
Increasingly, however, demand for international education is coming
from Thais, who now fill about a third of international school places,
according to the Education Ministry."
Denver Center for International Studies Opens
(CBS 4 Denver, October
10, 2006) | full
story
A video clip
on the new Denver Center for International Studies.
Students Take Aim at Global Problems
(Christian Science
Monitor, October 5, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: In
a climate of troubling indicators foreshadowing a decline in US competitiveness
- from international testing comparisons to the low cost of skilled
labor in Asia - the Global Challenge stems from a refreshing premise:
America does have the tools to compete in an increasingly borderless
and competitive world. And one way to cultivate those resources is to
give high school students a more compelling opportunity to engage with
science and math than is offered by, say, the boring chemistry teacher
in the movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off."
Understanding Global Awareness: Asia Society
Podcast
(Apple Learning Intenchange,
October 3, 2006) | full
story
Today’s
21st Century Student needs to master a complex set of skills to succeed
in work, school and life. One of those skills is global awareness. But
what does this mean? Is it enough for students to simply be “aware”
of other parts of the world? Apple Distinguished Educators began a project
this past summer to develop curriculum and experiences for teachers
and students to examine what it means to be “Globally Aware.” As
a part of this project Apple Learning Interchange is reaching out to
organizations across the globe to gain insight from experts in this
field. Listen to this recent interview with Ms. Vivien Stewart, Vice
President of Education, and Dr. Michael Levine, Vice President of New
Media at the Asia Society, as they explore the need for global awareness
programs in schools and tips and strategies on how to get started.
Many in State Department Can't Talk the Talk
(Washington Post,
August 11, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Nearly
30 percent of State Department employees based overseas in "language-designated
positions" are failing to speak and write the local language well
enough to meet required levels, according to a report by the Government
Accountability Office."
Executive Director's Report: Good schools produce
'globally competent' students
(School Board News,
August 8, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "We need
to create schools that prepare students for an internationally competitive,
globally interactive world. And we need to create experiences for our
kids that turn them on to education and fire them up -- in high school
and middle school, as well as the primary grades....Last week, I was
privileged to attend a session of the Asia Society Summer Institute,
where I heard from the 10 teacher-principal teams that are part of the
society’s Network of International Studies Schools. These teams
are redesigning their schools to be energized, personal, and academically
demanding, as well as globally focused."
Should the U.S. Take a Page Out of China's Schoolbook?
(Seed Magazine, July
14, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "The US education system has been periodically
compared to its Chinese counterpart since the 1960s, when it first became
apparent that Asian students performed better on international academic
assessment tests than Americans. That performance disparity is felt
more acutely now that China shows increasing economic strength, and
now that the US faces a shortage of foreign-born researchers that are
the lifeblood of American science. With President Bush focused on his
nation's competitiveness, American educators are looking to schools
like Nanyang to figure out what makes China so successful in science
education."
China Can Teach U.S. a Math Lesson
(OC Register, July
14, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Math and science. The
two subjects that are most difficult for me wouldn't be so for my peers
in a place like China. That's because the overseas system produces far
more stellar students in those areas, compared with U.S. schools, according
to a new Asia Society study.
The report goes on to note that the achievement gap
may hinder American competitiveness even as educators and policymakers
here are analyzing what are the best practices there."
Less Homework, More Trouble
(USA Today, July
2, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "There's
ample evidence to suggest that lack of homework leaves U.S. students
less prepared to compete in the global economy. If
anything, U.S. schools are guilty of spending too little time on academics.
The newest report to document this emerged recently from the Asia Society,
which compared K-12 educations in the USA and China. In just two decades
of pushing for universal education and high standards, China has surpassed
the USA in some ways."
Chinese Medicine for American Schools
(New York Times,
June 27, 2006) | full
story (Subscription
reequired)
Opinion piece
by Nicholas Kristof. Excerpt: "That many young Chinese in cities
like Shanghai or Beijing get a better education than Americans do is
a reality that should stir us to seek lessons from China."
Push Grows for Higher Graduation Standards
(Delaware News Journal,
June 26, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Delaware's
high school students will face some of the toughest graduation requirements
in the nation, if the state adopts a pending recommendation for new,
more rigorous standards. A
state committee last week recommended the state require an extra credit
of math, two credits of foreign language, a tougher senior year and
specific courses students must take, such as biology, chemistry and
algebra II."
China Takes Different Tack From U.S. in Teaching
Mathematics and Science
(Education Week,
June 21, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "The
study grew out of a 2005 Asia Society conference that brought together
experts on American and Chinese education. The
Chinese school year is a full month longer than that of the United States.
Nine years of education in China is compulsory; U.S. students are required
to stay in school until they are somewhere between 16 and 18 years old,
depending on the state, according to the Editorial Projects in Education
Research Center."
China's Education System Characterized by Strong
National Standards, Vast Inequalities
(Education Week,
Web-Only, June 13, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "China
uses a dramatically different approach to building students’ mathematical
and science skills from the United States', with strong national standards,
a structured progression from easy to difficult subject matter, and
extensive teacher training serving as core tenets of the communist country’s
educational system, a new study finds.
But China also suffers from a large disparity between the quality of
education in relatively advanced urban areas and poorer, rural communities,
and from a system that encourages relatively rigid teaching methods,
according to the report, which was released June 8 by the Asia Society,
a New York City-based nonprofit that seeks to promote international
understanding."
U.S.
Looks to Asia to Boost Grades in Math, Science
(AFP, June 11, 2006)
| full
story
Excerpt: ""There are grave concerns in the
United States about the quality of math and science education in American
schools," said a new report by experts at Asia Society, a US-based
institution striving to bridge the US-Asia gap. It
outlined key ways in which China, and East Asia more broadly, have been
successful in producing higher student achievement in math and science
and underlined US "need to benchmark best practices wherever we
can find them.""
US
Businesses, Educators Team Up to Boost Language Skills
(VOA, June 8, 2006)
| full
story
Excerpt: "Business leaders and educators often find
themselves on opposing sides of the debate on political and social issues.
But they are joining forces to press for greater resources for education
in international studies and foreign languages. Earlier
this year a business policy group, the Committee for Economic Development
(CED) issued a report called Education for Global Leadership. The report
warns of serious threats to the U.S. economy and national security if
the United States does not improve education in foreign languages and
international studies."
Clayton
State Professor Focuses on International Education
(Clayton News-Daily,
June 8, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "He often tells his students that there
are 500 pound gorillas in the world — a metaphor for nations whose
populations will compete with Americans for jobs. And
those same countries — such as India or China — have markets
where American companies will sell those products, said Raj Sashti,
a Clayton State University associate professor and director of the international
consortium of Georgia, consisting of a group of state universities."
Symposium
Offers Bridge to China
(Cincinnati Enquirer,
June 3, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Learn more about the past, present and
future of China at the 2006 Chinese Cultural Symposium today at Northern
Kentucky University....The purpose of the event is education, said Dr.
Jacque Van Houten, world language and international education consultant
for the Kentucky Department of Education."
They (the Chinese Ministry of Education) are trying to help the U.S.
get the Chinese language taught in school. Currently, there's only one
school district that offers some Chinese in the state," Van Houten
said."
Multilingualism
Has Value
(Camden Courier Post,
May 30, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Language diversity is a strength, not
a sign that immigrants are undoing the thread that binds us together.
If Americans aren't exposed early on to a foreign language, they should
strive to at least become conversant in another language."
Schools
May Raise Bar for Languages
(The News Journal
(DE), May 28, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Schools,
however, are struggling to meet the demand, especially for increasingly
popular Asian languages. They also are just beginning to require that
students take foreign languages, although that could change with an
upcoming statewide overhaul of graduation requirements. For many years,
foreign-language has taken a back seat to core testing subjects such
as math, science and English. But Jean Allen, president of the state
board of education and chairman of the graduation requirement committee,
said the committee could adopt a draft report this week that includes
a recommendation to require students to take two years of a foreign
language, beginning with the freshman class of 2009."
Downstate Education: Expanding Horizons; Teachers Bringing World Home
(NewsZap (DE), May
27, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Downstate teachers are bringing an international
flavor to their classrooms. Most
teacher preparation programs are "very Euro-centric," said
Dr. Shuhan Wang, education associate for world languages and international
education at the Delaware Department of Education. But individual teachers
driven to take advantage of professional development opportunities and
share their unique cultural knowledge are stretching the boundaries
of their students' minds."
Bridging
the Foreign-Language Gap
(Seattle Times, May
25, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Washington state leaders have responded
to this challenge by implementing education-reform measures highlighted
by the Washington Assessment of Student Learning. Even if the WASL —
with its emphasis on reading, math and science — works as well
as proponents hope, it alone won't prepare many students for the demands
facing them in the future. We need
to place greater emphasis on foreign-language instruction in our schools,
starting at the elementary level. We need to make foreign language as
high a priority as reading, math and science."
First-of-its-Kind
Agreement Will Allow High School Students to Earn College Credit for
Studying Abroad
(AScribe, May 18,
2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Idaho high school students who travel
abroad as part of an educational exchange program can now earn college
credit at Boise State University through an innovative new program. The cooperative agreement between
Boise States concurrent enrollment program in the Division of Extended
Studies and the State Department of Education is the first of its kind
in the country, according to Dan Prinzing, coordinator for international
education for the state."
Teacher
Brings a Touch of Scotland to Grafton
(Daily Press (VA),
May 18, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "McGregor is visiting Grafton Middle School
for the year through the Visiting International Faculty Program. The
VIF program, founded in 1987, is the largest international exchange
program for U.S. schools and teachers worldwide. "She is able to
offer another cultural element to the school. When (American) idioms
and customs are brought up, she passes on to our kids how it plays out
in other cultures.""
Middle
School Goes International
(El Defensor Chieftan,
May 13, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "... The students discussed current global
problems and some possible solutions during the 2006 International Education
Student Forum. Language arts teacher Kim Berlat took the students to
the conference and discussed international education and its place in
the classroom with other teachers. The
students volunteered to participate in the forum, the first in the state.
They chose to join groups focusing on environmental, social, political
or economic perspectives."
Lost
in America
(Foreign Policy,
May/June, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "In California, where Christina lives,
more than 1 in 4 of the state’s residents were born outside the
United States. Schoolchildren speak more than 60 languages at home.
Globalization is everywhere you look. Here in Oakland, an 11yearold
AfricanAmerican boy has impressed international audiences with his uncanny
Chinese arias. In nearby Fruitvale, nearly 100,000 locals turned out
last fall for a Mexican Día de los Muertos celebration. To the
south, in Silicon Valley, a Bollywood cineplex effortlessly sells out
its Hindi screenings. A few blocks from my San Francisco apartment,
a shop that specializes in goods from Brazil (the area around Goiania,
specifically) shares its block with a Vietnamese restaurant and a yoga
studio, where yuppies chant in Sanskrit as they bend and sweat; outside,
Caribbean reggaeton blares from the windows of Japanese tuner coupes. But for all the changes globalization
has brought to the average American kid’s cultural and commercial
ecosystem, the average classroom has lagged far behind, even in cosmopolitan
California."
Overstretched
American Special Forces Hit the Language Barrier
(London Daily Telegraph,
May 4, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "American special forces, the cutting edge
of the global strategy for winning the fight against terrorism, are
so overstretched that many units are deploying in the world's trouble
spots unable to communicate with the locals."
WCPS
Honored for International Efforts
(Walton Tribune (GA),
May 3, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "The Walton County Public Schools district
reaches far beyond the county’s borders. For
sponsoring international teachers from other countries, WCPS was named
District of the Year for excellence in educating U.S. students about
the “world beyond their borders.”"
Poll
Shows Many Can't Fine LA on Map
(AP, May 2, 2006)
|
full story
Excerpt: "Despite the wall-to-wall coverage of the
damage from Hurricane Katrina, nearly one-third of young Americans recently
polled couldn't locate Louisiana on a map and nearly half were unable
to identify Mississippi. Americans
between the ages of 18 and 24 fared even worse with foreign locations:
six in 10 couldn't find Iraq, according to a Roper poll conducted for
National Geographic."
Speaking
in (Many) Tongues Can Be Profitable
(New York Times,
April 30, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "WANTED, and in many instances urgently
needed: translators and interpreters of numerous languages into English.
Opportunities especially good in New York and other cities with large
and highly varied immigrant populations. And in government agencies
where certain Middle Eastern and Asian languages have surged in priority
in the post 9/11 world."
International
Curriculum Eyed
(Delaware State News,
April 28, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "...more than 200 educators that attended
the Delaware Summit on International Education Thursday at the Sheraton
Dover Hotel. The state Department of Education sponsored the event. Principals, teachers and administrators
debated ways to best integrate international education into the curriculum
and watched as the state took the historic step of partnering with Spain
and China. Secretary of Education Valerie A. Woodruff signed memoranda
of understanding with the two countries’ embassies to formalize
a plan for future exchange programs for teachers and students."
Michigan's
Students Should be Plugged into China, India
(DetroitNews, April
27, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "T he 21st century belongs to the globally
connected. Is Michigan plugged in? China
and India will continue to evolve as major players on the world scene,
including in business. Michiganians need to forge stronger bonds with
those countries, especially since one in six American jobs is tied to
international trade."
Students
Bridge Cultural Divide....
(Gulf Daily News,
April 21, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Four Bahraini government school pupils
built bridges between the East and West cultural divide, when they embarked
on the first US-Bahrain student exchange of its kind. The 16 to 18-year-olds,
from Khawla Girls' Secondary School, travelled to New York to stay with
College of Staten Island (CSI) High School for International Studies
students and their families, earlier this year."
Managing
Globalization: Back to School in the Rust Belt
(International Herald
Tribune, April 18, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "As manufacturing plants shrink and disappear
across the American Midwest, one thing is clear: The next generation
of workers will need a new set of skills. With their eye on globalization,
states in the region are mandating foreign languages, science and mathematics.
But they are also trying to give their students a new way of looking
at the world.
It's a lesson that many wealthy and middle-income economies will have
to learn as several types of manufacturing and other lower-skilled jobs
move to poorer countries. The Midwestern states could always afford
to give their children a good education, but they didn't always need
to."
Comment:
America and China Must Build New Bridges in Business
(Financial Times,
April 16, 2006) |
full story (Registration may be required)
Excerpt: "We in the US must also address impediments
to American competitiveness, understanding that this issue will not
be solved through protectionist legislation. We need, for example, to
strengthen our educational infrastructure to boost student performance
and close achievement gaps; increase competencies in subjects such as
maths, science and engineering; ensure that our students acquire the
skills - including language skills - necessary to succeed in international
and intercultural environments; and embed continuous learning in our
culture."
English
now the Foreign Language of Schools Abroad
(Education Week,
April 12, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "A similar trend is occurring in China
and Japan, where school officials and private companies are struggling
to meet the rapidly growing demand for English instruction for children,
teenagers, and adults. English is
hot in Asia, experts say, as China, Japan, Korea, and Thailand promote
the language as an essential skill for improving their nations’
competitiveness in the global economy." (Third and final in a series.)
Other Native-English Countries Ahead of United States
(Education Week,
April 12, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Even as the focus on foreign-language
instruction up north and Down Under has waned recently in the wake of
renewed attention to reading, mathematics, and science instruction,
countries outside the United States where English is the primary language
have more than a decade’s head start in their language skills
and public attitudes on the importance of language learning.
“How
far behind is the United States compared to other countries? I think
enormously,” said Alan Ruby, a former deputy secretary for the
Ministry of Education in Australia and now a senior fellow in the graduate
education program at the University of Pennsylvania, in Philadelphia.
“It’s almost impossible to gauge how much competitiveness
the U.S. will lose because it doesn’t have the language skills.”
Technology Becomes Substitute for English Teacher
(Education Week,
April 12, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "The Ministry of Education (in Mexico)
this year piloted a program that uses a computer loaded with interactive
language software and an interactive board to teach English in the 5th
and 6th grades in 150 schools. Preliminary reports show the program
is working. An outside evaluator found that beginning learners who used
the system progressed well in entry-level English, even in classrooms
in which the teachers didn’t know any English, said Lorenzo Gómez-Morin
Fuentes, the undersecretary for basic education for Mexico’s Education
Ministry."
Words
and Music
(Washington Post,
April 10, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Early this year, at a special U.S. University
Presidents Summit on International Education, President Bush unveiled
the National Security Language Initiative....This project reminds me
of a book I read recently, "The Piano Tuner," by Daniel Mason,
in which the central character seeks and makes peace in late 19th-century
Burma with music instead of guns. I want to believe the language initiative
also is at least partly motivated by an interest in more nonviolent
tools of negotiation, although I much prefer the word "conversation"
to "negotiation.""
'Heritage
Speakers’: Loss of a Treasure?
(Education Week,
April 6, 2006) |
full story
If the United States is going to take advantage of the
linguistic skills of millions of children in this country who speak
languages other than English at home, policy has to change at the district,
state, and national levels, experts in the field say. Includes accompanying
audio and video. (The second in a series).
Embracing
Arabic: State to get Language Grant
(Detroit Free Press,
April 4, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Michigan is on target to receive an annual
grant of about $700,000 for up to 16 years to pay teacher salaries and
other costs of teaching Arabic to students in grades K-12 and college,
a federal official said Monday. Bush
hopes the experiment will produce scores of young Michiganders who are
fluent in Arabic, and he wants the program to be copied nationwide,
said Robert Slater, director of the U.S. Department of Defense's national
security education program."
Our
State's Students Need More Language Training
(Puget Sound Business
Journal, WA, March 31, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt from this Op-Ed by State Senator Pam Roach: "Most
Washington K-12 students don't have the chance to study any language
other than English until they are in middle school or high school. In
fact, foreign language isn't even a state graduation requirement. (Some
colleges and universities use it as an entrance requirement.) Our state's
public schools should make foreign language instruction a higher priority.
It should be on par with basic subjects such as reading, writing, math,
science and social studies. "
Schools
Urged to Prepare for Globalization
(Daily Times, Maryville,
TN, March 29, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Daggett said globalization is a major
reason for the need for school reform. The fall of the Berlin Wall,
the decision by China, and later by India, to join in the global free-enterprise
economic system and the creation of the World Wide Web system linking
databases and ultimately people has changed marketplace dynamics. As
examples, Daggett said that in 1995, the year China came to the table,
the giant discount-chain Wal-Mart advocated that its goods were ``Made
in America.'' Two years ago, 38 percent of the goods were made in China.
This year, that percentage jumped to 72 percent, Daggett said."
A
world view: Teacher's trip to China will bring real life to classroom
(The Times-News,
Twin Falls, ID, March 24, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Since the state become involved with the
international education programs in 2003, delegations of Idaho
educators have also visited Spain, Germany and Mexico. Funded
through grants from the U.S. State Department, U.S. Department of Education
and non-government organizations, the mission goal is to provide firsthand
global perspectives on the political and cultural environments that
teachers can present to students whose exposure might otherwise be limited
to what they read in textbooks."
Worried About India's and China's Booms? So Are
They
(New York Times,
March 24, 2006) |
full story (NYTimes registration required)
Column by Tom
Friedman. Excerpt: "Both India and China, which have mastered rote
learning and have everyone else terrified about their growing armies
of engineers, are wondering if too much math and science — unleavened
by art, literature, music and humanities — aren't making Indira
and Zhou dull kids and not good innovators. Very few global products
have been spawned by India or China."
China's Modernization Plan: What U.S. Education
Leaders Can Learn
(Education Week,
March 22, 2006) |
full story (Downloadable PDF)
A commentary
piece by Vivien Stewart, Vice President for Education, Asia Society.
Based on her experience leading education delegations to China over
the past three years, the article highlights some of the lessons learned
about China's educational growth and examines the implications for the
next phase of U.S. education reform.
Outside View: Language panels revisited
(UPI, March 21, 2006)
|
full story
Excerpt: "The
United States needs foreign-language speakers, and in particular it
needs many more Arabic speakers. Despite massive investment and President
George W. Bush's plan to spend a further $117 million next year, it
does not seem to be getting them. What's wrong? America's
National Research Council is now undertaking a comprehensive review
of its language programs, funded by Title VI of the Higher Education
Act. Are the massive grants provided to area studies programs for language
instruction effective? How exactly has more than $100 million, allocated
annually for area studies and foreign language instruction, been used?
Have they been co-opted by universities to subsidize other aspects,
such as theoretically-driven research, at the expense of language instruction?
Hopefully, definitive answers will be available when the NRC finishes
its review in 2007."
Majoring in Asia
(New Jersey Record,
March 15, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Languages
like Hindi, Chinese, Japanese and Korean are the cornerstone of a growing
Asian studies program at the university (William Patterson), which in
the past year has begun offering a bachelor of arts degree in the subject.
For years,
the university's Asian courses were embedded in social science and language
studies programs. But faculty from several disciplines have created
a major that brings together economics, languages, anthropology, politics
and history focusing, in particular, on East and South Asia."
Strides in 'Critical Languages' Remain Small
(Washington Post,
March 14, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt:"Montgomery
County has more than 44,000 students taking foreign languages, a rich
linguistic feast that puts it No. 1 among U.S. school systems of similar
size. Yet it has only one high school Arabic class and would not have
that if special education teacher Nazeh Natur hadn't come to Gaithersburg
High School.
When Gaithersburg
lost its Arabic teacher last year, the head of the language department
persuaded Natur to add that class to his busy schedule. An Israeli Arab
who is a U.S. citizen, Natur once taught Arabic to young Jews and Hebrew
to young Arabs. Now from 7:20 to 8:15 a.m. each weekday, he cajoles
a dozen U.S. teenagers in Room C-16 to follow the twists and turns of
his complicated mother tongue."
Burmaster Gets Language Studies Award
(Madison.com, March
13, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: State
Superintendent of Public Instruction Elizabeth Burmaster received a
national leadership award for advancing international education and
language studies in Wisconsin.
The Sen. Paul Simon Award for the Promotion of Language and International
Studies was presented to Burmaster in Chicago on Friday during the Central
States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages."
That Good Education Might Not Be Enough
(LA Times, March
8, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "But
the president's (Bush) assertion that the answer to foreign outsourcing
is education, a mantra embraced by Democrats as well as Republicans,
is being challenged by a growing body of research and analysis from
economists and other scholars. Education — at least as delivered
by most of the nation's colleges, universities and technical schools
— is no longer quite the economic cure-all it once was, nor the
guarantee of financial security Americans have come to expect from college
and graduate degrees."
International Curriculum in PA Spotlight
(Boston Globe, March
6, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: President
Bush has called for Advanced Placement and IB programs to be expanded. Critics,
however, have argued that IB's multicultural themes promote values that
conflict with traditional Judeo-Christian values. Some opponents have
called it Marxist because the International Baccalaureate Organization
is a signatory to the Earth Charter, a collection of global principles
created in France in 2000."
Americans Breaking Out of Their English-Only Shell
(Washington File,
March 4, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "For
decades, Americans have been stereotyped as unwilling to learn any language
but English. The
rest of the world was learning English, according to the stereotypical
American, so why struggle learning a foreign language?...But all that
has changed. Innovative school curriculums, entertaining and affordable
interactive computer training programs, more opportunities to travel,
and a broader global outlook have motivated Americans -- young and old
-- to learn foreign languages."
New School for Scribes, Asia Studies
(New York Daily News,
March 3, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "The
next school year will feature two new schools in Flushing, one catering
to aspiring scribes and the other to buffs of Asian culture and tongues,
the Department of Education has announced. The World Journalism Preparatory
School and the East-West School of International Studies will debut
in September, prepping their students for college while concentrating
on topics currently unavailable in the borough."
Governors: Expand Students' Horizons
(eSchoolNews, March
1, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "At
the annual winter meeting of the National Governors' Association, members
discussed what it will take to ensure the success of students in an
increasingly global economy. The consensus: Students need to be exposed
to foreign cultures and languages--and technology, speakers said, is
a key to making that happen."
Volunteer Projects Broaden Student Horizons
(Staten Island Advance,
February 28, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Students
at Staten Island's newest high school -- the High School for International
Studies at the College of Staten Island -- must log 120 volunteer hours
in order to earn a diploma. Recently, the 114 freshmen who currently
make up the student body, as well as four exchange students from Bahrain,
started to satisfy this requirement by participating in five Community
Service Day projects in Staten Island and the Bronx."
Helping Hands: Local Group Creates Connections
with Students
(The State News (MI),
February 28, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "LATTICE
began 11 years ago as an international education partnership to link
international graduate students with six different school districts
in Mid-Michigan. A
year later, members became involved with Zulu educators after meeting
at an international conference."
Outreach Program Promotes Asian Studies
(Burlington Free
Press, February 23, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "Fifth-
and sixth-graders at Westford Elementary School are just a few of the
Vermont students benefiting from a program that promotes international
education. The students will hold an open house tonight at the school
to show parents and community members what they've learned. In
July, their teacher, Loretta Grant, went to Japan as a participant in
the Statewide Program for Asian Studies, a part of the University of
Vermont's Asian Studies Outreach Program."
Asia Society Plans Bold Projects to Increase
Its Global Presence
(New York Times,
February 22, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "The
society also plans to step up its educational activities. It will take
a delegation of education leaders to India and hold a forum in China
on educational policy. A deeper understanding of Asia is no longer merely
beneficial, but essential, Ms. Desai said. People ought to think to
themselves, "'I don't know anything about that part of the world,
but I better, to be globally literate,' " she said. "This
is not just a nice idea. It's a necessity for the 21st century.""
IB Programs Elsewhere Also Attacked as Going
Against American Values
(Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
February 22, 2006) |
full story
Excerpt: "The
elimination of the International Baccalaureate program in Upper St.
Clair is the latest in a series of similar attacks against the program
alleging that its curriculum is contrary to American values. In
recent years, the school program, which was developed by a 68-year-old
organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, has faced at least nine other
challenges based on similar arguments. The IB program
aims to give students a world perspective and develop critical thinking
skills."
Learning Knows No National Borders
(ASCD, February 2006)
| full
story
Excerpt: "We
have much to do to shore up our educational systems and to ensure that
our children can compete globally in the future. We have many great
examples of increasing international understanding and cooperation that
we can follow. But as educators, we must start with ourselves, expanding
the scope of our knowledge and then passing it on to our students."
Bibb County Schools May Get International Flair
(Macon Telegraph,
February 12, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "You'll
see a more culturally diverse group of teachers in Bibb County (Georgia)
classrooms this coming fall. The school system is in the process of
hiring teachers from Argentina, Belgium, France, Germany, Jamaica, Mexico,
China, South Africa and Russia. Bibb County is buying into a program
called Visiting International Faculty, a Chapel Hill, N.C.-based exchange
program that brings foreign teachers to U.S. classrooms."
Network Sponsors Worldwide Sharing of Curricula
(Ed Week, February
8, 2006) | full
story (Subscription may be required)
Excerpt: "Nancy
Kaplan, a world-literature teacher at the College of Staten Island High
School for International Studies, in New York City, used the program
(IEARN) to create an “international teen scrapbook” for
her students and those from other countries. IEARN officials set up
an online forum for Ms. Kaplan, in which students are invited to post
essays and photos on subjects ranging from their lives in school to
their favorite books, magazines, and movies.
Since the project
was launched in September, Ms. Kaplan has received at least three postings
from a class in Damascus, Syria, sent to her by a teacher via e-mail;
she has another commitment to participate from a teacher in Bahrain.
Students from Ms. Kaplan’s classes are expected to contribute,
too. At the end of the year, her school will publish the scrapbook postings,
most likely online and in print."
Khan's Global Education Bill Heard
(Newton Tab (MA),
February 1, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "Legislation
State Rep. Kay Khan filed to encourage Massachusetts schools to develop
curriculum initiatives which promote global perspectives in education
was heard by the Joint Committee on Education on Tuesday, Jan. 31. Representative
Khan became interested in international education after being introduced
to foreign exchange programs and foreign language classes offered to
students in Newton public schools. "
Foreign Language Funding Raised
(Daily Princetonian,
January 11, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "President
Bush announced on Thursday that he will request $114 million from Congress
to expand foreign language training across the country. The National
Security Language Initiative is designed to increase national security
by raising the number of Americans learning strategic languages like
Arabic, Chinese, Russian, Hindi and Farsi from kindergarten through
the university level and into the workforce."
Educators Must Help State
Compete
(Charleston Gazette
(WV), January 9, 2006) | full
story (Free registration required)
This Op-Ed by
the West Virginia Secretary of Education and the Arts, Kay Goodwin,
takes a look at the current international education movement in the
state and recommends that educators try to bring the world into their
classrooms.
US college summit to tackle drop in foreign students
(Guardian (UK), January
4, 2006) | full
story
Excerpt: "American
university presidents are to meet with state officials in Washington
tomorrow to discuss how colleges in the United States can attract more
overseas students and strengthen the provision of non-traditional languages."
Press
Clippings:
Chinese Language
U.S. Teen Woos China
(LA Times, February 2, 2008) | full
story
Excerpt: Kyle Rothstein stands out in a sea of Chinese faces not because he is an American teenager with curly red hair and clear blue eyes, but because he speaks Chinese. Fluent Chinese.
The visual and verbal double take is the handiwork of his father, Jay Rothstein, a prescient American businessman who put Kyle in a bilingual English-Mandarin school in San Francisco when he was 5. The elder Rothstein had read that if you don't learn to speak a foreign language by that age, you never really get it.
Mandarin a Must for Some
(Sydney Morning Herald, September 21, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The study of Mandarin is set to become compulsory in some NSW public schools from next year. The Conservatorium High School in Sydney may introduce Mandarin as a mandatory subject as early as next year, as part of a wide-ranging review of its curriculum. A spokeswoman for the Department of Education confirmed "it has been raised as a possibility".
Mandarin Missionaries
(Wall Street Journal, September 14, 2007) | full
story (subscription may be required)
Excerpt: "When she started college in 2000, Tang Guofang didn't chose a popular major such as computer science or business administration that would have given her an edge in China's increasingly competitive job market. Instead, she enrolled in a newly launched course that attracted only a handful of students and puzzled her parents: Teaching Mandarin as a Second Language."
China's Doors Open Wide for Mass High Schoolers
(Boston Globe, August 26, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "The three Chinese teachers assigned to Michigan this school year are part of a group of 64 who arrived in the United States in early August to begin their two-year stints in 23 states. They left behind their jobs and families to join the international program that sends English-speaking Chinese residents into classrooms in the United States, Britain and many other countries large and small."
China's Doors Open Wide for Mass High Schoolers
(Boston Globe, August 26, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "Liebman was so enthralled by his experience in high school that China immediately became an integral part of his life when he returned from Beijing. He spent a summer as a delivery boy for a Chinese restaurant in Brookline to keep up his newfound language skills. He majored in Chinese at Yale University, studied Chinese law at Harvard Law School, and practiced corporate law in China. Liebman still visits his Chinese host family and other Chinese classmates when he travels to Beijing on business. "It's the most important thing I've ever done in my life," said Liebman, 38. "None of this would have happened without this exchange.""
Language of the Future Sounds Like Chinese
(Hartford Courtant, August 27, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "In the past two years, U.S.-China trade has soared nearly 50 percent, and China leapfrogged over Mexico to become our second-biggest trade partner behind Canada. China's growing global economic and political influence is fueling increases in teacher and student exchanges in Connecticut schools and driving a statewide push to educate children on all things Chinese."
Over a Billion Served
(Newsweek International, August 20, 2007) | full
story
Stephen Noerper, an international-relations
specialist and Asia scholar and the president of St. Patrick's Old
Cathedral Academy, writes that around the world, more adults and kids are
learning Chinese because China is booming and citizens around the globe
want a piece of the action. Two U.S. senators have proposed spending $1.3
billion on Chinese- language programs over the next five years.
Milwaukee Chinese School Part of Growing Nationwide Interest
(Milwaukee Channel, May 14, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "About 130 students have signed up so far to attend the Milwaukee Academy of Chinese Language, also part of a growing number of schools offering Chinese language classes nationwide....So far the school's students are mostly from the surrounding neighborhood, which is generally black and low income. He said he wants this type of education to be available for everyone."
Chinese as a Second Language for Americans
(Osgood File, CBS Radio, May 10, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: " Time was when American kids could pick Spanish or French as a foreign language to learn in school. And in some places German or Italian. Then after World War Two in the cold war era Russian became the language to learn.
And as Japan grew into such an economic powerhouse A lot of American kids tried to learn some Japanese. But NOW? With the great rise of the People's Republic of China. The language to learn is Chinese. 300 million people in this world speak English. But more than a BILLION speak Chinese. And in this country today at least 27 states offer Chinese language classes in either elementary, middle or high school."
Schools Add Chinese to Language Effort
(St. Petersburg Times, April 28, 2007) | full
story
Excerpt: "In January, Kennedy sent out a survey to the homes of 400 Safety Harbor sixth-graders asking if they would be interested in a Chinese language program or would like more information about it. More than 170 responded positively."
Chinese-Language Classes Full, But Teachers Scarce in US
|