A Chinese class in Chicago high school
A Chinese class in Chicago high school
By Xu Jing, Wan Fang and Yang Haiyun in Chicago | Xinhua | China Daily, Updated: 2019-10-12
Standing in front of the blackboard, Christina Xu announced the start of the class. Eighteen students stood up, shouted their greetings of "good morning" in Chinese, and started the 90-minute class.
This is a usual Chinese class at Walter Payton College Preparatory High School in downtown Chicago. The 18 students were divided into small groups, four in each group, to practice Chinese speaking and writing.
The four different tones are considered one of the most difficult parts in Chinese learning. To make it easier, Xu attached to each tone a gesture, and asked the students to give corresponding gestures to the words she pronounced.
In sentence composing section, the students were encouraged to write down as many Chinese sentences as they can. Chances were there were often strokes either to the left or to the right missing in a character. When Xu added the missed strokes together with humorous comments, the students laughed again and easily remembered the correct ones.
Walter Payton is one of the 41 public schools in Chicago that offer Chinese classes. Some 60 certified full-time Chinese teachers like Xu are offering Chinese courses in four levels to some 11,000 elementary and middle school students in Chicago Public Schools (CPS).
"CPS offers 12 foreign languages for students to choose," said Jane Lu, CPS Chinese world language coordinator and director of the Confucius Institute in Chicago. "But in 2018, Chinese surpassed French to become the second most chosen foreign language."
Lu attributed it to the rapid development and rising of China on the world's stage. By choosing to learn Chinese, "the students are aiming at the potentials China has, and investing in the future."
Sixteen-year-old Steven Norinsky is a junior at Walter Payton. He started to learn Chinese in elementary school, and has kept learning ever since. "I plan to learn it throughout high school for the rest of my time here," he said.
"I chose Chinese because I think it would be the most valuable language to learn," Norinsky explained. "It's more valuable to know a language that more people speak and especially the United States has a lot of relations with China."
Norinsky said he believes that learning Chinese will help him in his career in the future.
CPS started to offer Chinese as a second language option in 1999. Only several schools had Chinese classes until 2006, when the Confucius Institute in Chicago was established.
The institute is responsible for coordinating Chinese courses and training Chinese teachers in CPS. Establishment of the Confucius Institute has added wings to Chinese teaching in CPS, Lu said.
The institute has not stopped on this. It sends more than 20 CPS students to China for exchange and study every year. "Only after having personal experiences of China would the students find a fair and objective knowledge about the country and share it with others," Lu stressed.
I really wish I had learned Chinese. By the time I got here, even though I was immersed in Chinese, I never learned very much, and I only know two symbols. One is the symbol for "male" because in some ancient towns the washrooms aren't labeled with English or symbols, and the symbol for "fat", because I look at labels on milk to make sure I am buying skim milk.
I think it's a great thing for US students to learn Chinese or any other language in addition to English.
One of the things that I found most interesting when I would visit China on business were the thousands of Chinese students learning English.
As you've seen, English is the second language in China. It's used everywhere, and many people speak it at least a little.