It looks like they send their students to live for a year in Hangzhou. Now, that’s immersion!
http://www.cis.edu.hk/community/phoenix-soaring鳳凰展翅/index.aspx
Information for parents of kids in Mandarin immersion education
It looks like they send their students to live for a year in Hangzhou. Now, that’s immersion!
http://www.cis.edu.hk/community/phoenix-soaring鳳凰展翅/index.aspx
Check out this great site where your kids can learn 放开手, Let It Go in Chinese.
For those of us who are being subjected to endless renditions of it at home, make them sing it in Mandarin!
The version sung in 25 different language is also very cool and worth watching.
Here’s the video
and then here’s a video of each of the 25 singers singing her line which is pretty fascinating to watch.
If anyone does attend and wants to write what they learned, I’d love to post it here.
Beth

(sturti/istockphoto)
By Heather Clydesdale
As recognition of language immersion’s wide-ranging benefits increase, and schools across the United States establish new programs, many are finding that the journey is rewarding, but also has hurdles.
At the 2013 National Chinese Language Conference, Shuhan Wang, Ph.D, president of ELE Consulting International, assembled a team of administrators and teachers who have successfully created Chinese immersion programs. In a workshop setting, she asked them to share their experiences and map the sometimes bewildering terrain that educators and administers must traverse for immersion initiatives to take root and thrive. Their discussion yielded helpful insights, and led to the launching of a new network, the Chinese Early Language Immersion Network at Asia Society (CELIN).
Please read more here.
If you’re in a new Mandarin immersion program, just be aware that there are a lot of weddings and baby showers in your future. New programs mean new teachers. And new teachers do what lots of folks do when they finally settle into a good, solid job with a future–they start to look towards their own future. So you’ll see lots of weddings and then lots of babies. It’s a wonderful part of the cycle of life.
The lunch room at Madison Elementary School was transformed into a makeshift reception hall Saturday as students, staff and parents celebrated the fact that five of the school’s eight Chinese immersion faculty members are set to tie the knot in the coming months.
“It’s a wonderful thing to be able to celebrate,” Karen Kruse, a teacher at the school, said.
Kindergarten teachers Congyu “Chris” Zhang and Xinyue “Sabrina” Lu along with second-grade teacher Feng Dong, fourth-grade teacher YuHan Chang and Chinese immersion instructional coordinator Hao Li, were the guests of honor Saturday. Zhang and Li will wed May 31 in a dual ceremony with Chang and her soon-to-be husband Ying-Ling Chiang. Chang, Lu and Dong are marrying men outside the circle of the Madison program.
Please read more here.
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The Longest ‘Ia
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| Story by Ronald Williams, Jr.Photos by Elyse Butler and Matt Mallams
It’s a tough day for practice. Even with the usual tradewinds that breeze across this campus high in Palolo Valley, it’s hot. The sparse patches of green on a field trampled by heavy feet seem to long for rain. Jerseys hang limply from shoulder pads, sticking to sweaty stomachs and backs. Players keep glancing at the oversize Gatorade thermos that’s a fixture at any football practice. Looking out across this field, it seems it could be an early fall afternoon on any high school athletic field in the country, from Tacoma to Topeka … until you listen.
“Lima! Lima!” someone in the defensive backfield shouts, and players shift into nickel coverage. Without missing a beat, the quarterback audibles, “‘Aina! ‘Aina!” and follows with a rhythmic “Ha, he, hu!” At “hu!” the center snaps the ball. The quarterback hands it off, and the play sweeps to the outside. A linebacker yells, “Hema! Hema!” and the defense swings left in pursuit.
They’re obviously not in Kansas. This group of young men and coaches is Na Koa (The Warriors), the hui popeku (football team) of Ke Kula Kaiapuni ‘O Anuenue (The Immersion School of Anuenue), and they’re conducting football practice in the native tongue of these Islands, a language that only a few decades ago had nearly gone extinct. Please read more here. |
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