• By SINDYA N. BHANOO

    Published: April 2, 2012

    Learning a foreign language is never easy, but contrary to common wisdom, it is possible for adults to process a language the same way a native speaker does. And over time, the processing improves even when the skill goes unused, researchers are reporting.

    Chris Gash

    For their study, in the journal PloS One, the scientists used an artificial language of 13 words, completely different from English. “It’s totally impractical to follow someone to high proficiency because it takes years and years,” said the lead author, Michael Ullman, a neuroscientist at Georgetown University Medical Center.

    The language dealt with pieces and moves in a computer game, and the researchers tested proficiency by asking test subjects to play the game.

    The subjects were split into two groups. One group studied the language in a formal classroom setting, while the other was trained through immersion.

    Please read more here.

  • This is from NPR. And please note that it was published on APRIL FIRST…
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    April 1, 2012

    For years, New York parents have been applying to preschools even before their youngsters are born. That’s not new, but the approach one prestigious pre-school on the Upper West Side is.

    At the Porsafillo Preschool Academy, all applicants must now submit a DNA analysis of their children.

    The preschool is housed in a modern glass and steel building designed by IM Pei. It’s situated in a leafy corner of the Upper West Side. On a recent afternoon, Headmaster Rebecca Unsinn showed off “Porsafillo Pre,” as it’s called.

    “Over here, we have computer labs, C++ learning, which of course, as I’m sure you know, is a language of computers,” she says. Wait, computer language? These preschoolers are learning C++?

    “Oh, absolutely they are,” Unsinn says. “And they’re very good at it.”

    Please read and listen here.

  • Immersion program gets an A

    Advocate staff photo by BRYAN TUCK<br />Students in Boucher Elementary School's Chinese immersion program, Dwayne Issac, center, and Cameron Charles try out their language skills and purchase cookies from Xing Zhoug Wang Friday morning at the Asian Market in Lafayette.

    Kindergartners busy learning Chinese

    BY MARSHA SILLS

    Acadiana bureau

    April 03, 2012

    “All research shows that especially in a school environment it takes a minimum of eight years to learn a foreign language to the point that you won’t forget it.” Nicole boudreaux, lead immersion teacher

    LAFAYETTE — Jade Carter already speaks French at home with her family.

    Now, the kindergartner is helping her family learn Chinese — Jade is one of nine kindergarten students enrolled in the Mandarin Chinese immersion program at Alice Boucher Elementary’s World Languages Academy.

    “We were excited when we learned about the program,” said the five-year-old’s mother, Sybil Carter, who teaches French at Southern University.

    The family attends community Chinese language classes offered on Saturdays, and Carter’s son is in the Lafayette School District’s French immersion program.

    “We want them to be ‘polylingual,’” she said of her and her husband’s choice to enroll their children in foreign language immersion programs. “This is something we couldn’t find anywhere else.”

    Please read more here.

  • Chapel Hill-Carrboro parents: Don’t end Chinese language program

    BY TOM HARTWELL, CORRESPONDENT
    CHAPEL HILL – A report that recommends suspending dual English-Chinese language classes met strong criticism and disappointment from parents and students involved in the program.The Mandarin Chinese dual language program got a ringing show of support from than 100 parents and students at Thursday’s meeting of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Board of Education.

    They wore red to show support for the program, which puts elementary, middle and high school students in a language immersion setting in which half of their classes, like math and science, are taught in Mandarin Chinese.

    No one would have guessed the program’s future was in jeopardy a year ago, when the school board resolved to double the size of program at the elementary school level. But in conjunction with redistricting for the new elementary school opening in 2013, a study determined the costs associated with bringing Chinese educators were higher than anticipated, and that the program was not viable.

    Please read more here.

  • It’s good to remember every once in awhile that most of our MI programs are in schools with many different strands. Here’s a nice story about one such strand at Portland’s Hosford Middle School.

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    PORTLAND, Ore. — For one local school principal, basketball is much more than a game.

    Principal Kevin Bacon is using basketball to “iron out” social and cultural issues at Hosford Middle School in southeast Portland. It’s a sixth-through-eighth-grade school known for its global outlook and Spanish and Mandarin language immersion programs.

    And now Bacon’s story is the subject of a documentary called “Lessons of Basketball and War.”

    “It was kind of a blessing to know from an early age what I wanted to do,” Bacon told KOIN with a laugh. “And that, of course, was if I didn’t make it to the NBA.”

    It seems like Bacon has known forever that he’d be an educator. And he is.

    At Hosford Middle School, he noticed several years back that a handful of young East African refugees — from war and famine — were putting his skills to the test. These teens, in a new home in a new school and in a new country, were coming from places like war-torn Somalia. And they were finding assimilation into America difficult. As the new documentary points out, some girls still carried tribal differences with them into the the school halls.

    Please read more here.

  • Delaware is one of four state education agencies, four Chinese Flagship Centers and numerous school districts from across 10 states that are working collaboratively to implement K-12 Chinese education pathways over the next three years.

    Lead by the Brigham Young University Chinese Flagship Center and Utah State Office of Education and funded by a $1 million federal grant from the Department of Defense’s National Security Education Program, the consortium is working to create, implement and disseminate what will become a national model of a well-articulated and replicable K-12 pathway for Chinese language study. By college graduation, students should achieve professional level (ACTFL Superior) proficiency.

    Please read more here.

  • SOUTH BRUNSWICK — By a one-vote margin, townships officials rejected plans for a Mandarin Chinese immersion charter school that had been opposed by residents in three towns.

    Founders of the proposed Princeton International Academy Charter School, which spent two years seeking local approvals, saw their request for a land use variance narrowly defeated when the zoning voted about 12:30 a.m. today.

    With five votes necessary to pass, only four board members voted in favor of the plan and three opposed it.

    Please read more here.