• Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School

    Gordon Elementary School

    6300 Avenue B
Bellaire, TX 77401

    Houston Independent School District is currently accepting applications for Pre-K to second grade for the 2012-2013 school year. 
Please visit www.houstonisd.org/magnet for more details and to apply the Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School.

    Texas
Holden Elementary School, HoustonHISD’s first ever Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School will open in time for the 2012-2013 school year, the Board of Education decided unanimously at its December 2011 monthly meeting. The school will be located at the site of the former Holden Elementary School, 812 W. 28th St., and will initially serve students in the early elementary school grades, with additional grades to be added in subsequent years. The school will serve youngsters from throughout the district, and transportation will be provided.

     

  • I’m giving a workshop at the conference on why parents chose Mandarin immersion for their children. If you’re planning on coming to the conference, drop a line and we can have a parent meet-up while we’re there.

    Beth

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    State of the Field:
    Proficiency, Sustainability, and Beyond
    April 12–14, 2012 | Washington Marriott Wardman Park

    Extended Early-bird Registration!

    We’ve extended the early-bird deadline, so you have until February 15 to get the most savings on your NCLC registration.

    Program Lineup Now Available

    This year’s exciting conference program lineup is now online. Take a look at the 60 sessions on offer. (The full program, including times, locations, and session descriptions, will be available soon.)

    5 Reasons to Be in Washington, DC this April

    1. Fifth Annual National Chinese Language Conference: Join us to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the NCLC and reflect on the state of the field – the accomplishments of the past, and the challenges and opportunities of the future.
    2. Rich Preconference Offerings: Sign up for school visits to see Chinese classrooms in action and find out how others teach Chinese language and culture. Register for workshops and learn from experts on assessment, standards, instructional strategies, calligraphy, and music.
    3. Exciting Conference Program: Hear from visionary plenary speakers and enjoy an exceptional musical performance. For the first time in the U.S., I SING BEIJINGwill perform for NCLC participants.
    4. Springtime in Washington, DC: Explore our nation’s capital and enjoy the beauty of the blooming cherry blossoms.
    5. Proximity to Capitol Hill: Be an advocate for world language learning. Make an appointment with your congressional representative and let them know why funding for Chinese language programs is a high priority.
    Photo credit: flickr/shagyshoo
    Learn more on the conference website:www.AsiaSociety.org/NCLC
    Spread the word: print and share theconference flyer
    Network with more than a thousand educators, plus publishers, service providers, and policymakers.
    See what it’s all about! The video page features keynotes and performances from years past.
    Experience Washington, DC and the National Cherry Blossom Festival. Explore the city’s cultural treasures.
    Copyright © 2012 Asia Society. All rights reserved.
    Our mailing address is:

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  • December 22nd, 2011 by Chris Livaccari

    A student at Aiton Elementary School in Washington, D.C., practices Chinese. (Grace Norman)

    This is part of a series of year-end posts on Asia Blog written by Asia Society experts and Associate Fellows looking back on noteworthy events in 2011. You can read the entire series here.

    In the 1980s and 1990s, in an effort to define the territory of our field, language educators created the idea of the “less commonly taught languages,” or LCTL . What is peculiar about this notion is that it includes just about every single one of the more than 5,000 languages spoken on Planet Earth, with the exception of English and just three other languages: Spanish, French, and German. For many years, these “big three” languages were just about the only choices available to language learners in the U.S., especially at the K-12 level.

    What is perhaps most puzzling is that these “commonly taught languages” represent a mere drop in the linguistic bucket in terms of number of speakers worldwide. Combined, they comprise about 500 million speakers, roughly half that of Mandarin Chinese alone, and not much more than Hindi or Arabic. In fact, Spanish is the only one of the Big Three that has significantly more than 100 million speakers — other languages in this range include the aforementioned Hindi and Arabic, Bengali, Japanese, Punjabi, Russian and Portuguese (mostly representing Brazil).

    In the early ’90s, when I began my studies of Chinese and Japanese, the world looked very different than it does today. I can look back to a time when Japan was “number one” and Japanese was the language of technology and industry, the language of the future. If you had looked at less commonly taught languages in 1990 or 1991, the smart money would have been on Japanese to supplant German or French as a “commonly taught” language. But in 2011 or 2012, that distinction clearly belongs to Chinese.

    Read more here.

  • What You (Really) Need to Know

    By LAWRENCE H. SUMMERS
    Published: January 20, 2012

    A PARADOX of American higher education is this: The expectations of leading universities do much to define what secondary schools teach, and much to establish a template for what it means to be an educated man or woman. College campuses are seen as the source for the newest thinking and for the generation of new ideas, as society’s cutting edge.

    Viktor Koen

    And the world is changing very rapidly. Think social networking, gay marriage, stem cells or the rise of China. Most companies look nothing like they did 50 years ago. Think General Motors, AT&T or Goldman Sachs.

    Read the full essay, and the discussion that followed, here.

  • Speaking a foreign language is an impediment to being president, a recent podcast on NPR found.

    Please click here to read and hear the discussion.

     

    John McWhorter, a contributing editor for The New Republic, wrote recently about past presidents, the current presidential candidates and the languages they speak. He explains why being bilingual may be considered a political liability today.

  • This is from the Asia Society’s newsletter, on the topic of Education › Policy Initiatives › State Initiatives. While all this education jargon can get pretty difficult to understand at time, the general theme seems to be how standards are being set for what all students nationwide should be learning, and how those are going to be taught in Mandarin.

    Beth

     

    Implementation of the Common Core State Standards


    Teacher professional development workshop. (vm/istockphoto)

    Over the course of the last decade, we’ve seen many examples of states adopting best practices in global learning from one another. The wide-scale adoption of the Common Core State Standards, and specifically how it relates to global competence, is a new opportunity for states to leverage one another’s thinking and models. We’ve invited Cheri Quinlan, the coordinator of World Languages, International Education, and Gifted and Talented Programs at the New Jersey Department of Education, to share with us a collaboration between New Jersey, West Virginia, and Washington—as well as many ready-to-use tools for your own state. –The editors

    By Cheri Quinlan

    The advent of the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) marked an historical event in the United States. For the first time ever, a majority of states had agreed upon what all students, regardless of where they live or what their circumstances are, should know and be able to do in mathematics and in language arts and literacy.

    At the same time, The Longview Foundation, announced a multi-state grant competition to promote international education and to create models for other states. How can states come together both in person and virtually to create a model that moves this nation forward in its effort to prepare all students to be ready for college and an interconnected world? New Jersey, Washington, and West Virginia, each with their own unique approach to international education, were thrilled to be named recipients of the Longview Foundation grant and excited by the opportunity to develop a three-state partnership to create such models.

    Here’s what we did:

    New Jersey developed the Connecting to the Common Core institute, a three-day professional development opportunity for teams of K-12 teachers in all content areas. The institute was designed to facilitate the development of interdisciplinary curricular materials and effective instructional practices that address the expectations of the CCSS.

    The goal of the institute was for each team to develop interdisciplinary project based learning scenarios that incorporated global perspectives while addressing the expectations of English Language Arts Writing Standard 1. On Day One, Heidi Hayes Jacobs discussed how global perspectives could be effectively incorporated into learning experiences addressing the CCSS. Afterwards, participants explored products and practices to support the integration of global perspectives and to move the learning beyond the confines of the classroom. On Day Two, the focus moved to performance-based assessments. Mari Pearlman provided guidance in developing assessments linked to Writing Standard 1. Subsequently, participants explored Writing Standard 1 in depth, examining the components of an argument in a discipline-specific content. The last day of the institute, Carol Ann Tomlinson addressed the group about the importance of incorporating differentiated instruction strategies when designing lessons. During the fall of the current school year, the teams of teachers will come together again to examine student work related to the scenarios and to develop strategies for turnkey training within their schools and districts.

    The two partner states played an important role in laying the groundwork for the Connecting to the Common Core institute. West Virginia had initiated a two-year Go Global program that provided training for teams of teachers from schools committed to enhancing global awareness. Representatives from the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction in Washington and the Department of Education in New Jersey attended the 2010 Go Global Institute, presented on initiatives in their states, and served as ‘critical friends’ during participant work sessions. Later in the summer of 2010, Washington sponsored a Global Competence institute. Representatives from New Jersey and West Virginia participated and presented at the institute. These face-to-face meetings served as a catalyst for building strong collegial relationships that continue through a virtual meeting environment.

    It is anticipated that educators in Washington and West Virginia will implement the scenarios in their classrooms and collegial discussions centered on student work will take place virtually among teachers from the three-state partnership. Imagine how far reaching and impactful this work might be if the readers of this article choose to replicate the process in their states. By providing open access to all materials used during the institute it is hoped that is exactly what will happen. All materials used during the institute—presentation slides, archived webinars, and resources related to integrating global perspectives, developing an argument, creating performance-based assessment, and providing differentiated learning experiences—are stored online for others to use. Once the scenarios are ready for publication they may be accessed at the same link.

    Learn more about International Education in Washington.

    See additional information on Go Global in West Virginia or visit the Go Global Wiki.

    More here.