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    I heard a new term last night as we were at the dining room table. There was a discussion of Chinese and reading and keeping up over the summer and my middle schooler said of one of her classmate’s moms, “Oh, she’s a white tiger.”

    “White tiger?” I asked.

    “That’s a white parent who’s a tiger mom,” she said, as if I should have known the answer.

    I asked if I was a white tiger and there was a looooong pause.

    I’m thinking we need t-shirts!

    FYI, 甝 is the word for white tiger, it’s pronounced hán.

    So anyone else running into this term among students?

    And, more importantly, how do you feel about it?

  • World Language Immersion Program Expands for 2015-16 School Year

    Date Posted: Wednesday, January 7th, 2015
    Categories:  Department of Education News Office of Governor Markell

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    Next fall, more than 2,300 kindergarten through third grade students will be enrolled in Governor Jack Markell’s World Language Expansion Initiative, as six more schools across the state begin offering students the opportunity to participate in an elementary immersion program studying either Mandarin Chinese or Spanish.

    The initiative launched in the 2012-13 school year with four programs in three elementary schools. An annual investment of $1.9 million will support programs reaching nearly 10,000 students in K-8 immersion programs by 2022.

    “We know that the most natural language learning and the most effective language instruction happens when students start the process as early as possible. By continuing to expand language learning in Delaware, we have the chance to provide our kids an edge in a multilingual and multicultural workforce and meet our need to build a talent base in Delaware that will compete, lead and win on a global stage,” said Markell, who announced the expansion this afternoon at an event celebrating a new partnership with Wanxiang that will give Delaware high school students the chance to study abroad in China.

    Please read more here.

  • Screen Shot 2015-05-30 at 9.31.01 AMDavid Sarasohn: King School’s Chinese immersion program (OPINION)
    By David Sarasohn

    For The Oregonian

    May 29, 2015 at 2:54 PM

    By David Sarasohn

    First graders, having recently escaped from Sesame Street, spend a lot of time working on shapes and colors. So last week in inner Northeast Portland’s King School, 10 first graders were working, with intense concentration, to puzzle out the differences between a triangle, a circle and a square.

    Except everything they’re saying, and everything written on the wide sheets of paper in front of the class, is in Chinese.

    Nobody ever got to that stretch of Sesame Street.

    This Wednesday’s Junior Rose Parade will feature a new entry: several dozen inner city kindergartners and first graders who are immersed in Chinese. It’s the first year of the King program, and the first time anything quite like it has surfaced in this neighborhood.

    As parade entries go, it beats a clown car.

    Portland Public Schools already had one Chinese immersion program, at Southeast Portland’s Woodstock Elementary School, with a sizable Asian student population. The King school program was spurred by a Chinese language program at nearby Albina Head Start, with teachers from the Chinese government’s Confucius Institute. Ron Herndon, head of Albina Head Start, pushed hard for an elementary school Chinese immersion program for AHS alumni.

    Please read more here.

  • Bilingual classes in Hong Kong public schools suit Chinese and non-Chinese alike

    Two public schools have stepped up to the challenge of providing cost-effective options for bilingual learning

    PUBLISHED : Monday, 26 January, 2015, 6:15am
    UPDATED : Monday, 26 January, 2015, 6:15am

    While the number of international schools in Hong Kong has grown over the past decade, non-Chinese parents, among them long-time residents in Hong Kong, are looking for a bilingual education for their children, and at a much lower cost.

    And two public schools have sought to meet their need.

    “Eight years ago, we noticed that the number of non-Chinese families living in Sai Kung was growing,” says the principal of the Lee Sin Yam Memorial Primary School, Lewis Ng Chor-kung.

    “Some of them had children who were enrolled in local kindergartens, and receiving basic bilingual education. I met parents who were looking for a school with a more well-rounded environment where both English and Cantonese are used, so we decided to alter our curriculum to cater for these needs.”

    The core curriculum at Lee Sin Yam is similar to other public schools, except that they have two streams. In one stream, all subjects are taught in Chinese (except English).

    In the other stream (the Chinese-English stream), core subjects such as mathematics and computer studies are taught in English, while other subjects are taught in Cantonese or Putonghua. Children who come from households where Cantonese is not used receive extra language assistance through project-learning, debate, drama, sports and field trips incorporated into the curriculum, allowing them to interact with Cantonese-speaking children in a more informal environment.

    “The programme benefits both local Chinese and non-Chinese students. The students develop better language skills not only in the classroom, but also from their social interactions, and they get a rich multicultural experience. The programme is structured so it reduces the use of textbooks and focuses on task-based projects and real-world learning. Having a mixture of native English and native Cantonese speakers means both groups benefit in their bilingual training. It is refreshing to see young learners embrace other languages and cultures,” says Ng.

    George Woodman, a Briton who has been living in Hong Kong since 1997, enrolled his son at Lee Sin Yam so he can learn Cantonese. “Lee Sin Yam reflects the Sai Kung community. The students in international schools tend to come from a subset of the community, but we value the diversity,” he says.

    Susan Yeung enrolled her two daughters, Chloe and Caley, at the school for similar reasons. Although her family speaks Cantonese at home, she says she didn’t want her children to attend a local Chinese school because she feels that the workload at such schools is often too heavy.

    “It is important that my girls are bilingual and biliterate in Chinese, but also proficient in English. I don’t think their Chinese would have been up to par if they had gone to an international school, and I think their English would not be as good if they had gone to a regular Chinese medium school. Lee Sin Yam has a good mix of cultural backgrounds, so it feels like an international school with the benefit of being cost free,” Yeung says.

    HKTA Yuen Yuen Institute No 3 Secondary School recently introduced a curriculum tailored to foreign students. They learn subjects such as maths, liberal studies, integrated science and computer studies in English, but Chinese language and “living Chinese” – a more practical substitute subject for Chinese history, are taught in Putonghua; and design and technology, home economics, visual arts, physical education, music and religious and ethical education in both English and Cantonese.

    It is refreshing to see younger learners embrace other languages
    LEWIS NG, PRINCIPAL AT LEE SIN YAM MEMORIAL PRIMARY SCHOOL

    The Education Bureau provides funding for non-Chinese speaking students in all government and aided schools, so Lee Sin Yam and Yuen Yuen used these extra funds to support their programmes. “The bureau advocates progressive change, and our curriculum has many elements of its suggested modules of learning. We did not need to get permission for a curriculum change, as our programme already addresses concepts that the bureau suggests for non-Chinese speaking students,” says principal Ng.

    Please read more here.

  • At the beginning of May, the California State Board of Education approved, with a landslide vote, the Wei Yu International Charter School. Wei Yu will be the first Mandarin immersion charter school in Santa Clara County, and it is scheduled to open for the 2016-17 school year.

    The journey to approve Wei Yu took the group of founding parents, led by Dr. Felicity Miao, through challenging hearings at the local Moreland School District, Santa Clara County Office of Education, and finally, the State Board of Education in Sacramento where they achieved success.

    Roy Stanley, President of the governing board of Wei Yu commented, “The Wei Yu founding parents established a strong network of experts to bolster their curriculum development, but at the core, it was a grassroots effort led by a group of dedicated parents from the community who persevered in getting this innovative educational program approved. I am pleased that the State Board of Education recognized this need and reacted positively to our voices. We are very grateful to have the expertise of our board and advisors such as Dr. Danni Tsai, whose advocacy of language immersion education guided the parents to success.”

    In addition to Dr. Tsai, Wei Yu’s governing board and advisors include Nobel Laureate Thomas Südhof, noted bilingual educator Helen Wong, and a team of seasoned teachers and administrators.

    The founding families hail from diverse backgrounds and share the goal of raising children in a multilingual educational program that prepares them to succeed in the global economy.

    Despite long waiting lists in existing Mandarin immersion programs, and the U.S. State Department deeming Mandarin a “critical language,” access to Mandarin immersion programs in Silicon Valley remains extremely limited. Even though Silicon Valley tech giants conduct heavy business with China, only two communities in Santa Clara County offer public Mandarin immersion programs in the elementary years, with the most recent program in Palo Alto having launched over seven years ago.

    The addition of Wei Yu International Charter School as an option for learning Mandarin will give California a chance to catch up with states like Utah and Minnesota that lead the nation in public elementary Mandarin programs per student.

    According to Dr. Danni Tsai, an educational visionary who was instrumental in the adoption of the Cupertino Union School District Mandarin program, “The benefits of bilingualism are clear. It is imperative that we prepare students for the needs and demands of a global society. Schools like Wei Yu will provide access and opportunities for children to acquire multilingualism, an important life and career skill. A language immersion curriculum coupled with STEAM is clearly relevant to our area. Parents should have curriculum options that match the inventive nature of Silicon Valley.”

    Wei Yu International Charter School will be a K-8 Mandarin immersion STEAM school. The school plans to seek facilities in the Moreland neighborhood of West San Jose and will open its doors in July 2016 with Kindergarten and 1st grade classes.

    Please visit http://www.weiyucharter.org for more information.

  • Screen Shot 2015-05-28 at 12.21.17 PMJust in: ‘Game changer’ to game over for Westside ‘immersion’ school

    LA Unified Superintendent Ramon Cortines has cancelled the district’s plans for a proposed construction project at a Westside school campus that was to house an expanded foreign language immersion program.

    Explaining the rationale for his decision in a three-page memo to members of the school board and its bond oversight committee yesterday, Cortines said the project “will not move forward,” but he vowed to work with district officials to provide an alternative pathway for students to continue their immersion studies into high school.

    The decision is a blow to school board member Steve Zimmer, who had hailed the expansion of the program into a new school as a “game changer” for the district as part of an overarching strategy to stem the tide of falling enrollment.

    Please read more here.

    Some previous reports:

    http://laschoolreport.com/zimmer-immersion-school-is-game-changer-to-stem-falling-enrollment-lausd/

    http://laschoolreport.com/westside-group-outraged-over-proposed-immersion-school/

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    Boren Scholar with a talent for study abroad makes plans for China

    May 8, 2015 – 1:08pm

    When she was in kindergarten, Megan Garland did the usual things 5-year-olds do — she counted, she colored, she learned Chinese.

    She didn’t know it then, but China would soon fill her horizon, and no mere ocean would keep them apart. Now the UO’s newest Boren Scholar, Garland is about to graduate with degrees in Chinese and international studies before crossing the Pacific to spend a year in the country that has captivated her for so long.

    “It’s just a really interesting place. It’s so different,” the UO senior said recently of her China fascination. “But the people are really, really nice, and its culture is just this interesting mix of modernism and traditional Chinese.”

    The Boren Awards for International Study are among the most coveted scholarships for students who wish to study abroad. An initiative of the National Security Education Program, they can run from a summer to a semester to a full year.

    Garland received a full-year, $20,000 scholarship to study at Nanjing University in the eastern city of the same name. She will spend half the year taking classes, some with other American students and others with Chinese students, and then do an internship for the remainder of the year.

    But it won’t be Garland’s first trip to China. Or her second or third, for that matter.

    She’s already had three study-abroad trips to China and made other visits on vacation. And it all traces back to kindergarten, when Garland was in the first-ever class of a Mandarin immersion program in Portland Public Schools.

    The program places students in Chinese-speaking classes half the day and English classes the other half, starting in kindergarten. Garland was among the first 40 students enrolled.

    The UO later partnered with Portland schools to establish the nation’s first K-16 Chinese Flagship language program, making it all but inevitable that Garland would ultimately enroll here. The program worked so well that when Garland arrived as a freshman, she tested into the Chinese language program at the 400 course level, effectively allowing her to skip most of the lower-division curriculum.

    Please read more here.