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It's Got to Be Chinese for American Kids!
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American parents are plunging their children into Chinese immersion classes and hiring Mandarin-speaking nannies in the hope of giving them a competitive edge as China imposes itself as an economic giant.

 

"The Chinese language is extremely hot at the moment," said Michael Levine, vice-president of the New York-based Asia Society, a non-profit organization that promotes knowledge and understanding of Asia. "Chinese is a language that people in the hinterland in states as diverse as Kansas and Kentucky now want to speak."

 

The trend is such that many schools across the country are unable to meet the growing demand for Mandarin Chinese. Although the most widely spoken language in the world it's just starting to make inroads in US schools.

 

"Parents and people in the school business are beginning to see China as one big opportunity," Levine told AFP. "The question is -- where on Earth, literally, are we going to find the high-quality teachers that we need to fulfill the demand?"

 

Shuhan Wang, executive director of the Asia Society's Chinese Language Initiative, said between 300 and 400 schools nationwide currently offer Chinese to an estimated 25,000 to 50,000 students and many more are gearing up for it as the federal government makes funding available.

 

"I've been waiting for this for 20 years and I was always hopeful that finally one day the US will wake up to the fact that we really need to expand language offerings in our schools," Wang said.

 

At Potomac Elementary School, near Washington, the Chinese immersion program launched in 1996 has become so popular that about 40 children are on a waiting list to join and several of the spots available each year are allocated by a lottery. About 18 percent of the students are of Asian origin.

 

"It's been a hit," said principal Linda Goldberg. "We're in a global society and the parochial view of English first no longer holds."

 

Diana Conway said she and her husband decided to enroll their three children in the Chinese immersion program at Potomac to expose them to a different language and culture increasingly present on the world stage.

 

"Whatever path my children follow this will be terrific for them," she said. "French is a wonderful language, it'll open Europe to you and a lot of Africa but ... it won't open any doors to you in Asia."

 

The 150 students in the program at Potomac, where signs are posted in English and Chinese, spend half their school day learning mathematics and science in Mandarin and then switch to English for reading, social studies and language arts. Many of the pupils also get to travel to China during spring vacation.

 

The public school's three Chinese teachers speak only in Mandarin to their pupils using the blackboard, body language, facial expressions and objects to get their messages across.

 

"It's kind of difficult but it's cool and people recognize you for it," said James, a 10-year-old struggling with a math equation in one of the classrooms. Olivia, 7, said she enjoys learning the language for another reason. "It's fun because I can speak it with my brother and we tell secrets in Chinese that my parents don't understand," she said.

 

While US schools rush to fill the growing demand for Chinese the same trend is hitting companies that place nannies and au pairs who say they're being deluged with requests for Chinese speakers.

 

In New York where Chinese nannies are in huge demand some can command a salary of US$20,000 more than the average nanny. One Chinese nanny reportedly secured a US$70,000-salary after a bidding war between two families.

 

Agencies are also reporting a surge in the demand for Chinese au pairs. Michael DiMauro, senior vice president for marketing at the American Institute For Foreign Study (AIFS), which oversees Au Pairs in America, said his company in the last year has received requests from around 1,400 families nationwide interested in Chinese au pairs.  

 

So far, the company has only been able to provide two, but about 200 more were expected to arrive in the US this year. "There is greater demand than supply," he told AFP. "But government relations are improving in terms of cultural exchange so what wasn't possible a few years ago is possible now.

 

"There is a movement between the two governments to promote exchange," he added. "We bring in about 4,700 au pairs from around the world annually and we expect in a of couple years that China will be one of our strongest countries."

 

(China Daily via AFP January 23, 2007)

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