ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -- The short teacher with the bamboo-print blouse hands her students a mini-football, basketball and soccer ball, and tells them to practice their words. "Don't drop the ball," she jokes.As the students pass the balls up and down the rows, they count.San shi si.San shi wu.San shi liu.Thirty-four. Thirty-five. Thirty-six."Very good," Jingsi Cheng tells them, first in English and then in Mandarin Chinese.With every exotic new word they learn, the 23 seventh- and eighth-graders in Cheng's first-period Chinese class make the planet a smaller place.They also offer some observers proof that an American education system often panned as detached from a fast-changing world can become more responsive."It's just a great way to teach students in the 21st century," said principal Dallas Jackson of Thurgood Marshall Fundamental Middle School in St. Petersburg. "I want to provide the best, current education we can possibly offer here."Cheng's two classes at Thurgood Marshall, offered for the first time this year, are among hundreds cropping up around the country, fueled by awareness of China's growing economic muscle, the demands of parents and the prodding of educators who want schools to offer something fresh and maybe, just maybe, a little more relevant.When education guru Willard Daggett gives speeches, he often cracks this joke: Why are 1.4-million American kids learning French when India and China are reshaping the world? The punch line: Because we have so many French teachers.Mandarin Chinese is spoken by more than 1-billion people. Yet just a few years ago, it wasn't even an afterthought in U.S. schools.A national survey in 2000 by the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages estimated that 5,000 students were learning Chinese -- barely a blip compared to the 4.8-million learning Spanish, and barely more than the 3,300 learning an American Indian tongue.Today, an informed guess pegs the figure at 50,000, making Chinese far and away the fastest-growing language taught."The growth has been substantial," said Steve Ackley, spokesman for the foreign languages council. "Everyone realizes this is a country with whom we are going to have to deal on a business and social and cultural level in the future."The demand has been so great that it's outstripping the ability of schools to find good teachers. For anyone who wants public schools to change, it's a sobering reminder that even where there is consensus about something in education, things don't get fixed overnight."We do have some native speakers of Chinese who are currently in the community who are anxious to get into teaching," said Jan Kucerik, supervisor of K-12 world languages in Pinellas. "But I do anticipate that that pot's going to dry up ... unless we get students graduating from the universities."Efforts are under way to get more teachers in the pipeline.The Florida Department of Education recently created an expedited certification process for potential Chinese language teachers, Kucerik said. The Confucius Institute at the University of South Florida is working on the issue. And the Chinese government has been aggressive with a teacher exchange program.Will it be enough to meet demand? Only time will tell."We've been through periods like this before," Ackley said, pointing to the hand-wringing over languages that followed the Soviet launch of Sputnik in 1957 and Japan's economic rise in the 1980s. "It is something we've got to learn, that we need to prepare and look down the road."Back in Cheng's class, a huge map of China is posted next to the U.S. flag. Pandas play in a photo on the wall.Cheng teaches her class the words for family members and then shows off photos of her own family. Some were taken in Tiananmen Square.She points to a figure, says something in Chinese, and then asks her students to translate.Di di? "Your younger brother."Mei mei? "Your younger sister."Ma ma? "That's your mother."Cheng, 38, taught English in China for 14 years before moving to the United States last year. In China, she said, nearly every student learns English because "they want to know more about the world." English is a common second or third language in many countries.Will U.S. students ever be as enthusiastic about learning Chinese? "It will take some time," Cheng said.But not in her class.Twins Marisa and Mariah Kaylor visited China two years ago. A driver taught them a few words in Chinese and spurred their interest. Now they see the language as useful."We're trading a lot with China," said Marisa, 12. In the future, "you might have to speak with someone who's Chinese."E-mail Ron Matus at matus(at)sptimes.com.(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service www.scrippsnews.com)


EFL Teachers
Perhaps in the years to come us EFL and ESL teachers will be replaced by CFL and CSL teachers (Chinese as a Foreign Language and Chinese as a Second language), but I think we are safe for the time being!
crazy
if CFL and CSL teachers will be replaced, people will get crazy because it is a hard language to be honest
Chinese Teachers
I am the principal of Campbell Middle School in Lee's Summit, MO. We have 997, 7th and 8th graders in our school. This is the first year we have offered Chinese to our 8th graders. The class sizes in all three middle schools are small right now, averaging around 8 students. I don't think parent realize the importance of this language yet. The students are able to earn high school credit for the class. If a student starts taking Chinese in the 8th grade, he can earn 5 credits of Chinese upon graduation. All three high schools and the other two middle schools in our district also offer Chinese. We share two teachers from China. At the beginning of the school year, they took a taxi to get to all the schools; now they are in the process of taking their driver's test. We are leasing two cars for them from a local car dealership. We have been very pleased!!! Vicki
How can you develop
How can you develop proficiency in a language that is not spoken at home or in the society around them...not to mention the contextual culture of a language.
The Confucius society, which is a Chinese government organization has a lot to do with installing Chinese in schools (check out their mandate).
Gimme a break...
The students are able to
The students are able to earn high school credit for the class. If a student starts taking Chinese in the 8th grade, he can earn 5 credits of Chinese upon graduation.
I live in Saint Petersburg
I live in Saint Petersburg right now and my college offers chinese as a course. I am currently taken French but Chinese would be a great language to learn, all those symbols though seem mind boggling though.
I would like to learn Chinese at my school.
I am a ninth grader in Plaquemine, Louisiana who is taking Spanish II. If our school offered another foreign language, it would most likely be French, but having known French since kindergarten, I would like to brush up on my Chinese. I would take Chinese in my sophomore year if our school were to offer it.
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