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Archive for 2010

Tour of Arrowhead Lake – Student Short Story in English and Chinese

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

By Brian Guan(Guan Yi)

    The Arrowhead Lake scenery is very elegant, the water surface is tranquil looks like a mirror. That day, space cloud, although is the gray, but was still very attractive; Because works as when bright optical fiber illumination, its color is more prominent; Much less a pessimistic cloud, the shape varies, some look like the hills, some look like the ocean waves, some look like the bear, some look like the cow ……Fire imagination.

     Our whole family when Arrowhead Lake leisure, takes a walk along the bund, sees to many different color speed boats, if flew passed over gently and swiftly generally the water surface; Also saw some person of scullery paddling boat, marches forward unhurriedly. The bird is singing, wild duck in swimming. As soon as gains ground, may see on the mountain the megalith, but also has greenery and the shrubbery all over the mountains and plains. The beautiful scenery, who can not like? The elder sister takes the camera not to stop photographs; she has photographed more than 200 photographs at least.

     The Arrowhead Lake is really a tourist sites!

学生作文:

游览箭湖

管毅 Brian Guan

箭湖景色十分秀美,水面平静得像一面镜子。那天,天上的云虽然是灰色的,但仍然很漂亮;因为当明亮的光线照射时,它的色彩更加突出;何况朵朵灰色的云,形状各异,有的像山,有的像海浪,有的像熊,有的像牛……让人神往。

我们一家人在箭湖休闲时,沿着湖边散步,看到许多不同颜色的快艇,如飞一般掠过水面;也看到有人摇桨划动小船,不慌不忙地行进。鸟儿在唱歌,野鸭在游泳。一抬头,可以看到山上的巨石,还有漫山遍野的绿树和灌木丛。这么美的景色,谁会不喜欢呢?姐姐拿着照相机不停地拍照,她起码拍照了200多张相片。

箭湖真是一个旅游圣地!

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Riddle story -Why I can’t “ask”?

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Riddle story -Why I can’t “ask”?

Jack is both intelligent and handsome, and he is a student in our elementary online Chinese class. He is one of the best students among his peers;has only then learn Chinese online with us for three months, and could speak few Chinese words, phrases and/or sentences.
One day, he went shopping in China Town and was lost. He saw a young Asian girl walking by, he said ‘hello!” in Chinese to her. The girl responded: “hello!” in Chinese as well. Jack wanted to practice his Chinese and continued speaking Chinese to her “Could I ask you…” Before he could finish his sentence, the girl’s face turned red, left in a hurry and talking back to him as she passed him, “no, no, you cannot, it is not right….”
Jack was puzzled and thought:Why can’t I ask her for the direction?
Dear friends, could you explain to Jack what happened here?

Answer: Jake spoke in the third tone in Chinese “wen” became “kiss”, and “ask” is in fourth tone. He said to the girl “Could I kiss you?”, instead of “could I ask you?” in Chinese.

谜语故事
我怎么就不能“问”呢?
杰克既聪明又英俊,在我们中文初级班,他的学习成绩名列前茅;
才学了三个来月,就能结结巴巴地跟中国人交谈了。
一天,他到市中心的步行街去买东西,走着走着,就迷了路。这时对面走过来一位年青姑娘,他急忙上前问路。杰克先打招呼:“您好!”那个姑娘也回应说:“您好!”杰克很有礼貌地问:“我能不能问您一下儿?”没想到,那位姑娘一下子脸涨得通红,急忙说:“不行,不行!这不合我们中国人的习俗!”说完,她就慌慌张张地跑开了。
杰克迷惑不解地想:我怎么就不能问她一下呢?
亲爱的朋友,你能解答杰克的疑问吗?

谜底:杰克把第四声的“问”说成第三声的“吻”了。

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Tags: elementary online Chinese class, learn Chinese online, online chinese classes
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Chinese Language School

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Welcome Back

This week mark the first week of 2010 – 2011 school year, and we welcome all returning students and new students to our online Chinese school.

Many of you have traveled to China and globally during the summer. This summer, China has surpassed Japan to become the 2nd largest economy by GDP (Gross Domestic Product) amount, although it is still a developing country when you count on GDP per capita bases, it is less than 10% of United States and Japan’s GDP per capita figure. See the following like if you would like to learn more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capita

We cannot stress enough the importance of learning Chinese, as having an invaluable skill for your lifetime. In the past 30 years the world has changed significantly, not only China’s emergence as one of world largest economies, but also its implication on the global scale of its commerce and foreign relationships with the rest of the world. Learning Chinese is not going to be a temporary phenomena; it will be here for the rest of the century and beyond. Learning Chinese online is widely accepted as the best method to learn Chinese, and we congratulate you for having been our students for a few years, months and/or days. You will find it beneficial in the short and long run.

I get to visit our office in Tianjin, PRC, where our teachers host our online Chinese classes daily from. If you want to know more about Tianjin, here is a link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianjin

Currently, our AP Chinese, AP Chinese review and SAT II Chinese review classes are open for enrollment besides the regular Chinese classes we offer on an ongoing basis.

Happy Learning!

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Tags: AP Chinese language, chinese language school, learn Chinese language, learning Chinese online, online Chinese language school, SAT ll Chinese Test Preparation
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The Chinese Language and Characters, Simplified or Traditional

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

As an Online Chinese School, at www.chinesesphere.com, we never debate about what to teach, simplified or traditional characters.  We teach them both for students who have the time and willingness to learn them.  I was born and raised in China during Cultural Revolution, and still manage to learn both forms of Chinese characters since I love to read ancient novels, all of them were written and published in Traditional Characters.

Many of our students from American and Europe prefer simplified version due to its simplicity, and ease to write.  Our teacher tries to point out the related traditional characters to our student so they are aware of characters’ origin and its artistically constructed form.  On the other hand, our students from Hong Kong and Japan, prefers to learn the traditional characters since that’s most of the textbook and print media uses.  We tend not to teach simplified characters to student learning in traditional format unless requested by students.

Learning Chinese Online has so much flexibility on what to learn, from whom to learn, and when to learn, it became a lesser issue of a debate in practice of what to learn and teach, simplified or traditional.  We still would like the interested party to read the debate to understand the issue in your own mind.  Enjoy learning with us, the best online Chinese school.

http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/05/02/chinese-language-ever-evolving/

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Tags: learn Chinese online, Learn Traditional Chinese Language, Online Chinese School, Traditional Chinese Language School, Traditional Online Chinese Language
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The Growing Importance of Learning Chinese

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

The value of learning Chinese has become self-evident and enrollment in top Chinese language programs in US K12 schools, private and public nationwide has increased significantly. In fact, Chinese language school in San Francisco report that families have actually relocated their entire household to the Bay Area—”just so their kids can go to a Chinese language school.”

Who are these ambitious language-learners?

In this particular school, less than half of the student body comes from families with Chinese ancestry (heritage Chinese Learners), and only a few are native speakers.  Indeed, the desire to learn Chinese has spread far and wide, moving beyond cultural boundaries.

Marty Abbott, director of education at the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages thinks it is unprecedented. “I think we would have to characterize what’s happening with the expansion of Chinese language programs right now as an explosion,” he added, in a conversation with the Los Angeles Times.  The K12 Chinese learners have at least doubled from 20,000 plus to more than 50,000 in the United States.

It is becoming increasingly popular to learn Chinese online with the current younger generation since they were born and have grown up with computers, and instant communication with a teacher more than 10,000 miles away is no strange incident to them.  Benefit of our online Chinese program has shown to students and parents alike; even to the heritage Chinese learners (parents are of Chinese decent).

Why is learning Chinese gaining importance?

China plays an increasingly important role in our interconnected world, and its growing global influence can be seen across the political, cultural and economic spectrum. Savvy parents recognize that students who learn Chinese today may discover new and exciting ways to succeed tomorrow. Beyond the value of someday doing business in China, there await tremendous opportunities in world travel, the possibility of forming international friendships, and a chance for young students to broaden their horizons.

How hard is it for kids to learn Chinese?

A Harvard Study Says Kids Learn Chinese and English the Same Way. According to this study, recent research has found that toddlers may learn Chinese, or any other second language, by utilizing the same building blocks—and developmental process—that babies use when first learning to speak. However, toddlers enjoy a much faster acquisition rate for new languages.

Seeking to discover how children naturally acquire a second language, Harvard developmental psychologist Jesse Snedeker recently studied a group of preschool-aged children who were adopted from China. These children, who learn Chinese in their native country, often face an abrupt transition to an all-English environment. Snedeker found that, within 3 to 18 months after their arrival in the US, the adopted children had followed the same language-learning patterns we associate with infants.

Around their first birthday, most children start speaking in single-word utterances. This timeline holds true for children all over the world: it doesn’t matter if they first learn Chinese or English or Swahili. Then, after several more months, they begin to combine multiple words into phrases, gradually expressing more complex ideas, with greater consistency. For example, an 18-month-old child raised in an English-language household might ask, “Cookie eat?” while a 2-year-old raised to learn Chinese would greet the now-opened cookie jar with a grateful “Xie xie!” (Thank you!). Initial vocabularies are predominately nouns, and, at first, children keep their utterances short and direct.

Toddlers are quick to adopt a second language

Snedeker found that preschoolers and infants follow the same steps when acquiring language, but at a disproportionate rate. On average, the adopted preschoolers learned as many words during their first three months in the US as an infant would learn between 12-24 months of age. In other words, the preschoolers were at least four times faster overall. This suggests that many of these young children will eventually catch up with their English-speaking peers, and become fluent speakers of their new language.

Though Snedeker’s study pertains to children who learn English as a second language, rather than English-speaking children who learn Chinese, the implications extend across all languages. “Are the early stages reflections of cognitive immaturity, or do they represent necessary steps in decoding the target language?” asks Snedeker, in a recent issue of Psychological Science. “Our results strongly suggest that these features of early language production are due to the nature of the learning problem rather than the limitations of infant learners.” Moreover, the study affirms the incredible flexibility and resilience of young children’s linguistic abilities.

Programs for kids to learn Chinese

The adopted children in Snedeker’s study primarily attained their language skills through direct contact with peers, in a full-immersion environment. Most second language learners—including the thousands of American children who learn Chinese—also enjoy the benefit of bilingual teachers and language programs.

Some students attend language-immersion schools, like the Chinese American International School in San Francisco, which runs from preschool to eighth grade. “In the early days, probably up until 10 years ago—we were considered experimental, kind of ‘out there,’” said the school’s finance director, Betty Shon, in a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times. “I’d get questions like, ‘What kind of parents want their kids to learn Chinese?’”

Many advantages for kids who learn Chinese

“Now,” she says, with satisfaction, “there’s just no question.” The value of learning Chinese has become self-evident, and enrollment in top language programs is highly coveted. In fact, Shon reports that families have actually relocated their entire household to the Bay Area—”just so their kids can go to the school.” Who are these ambitious language-learners? Less than half of the student body comes from families with Chinese ancestry, and only a few are native speakers.

“Certainly, having an understanding of Chinese language and culture is an advantage,” concludes Marty Abbott. Parents of children who learn Chinese will undoubtedly agree.

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Tags: chinese language for kids, Chinese language programs, chinese language school, Chinese language schools in San Francisco, learn Chinese online, learn foreign languages
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Chinese college graduates has high unemployment rate, just like here in the United States

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Educated and Fearing the Future in China is the title of this article (click on the link below), it will be equally true if we just change China to United States in the heading.  Even last decade, having a college degree means having a job and career, now a wider notion of ability and sense of passion is needed to stand out amonge the cllege graduated crowd.  http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/07/educated-and-fearing-the-future-in-china/

Learning Chinese will fit in with a wider notion of ability.  Learning a secondary language, like Chinese, not only provide the learner with a concrete skill, but also introduce him to a new culture, and different way of thinking about issues and concerns of the world.

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Solutions to Teaching Chinese in United States

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

I have read this report in 2008 when our online Chinese school was in its infancy.  Now, after 3 years of explosive growth in student counts, Chinese lessons delivered, and AP courses offered, we have proved beyond the reasonable doubt that learning Chinese online is the most effective and efficient way to increase geographic coverage of US K-12 schools offering Chinese langauge classes.  To educating the next generation of US population, especially during these trying times, while regular teachers are getting more furlough days; the affordable, quality, and online Chinese langauge education is the best and least we should offer to our children.

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Foreign Languages Fade in Class — Except Chinese

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

I read this article in New York Times a few month back and did not get time to comment on it, here is the link to the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/21/education/21chinese.html?hp

Article states, “Among America’s approximately 27,500 middle and high schools offering at least one foreign language, the proportion offering Chinese rose to 4 percent, from 1 percent, from 1997 to 2008, according to the survey, which was done by the Center for Applied Linguistics, a research group in Washington, and paid for by the federal Education Department.”  If your kids are attending the rest 96% of the middle and high schools which do not offer Chinese as foreign language, come to us.  Learning Chinese Online has proven to be the best way to learn the language.  If your kids are attending the 4% which offers Chinese as foreign lanuage, we can provide Chinese tutors for kids so they can truly master the language.

We offer College Board audited AP Chinese classes online in a small group setting also.  Yet,before your kid can enrolled in AP Chinese class, they need to have intermedia Chinese to be able to take the class and pass the AP Exam in May.  Start them in elementary school or middle school so they are ready to take AP Chinese class, which will surpass AP German to become the third foreign language learned by US K-12 students.

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Learning Chinese is Fashionable

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

We have seen Chinese influence in fashion, furniture, home decor, and mall shops’ window displays.  Now it is fashionable to learn Chinese even on the top university campuses globally.   One of our students is attending UCLA, she was telling me, Chinese classes are the hottest on campus, they are all booked full the day when they are available, not only because there is a big Asian population on campus of UCLA, but also because it is trendy.  It is cool to be able to read the Chinese character on somebody’s t-shirt, it is even more hip if you traveled to China on your own with your broken Chinese, or just the few phrases you learned in high school.

With the demand is growing in learning Chinese online and market is very local and fragmented, we have launched a sister site, www.languagesphere.com, which is for a different learning community and market place.  We added English and some other subjects lessons which we can offer online for life long learners.  Enjoy learning!

Get Ahead, Learn MANDARIN is an old article online from Time ASIA – http://www.time.com/time/asia/covers/501060626/story.html, read it and let me know your feedback.

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Before Heading to China…

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Read an article on WSJ,

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203946904574302052610981892.html?mod =WSJ_hps_MIDDLEForthNews#articleTabs%3Darticle

I think it is way pass the time to educate the companies about the basic of entering the Chinese market place, I was a consultant and taking large multinationals to China 15 years ago.  If any company still do not know all of those basic things before heading to China now, they might not be focusing on China, period!

It is time to learn Chinese, learn Chinese Culture, understand Chinese language and what China has done in the past three decades.

Learn Chinese Online is the way to do it since the web has provide equal opportunity to everyone with Internet access to learn and grow….

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