Reports in the NY Times
and elsewhere point to the rise of Chinese language instruction in our
schools, against the backdrop of the demise of language learning in
general. People justify this rush to Chinese by referring to the growth
of the Chinese economy. The US government has declared Chinese a
“critical language.” How realistic is this Chinese boom, and will it
last? Here is a reality check.
1) Chinese will probably not help your kid get a job.
Chinese is being touted as the language of the future, given the
growth of the Chinese economy. Some predict that a knowledge of Chinese
will be big advantage in the job markets of the future. It is worthwhile
remembering that Chinese is the language of business in only one
country, China. Relatively few American kids are going to be working in
China after graduating.
2) Chinese is not an international language and unlikely to become one.
Almost all Chinese speakers are in one country. Chinese is not an
international language. It is not used widely by speakers of third
languages. It is unlikely that this will change in the short term
because Chinese is very difficult to learn, for most people.
3) Chinese is difficult.
Chinese has no vocabulary in common with English, unlike Spanish,
where over the half the words are similar to English words. Most kids in
the US who study Spanish do not learn to speak. English speaking
school kids in Canada have had similarly poor results with their French
studies. It is likely that kids who study Mandarin in schools will have
even more difficulty.
4) Learning the Chinese writing system is time consuming.
To write Chinese requires the learning of several thousand
characters. Each character consists of up to 15 or more strokes.
Chinese children are surrounded by the written language from early
childhood. Our kids would have devote an immense amount of time to this
task. There is already a fundamental problem with literacy in English in
our schools. Learning to write Chinese would be a major distraction for
most school children.
5) There is little chance to use Chinese.
While there are around 40 – 50 million Spanish speakers in the US,
there are only 2 million Chinese speakers. However, most of these
Chinese speakers speak Cantonese, so students studying Mandarin would
not have many native speakers to practice with, even assuming that some
would learn to speak.
6) The rush to Chinese is being pushed by the Chinese government.
The Chinese government has a major program to promote Chinese
language studies around the world and appears willing to pay for
teachers and for trips to China for school administrators. This
represents an opportunity to establish Chinese language programs in
certain schools, no doubt. Is it advisable, however, for school
curricula to be determined by the promotional activities of foreign
governments?
7) Learning Mandarin makes sense for other reasons.
There are excellent reasons to offer Mandarin, as an option, in our
schools, without the hype and without making it a “critical language”.
For much of the last 4,000 years of history about 20% of humanity has
been Chinese. Chinese culture has had an important influence on the
course of history. The number of schools in the US offering Chinese has
grown from 1% to 4% from 1997 to 2008. This is hardly surprising and is,
in fact, largely overdue. Mandarin language instruction should be
offered, and looked upon from a longer term educational perspective, and
not as a sudden reaction to recent Chinese economic growth.
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