China is stepping up efforts
to train more Chinese language teachers and plans to set up 60 more
Confucius Institutes to meet the demand for Mandarin across the
world, according to Chinese Language Council
International.
"Each year, there are 10,000 positions of teaching
Chinese as a foreign language in the world by conservative
estimate, but only 2,000 teachers are available from China," said
Xu Lin, director of the office. "The greatest challenge we are
facing now is to meet the surging demand for Chinese
teachers."
This year, a large number of college graduates,
regardless of their major, will be recruited to attend a one-year
training course to teach Chinese as a foreign language, according
to Xu.
China currently has a pool
of over 5,000 certified teachers of Chinese as a foreign language.
Some of them will be selected to learn Spanish, Portuguese and
Arabic for a year and then sent to teach in Latin American and Arab
countries.
Last year, China sent 1,004 Chinese teachers to 80
countries and 1,050 volunteers to 34 countries.
In addition to recruiting more Chinese teachers, the
office also plans to set up another 60 Confucius Institutes and
launch Confucius Institute online and broadcast
services.
In the Middle East and North Africa, the Chinese
language has become increasingly popular as bilateral trade and
cultural exchanges have expanded.
The first Confucius Institute in an Arab country was
set up on February 27 in Saint Joseph's University of
Lebanon.
Egypt will likely to have
its first Confucius Institute soon, said Chinese ambassador Wu Sike
to Egypt, who, on behalf of Xu, has signed an agreement with the
University of Cairo on setting up a Confucius Institute.
"Along with the University of Cairo, three
universities have Chinese language and culture departments. The
number of students majoring in Chinese language has been on a
steady rise in recent years," said Wu.
"Almost every term of the Chinese language training
course is fully booked," he added.
The latest Confucius Institute was established on
March 16 in the University of Zimbabwe, which enrolled over 50
students on the opening day, including scholars, government
officials and entrepreneurs, said Yuan Nansheng, Chinese ambassador
to Zimbabwe.
The Chinese government donated US$100,000 to the
institute and installed two well-trained volunteers as
instructors.
"The teachers are expected to introduce China's
cultural, economic and social development as well as giving
students linguistic instruction, in the hope of cementing the two
countries' friendship and promoting bilateral trades," said
Yuan.
According to an agreement signed by China's Hunan
Normal university and Russia's Kazanian State University, the third
Confucius Institute in Russia will be set up to receive an
ever-growing number of Russian students who want to learn
Chinese.
A total of 10,000 people in Russia are attending
Chinese-language training programs.
The Confucius Institute, headquartered in Beijing, is
a non-profit organization aimed at promoting the Chinese language
and culture. By 2010, 500 Confucius Institutes and classrooms are
expected to be set up around the world.
Some Confucius Institutes, however, have encountered
difficulties.
The first Confucius Institute in southeastern Asia has
struggled since it was launched on February 14, 2006 in Bengal. Now
only 10 students remain and teachers have nothing but a desk in the
office.
"The teaching method is mainly to blame because most
of the teachers are linguistics major graduates and not
knowledgeable enough in other spheres. As a result, the institute
has little influence on the upper class," said an
insider.
"A way out may be to follow a successful model, like
the 'Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme.' At the same time, we
can train some local Chinese teachers in the hope of influencing
more people of higher education or from a higher class," said Xu
Guangyuan, headmaster of the Confucius Institute of
Bengal.
Confucius, born in 551 B.C., was a great Chinese
thinker, philosopher, statesman and educator. He was also the
founder of Confucianism. Advocating the building of a harmonious
society through individuals' self-refinement in manners and taste,
Confucianism dominated the Chinese society for centuries and was
spread to Europe in the late 16th century.
In an effort to promote the Chinese language and
Chinese culture abroad, the Chinese government has set up 140
Confucius Institutes, schools or classrooms in 52 countries and
regions worldwide.
(Xinhua News Agency March 21, 2007)
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