On June 15, 2004, Chinese President Hu Jintao officially opened the first Confucius
Institute in Uzbekistan. Nearly three years later, on January 31,
2007, Premier Wen Jiabao and Portugal Premier Socrates signed
the latest such agreement at the Great Hall of the People opening a
Confucius Institute in University of Lisbon.
To date, 128 Confucius Institutes exist around the world, with
46 in Asia, 46 in Europe, 26 in North America, 6 in Africa and 4 in
Oceania.
Global interest in China and the Chinese language has been
growing along with China's economy.
In the US, over 20, 000 students were learning Chinese in 200
public primary and middle schools back in 2004, this number rising
to 50,000 in 2006 with a further 2,400 middle schools wishing to
offer Chinese classes.
Since 2001, the UK Department for Education and Skills, the
British Council and HSBC have begun a scholarship program catering
to hundreds of British middle school students to encourage them to
learn Chinese. The program also aims to sponsor 200 Chinese
teachers to come and teach in the UK. Germany has also felt this
popularity with 150 schools and 50 famous universities now offering
Chinese electives and majors. Meanwhile, France, exhorted by its
China-loving President Jacques Chirac, has seen 110 of its top
universities open Chinese departments.
In the Far East, Japan and Korea put at 2 million and 1 million
respectively their quotas of Chinese students with all 142
universities in Korea now offering Chinese courses. The Korean
Ministry of Education is now planning to capitalize on this success
by introducing Chinese classes in all primary and middle
schools.
Southeast Asia has also followed suit with 1,000 middle schools
in Indonesia offering Chinese to their students and Thailand
planning to do so at 30 percent of all high schools within five
years.
South American countries like Brazil, Argentina, Peru and Chile
are also seeing marked rises in the popularity in Chinese language
learning there.
Chinese teaching is also a pillar of Sino-African cooperation.
Ain Shams University, Al-Azhar University and Cairo University,
Egypt's three main universities, have all set up Chinese majors.
Students at the University of Liberia voluntarily set up Chinese
Association and addressed a letter to the Chinese ambassador to
Liberia wishing to soon be able to learn Chinese language and
culture. They also petitioned on behalf of over 3,000 of their
peers that a Confucius Institute be created in Monrovia as quickly
as possible. In Algeria, many youngsters have reached out to
Chinese employees in Algerian companies to teach them. Algeria has
also recently sent up a clamor asking for a Confucius
Institute.
Over 2,500 universities in over 100 countries have set up
Chinese courses reaching out to over 40 million Chinese learners
abroad.
Such a successful run has come from the observation of similar
movements in the UK, France and Germany. The three Western powers
have long implemented a worldwide network of institutes, promoting
their culture. The paths trail-blazed by the UK with the British
Council, France with the Alliance Francaise and Germany's Goethe
Institutes have helped chart the Confucius Institutes' success. By
the end of 2006, the International Office of Chinese Language
Council (better known as Hanban) has received over 400 applications
to set up Confucius Institutes in more than 60 countries.
In 2006, a new Confucius Institute sprung up every four days on
average with extensive media coverage.
At the end of 2006, a sample survey of 40 Confucius Institutes
saw over 10, 000 people trained and offered over 300 Chinese
courses averaging six months in length. Meanwhile, a slew of other
activities have been organized such as lectures, exhibitions or
performances involving some 200,000 participants.
When the first Confucius Institute Conference was held in July
2006, it attracted approximately 400 delegates from 38 countries
and regions.
Nancy Jervis, vice president of the China Institute in New York,
who attended the conference, spoke of her disbelief that the
"Chinese language could become so popular" when she first visited
China in 1972. Her mind must have boggled at the total of 2,400 US
universities that now run or plan to run Chinese language courses,
the biggest foreign language rise among US colleges.
(China.org.cn by Li Xiaohua March 24, 2007)
|