Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How challenging are Chinese 1 and 2 in high school?
My son wants to avoid Spanish 4 and AP because his high school has absolutely terrible Spanish teachers.
He has ADHD and finds languages challenging when his teachers are also struggling.
I’m assuming ending his language studies with Honors Spanish 3 is not a great idea for college applications so I thought taking French or maybe Chinese would be better than no language at all in jr and sr year.
Your HS offers Chinese? Why is this only available at the wealthy schools?
Anonymous wrote:How challenging are Chinese 1 and 2 in high school?
My son wants to avoid Spanish 4 and AP because his high school has absolutely terrible Spanish teachers.
He has ADHD and finds languages challenging when his teachers are also struggling.
I’m assuming ending his language studies with Honors Spanish 3 is not a great idea for college applications so I thought taking French or maybe Chinese would be better than no language at all in jr and sr year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most kids taking Chinese at Whitman were native speakers who couldn't read or write it. My DD (not a native speaker, just someone who took it in MS and HS) found that the focus of the class was not so much on the speaking aspects but filling the gaps for the majority of the class. However the teacher was excellent and the only Chinese teacher for all 4 years of HS. The classes were grouped 2 & 3, or 3 & 4 etc because there weren't many students.
My sense was that class was mainly for native speakers and anyone who wasn't already fluent would be at a huge disadvantage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Chinese class a the W school is not developed for native speakers but the teachers are not really good teachers and don’t know how to teach the language so it ends up that the only kids that stay are the native speakers. The teacher pushed the kids over the edge and set standards that were unattainable, all non native speakers dropped out. She has a class full of native speakers! Good for her! Mission accomplished. She really is a horrible teacher.
Which W school?
Anonymous wrote:How challenging are Chinese 1 and 2 in high school?
My son wants to avoid Spanish 4 and AP because his high school has absolutely terrible Spanish teachers.
He has ADHD and finds languages challenging when his teachers are also struggling.
I’m assuming ending his language studies with Honors Spanish 3 is not a great idea for college applications so I thought taking French or maybe Chinese would be better than no language at all in jr and sr year.
Anonymous wrote:The Chinese class a the W school is not developed for native speakers but the teachers are not really good teachers and don’t know how to teach the language so it ends up that the only kids that stay are the native speakers. The teacher pushed the kids over the edge and set standards that were unattainable, all non native speakers dropped out. She has a class full of native speakers! Good for her! Mission accomplished. She really is a horrible teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, not a class I would let my kid take. Sooo not important in this economy. Take Latin which is the root of many languages, helps with spelling/English language and will actually be impressive to colleges and employers. U.S. immigration generally favors and is extremely generous regarding Chinese immigrants, so we already have a ton of people FROM the country who live here and speak the language. There is absolutely no advantage to taking it and no-one will be the least bit impressed.
Also, not sure why my comment on this issue keep getting deleted - some people are incredibly sensitive. If you told me you wanted to learn Swahili, I would also tell you similar. I work for a well known international corporation and being fluent in Chinese gets you no brownie points. I'm advising you not to waste your time.
Racist baffoon
Anonymous wrote:Again, not a class I would let my kid take. Sooo not important in this economy. Take Latin which is the root of many languages, helps with spelling/English language and will actually be impressive to colleges and employers. U.S. immigration generally favors and is extremely generous regarding Chinese immigrants, so we already have a ton of people FROM the country who live here and speak the language. There is absolutely no advantage to taking it and no-one will be the least bit impressed.
Also, not sure why my comment on this issue keep getting deleted - some people are incredibly sensitive. If you told me you wanted to learn Swahili, I would also tell you similar. I work for a well known international corporation and being fluent in Chinese gets you no brownie points. I'm advising you not to waste your time.