Anonymous wrote:I read several of the comments regarding Chinese as a language specifically used in Asian business dealings. Obviously, posters have limited their vision to Asian/American dealings.
My African-American child has been studying Chinese for 8 years with the goal towards somewhat fluency by the time graduating from college in four years. There are many avenues where a Chinese speaking African-American can have a tremendous advantage.
Looking at the bigger picture, I have directed my AA child towards China's increasing financial role and building of physical structures in Africa. There is absolutely no doubt that the knowledge of the language and culture (Africa and Chinese) will be a strong advantage should my AA child decide to work with American or any company who, along with China, are working with Africa.
It's the bigger global picture!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a working knowledge of Spanish, French, Russian, and Chinese (and one or two other languages that are more obscure).
For living in the US, Spanish is the way to go. You're much more likely to need it in every day scenarios compared to the others. At the same time, Spanish is relatively easy to learn compared to Russian and Chinese (uses Roman alphabet).
Forget French. It's great for intellectual reasons, but not that useful. Yes, I know many countries speak French, but even that's going out of style. For example, Rwanda changed their official language from French to English a couple years ago. You never see countries switching to French any more.
Russian is the lingua franca of most of Eastern Europe. I can get around in at least 20 countries with Russian, as the locals know it as a second or first language, or their own language is similar (Slavic).
Mandarin is the interesting one. First, the characters (referring to Simplified, not Traditional Chinese) do not map directly to spoken language. There are many dialects in China, and people may not be able to understand each other, but they can both understand the same characters. The reason is that the characters do not necessarily indicate pronunciation (yes, I know about pictophonetic characters but tell that to someone from Guangdong province). I'm assuming the schools teach standard Mandarin (putonghua). In terms of learning grammar, Chinese is actually pretty easy. Verbs are not declined, and there is no perfect tense. You basically have present and past tense only. The numbers are really easy also. Usefulness is the big question. If you plan to spend time in China or nearby countries, knowledge of Mandarin will be extremely useful as English skills are sorely lacking (this may be different in 20 years from now though). However, there are huge numbers of American children with Chinese parents who will get those jobs before any non-Chinese person due to more skills.
Ok, so that's not an answer. We're facing the same question also, though not for immersion. I'm leaning towards Spanish and then Chinese.
This is true but most Amercian born Chinese while they can speak Mandarin or Cantonese, more common, aren't literate. BIG difference. Also, it does not matter if whether a having a Chinese heritage is preferred. When the Chinese do business with foreigners, they are doing business with foreigners and don't expect "Chineseness" b/c non-native born Chinese aren't native born "Chinese". Literacy and ability to communication in Mandarin is the main thing and it doesn't matter whether you are a "Big Nose" or not.
she's fluent in Mandarin and got a decent job here in DC...
Madelyn Ross
Madelyn Ross is currently Director of China Initiatives at George Mason University, where she has worked on a variety of China-related programs and campus-wide educational initiatives since 2003. Prior to coming to Mason, she worked as an independent consultant to Asia-focused organizations and projects and spent nine years at The US-China Business Council, where she was editor of The China Business Review and Executive Director of The China Business Forum. Ms. Ross holds an M.A. in International Affairs from Columbia University and a B.A. in East Asian Studies from Princeton University. She also did graduate work at Fudan University in China, and has lived and worked in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Taipei.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a working knowledge of Spanish, French, Russian, and Chinese (and one or two other languages that are more obscure).
For living in the US, Spanish is the way to go. You're much more likely to need it in every day scenarios compared to the others. At the same time, Spanish is relatively easy to learn compared to Russian and Chinese (uses Roman alphabet).
Forget French. It's great for intellectual reasons, but not that useful. Yes, I know many countries speak French, but even that's going out of style. For example, Rwanda changed their official language from French to English a couple years ago. You never see countries switching to French any more.
Russian is the lingua franca of most of Eastern Europe. I can get around in at least 20 countries with Russian, as the locals know it as a second or first language, or their own language is similar (Slavic).
Mandarin is the interesting one. First, the characters (referring to Simplified, not Traditional Chinese) do not map directly to spoken language. There are many dialects in China, and people may not be able to understand each other, but they can both understand the same characters. The reason is that the characters do not necessarily indicate pronunciation (yes, I know about pictophonetic characters but tell that to someone from Guangdong province). I'm assuming the schools teach standard Mandarin (putonghua). In terms of learning grammar, Chinese is actually pretty easy. Verbs are not declined, and there is no perfect tense. You basically have present and past tense only. The numbers are really easy also. Usefulness is the big question. If you plan to spend time in China or nearby countries, knowledge of Mandarin will be extremely useful as English skills are sorely lacking (this may be different in 20 years from now though). However, there are huge numbers of American children with Chinese parents who will get those jobs before any non-Chinese person due to more skills.
Ok, so that's not an answer. We're facing the same question also, though not for immersion. I'm leaning towards Spanish and then Chinese.
This is true but most Amercian born Chinese while they can speak Mandarin or Cantonese, more common, aren't literate. BIG difference. Also, it does not matter if whether a having a Chinese heritage is preferred. When the Chinese do business with foreigners, they are doing business with foreigners and don't expect "Chineseness" b/c non-native born Chinese aren't native born "Chinese". Literacy and ability to communication in Mandarin is the main thing and it doesn't matter whether you are a "Big Nose" or not.
Anonymous wrote:I have a working knowledge of Spanish, French, Russian, and Chinese (and one or two other languages that are more obscure).
For living in the US, Spanish is the way to go. You're much more likely to need it in every day scenarios compared to the others. At the same time, Spanish is relatively easy to learn compared to Russian and Chinese (uses Roman alphabet).
Forget French. It's great for intellectual reasons, but not that useful. Yes, I know many countries speak French, but even that's going out of style. For example, Rwanda changed their official language from French to English a couple years ago. You never see countries switching to French any more.
Russian is the lingua franca of most of Eastern Europe. I can get around in at least 20 countries with Russian, as the locals know it as a second or first language, or their own language is similar (Slavic).
Mandarin is the interesting one. First, the characters (referring to Simplified, not Traditional Chinese) do not map directly to spoken language. There are many dialects in China, and people may not be able to understand each other, but they can both understand the same characters. The reason is that the characters do not necessarily indicate pronunciation (yes, I know about pictophonetic characters but tell that to someone from Guangdong province). I'm assuming the schools teach standard Mandarin (putonghua). In terms of learning grammar, Chinese is actually pretty easy. Verbs are not declined, and there is no perfect tense. You basically have present and past tense only. The numbers are really easy also. Usefulness is the big question. If you plan to spend time in China or nearby countries, knowledge of Mandarin will be extremely useful as English skills are sorely lacking (this may be different in 20 years from now though). However, there are huge numbers of American children with Chinese parents who will get those jobs before any non-Chinese person due to more skills.
Ok, so that's not an answer. We're facing the same question also, though not for immersion. I'm leaning towards Spanish and then Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree that Spanish is the only language in America that is used widely other than English. I see huge numbers of Indians, Arabs, French, and Chinese people around here and other areas of the US.
Anonymous wrote:I have a working knowledge of Spanish, French, Russian, and Chinese (and one or two other languages that are more obscure).
For living in the US, Spanish is the way to go. You're much more likely to need it in every day scenarios compared to the others. At the same time, Spanish is relatively easy to learn compared to Russian and Chinese (uses Roman alphabet).
Forget French. It's great for intellectual reasons, but not that useful. Yes, I know many countries speak French, but even that's going out of style. For example, Rwanda changed their official language from French to English a couple years ago. You never see countries switching to French any more.
Russian is the lingua franca of most of Eastern Europe. I can get around in at least 20 countries with Russian, as the locals know it as a second or first language, or their own language is similar (Slavic).
Mandarin is the interesting one. First, the characters (referring to Simplified, not Traditional Chinese) do not map directly to spoken language. There are many dialects in China, and people may not be able to understand each other, but they can both understand the same characters. The reason is that the characters do not necessarily indicate pronunciation (yes, I know about pictophonetic characters but tell that to someone from Guangdong province). I'm assuming the schools teach standard Mandarin (putonghua). In terms of learning grammar, Chinese is actually pretty easy. Verbs are not declined, and there is no perfect tense. You basically have present and past tense only. The numbers are really easy also. Usefulness is the big question. If you plan to spend time in China or nearby countries, knowledge of Mandarin will be extremely useful as English skills are sorely lacking (this may be different in 20 years from now though). However, there are huge numbers of American children with Chinese parents who will get those jobs before any non-Chinese person due to more skills.
Ok, so that's not an answer. We're facing the same question also, though not for immersion. I'm leaning towards Spanish and then Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I speak 5 languages -- some very useful, others fairly useless.
I would say that the best gift you can give your child is the knowledge that learning a language is not that hard. If you know three languages well, learning a fourth is easier -- there is often shared vocabulary and grammar, but moreover you'll have experience in how to learn and study a language.
Which languages do you find the most useful?
But like I said -- when I met my (foreign) DH and realized I had to learn his language, it was a fun project -- not something to be scared about. Learning his native language (which is "useless" in business etc) is one of the best investments I've ever made, learning wise.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would choose Mandarin first as its harder to learn and the opportunities to learn it later on are minimal. You can learn Spanish anywhere as long as you put in the time.
I agree. Every MD I know picked up enough Spanish during their medical training to be able to work at major urban medical centers even if they had not known any Spanish prior to entering med school.