Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has Hardy been having trouble retaining Chinese teachers? Deal has not had that problem. One teacher is retiring after many years of teaching at Deal and is not getting replaced, but there is a second Chinese teacher at Deal (who came from Walls, I believe), so the program will continue for now. No cuts to JR foreign languages at all, at least for this year. But if these budget cuts continue I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re on the chopping block in the future.
No, Hardy has not had trouble retaining Chinese teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Hardy Middle in Ward 2 cut Mandarin but kept Spanish and Italian.
Anonymous wrote:Has Hardy been having trouble retaining Chinese teachers? Deal has not had that problem. One teacher is retiring after many years of teaching at Deal and is not getting replaced, but there is a second Chinese teacher at Deal (who came from Walls, I believe), so the program will continue for now. No cuts to JR foreign languages at all, at least for this year. But if these budget cuts continue I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re on the chopping block in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Native speaker of Chinese who doesn’t agree. You probably think that your tones and written characters are better than they are. Chinese students spend a huge chunk of their childhoods getting the writing right. There’s nothing quick about any of it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do I get the impression that you've never studied Chinese and never will.
Trust me, learning earning the "basics to have a conversation" of any dialect of Chinese is around five times harder than for any variant of Spanish.
np: You are overstating the difficulty.
I learned Chinese as an adult and am decently conversational. I'm better at speaking Chinese than French, which I studied in high school and part of college.
The learning curve for Chinese is steep at the start -- learning the sounds and learning to speak and hear tones is necessary before learning basic conversation. But then things pick up quickly. The grammar is easy, and there are not volumes of complicated verb conjugations to learn.
Reading and writing Chinese is hard, but learning a basic level is doable and worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hardy Middle in Ward 2 cut Mandarin but kept Spanish and Italian.
Madness. 1.8 billion Chinese in the next superpower and they kept...Italian? Where's the vision on DCPS' part?
The dumbest decision ever. Supposedly Italian was more popular among the middle schoolers than Chinese. What self-respecting school allows its curriculum to be dictated by the whims of pre-teens? You’d think in DC of all places in America, there might be an appreciation of the importance of training people to speak the language (for which starting at middle school is required), but somehow the Hardy MS principal didn’t get the memo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hardy Middle in Ward 2 cut Mandarin but kept Spanish and Italian.
Madness. 1.8 billion Chinese in the next superpower and they kept...Italian? Where's the vision on DCPS' part?
Native speaker of Chinese who doesn’t agree. You probably think that your tones and written characters are better than they are. Chinese students spend a huge chunk of their childhoods getting the writing right. There’s nothing quick about any of it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do I get the impression that you've never studied Chinese and never will.
Trust me, learning earning the "basics to have a conversation" of any dialect of Chinese is around five times harder than for any variant of Spanish.
np: You are overstating the difficulty.
I learned Chinese as an adult and am decently conversational. I'm better at speaking Chinese than French, which I studied in high school and part of college.
The learning curve for Chinese is steep at the start -- learning the sounds and learning to speak and hear tones is necessary before learning basic conversation. But then things pick up quickly. The grammar is easy, and there are not volumes of complicated verb conjugations to learn.
Reading and writing Chinese is hard, but learning a basic level is doable and worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Looks like not only Walls but someone mentioned that Hardy and McArthur are also cutting Mandarin. If so, then it’s basically dead in DCPS.
It’s not like the other kids in the poorly performing middle and high school are taking it.
Anonymous wrote:Why do I get the impression that you've never studied Chinese and never will.
Trust me, learning earning the "basics to have a conversation" of any dialect of Chinese is around five times harder than for any variant of Spanish.