Anonymous wrote:I must second the PP who said that your average to above average child will do fine in YY Chinese without extraordinary measures. One of my children does. The other one is not blessed with very good language skills and he struggles. We work very hard, I supplement and we do all of the things they recommend on the portal. But YY is set up so that average kids can succeed in Chinese there without outside exchange programs and tutors. Will the kids who receive those extras do better? Well of course they will. If your goal is full fluency and you don't speak it at home you either need an exceptional student or you need to go above and beyond.
In our situation we decided that fluency will come over a greater period of time and will require a sustained investment well into adulthood. I imagine that there will come a point when our oldest will take over and assume the lead on this. Right now we are creating the gateway for this, but without family or business interests in China at this time we don't have an embedded connection. For our younger child fluency may never come or it will be a very long and difficult road. The general benefits of comprehensive language instruction are what keeps us at YY with that child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So are you going again this yr? Did the trip help your kid's Mandarin? Attend Mandarin school?
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^
really idiot? Let's see, I'll tell you all about Flying with Chinese, anything else on the parent website. Glad your kids are so proficient. Guess what, it gets harder your kids get older. You got to work a little.
your bright kid doesn't actually have to work hard to meet or exceed yy's standards for chinese all the way up. you only have to work hard, and spend money to supplement, if you aspire to more. yy kids invariably struggle when speaking with native speaking peers (as mine did during a month in china last year).
Anonymous wrote:^^^
really idiot? Let's see, I'll tell you all about Flying with Chinese, anything else on the parent website. Glad your kids are so proficient. Guess what, it gets harder your kids get older. You got to work a little.
Anonymous wrote:^^^
really idiot? Let's see, I'll tell you all about Flying with Chinese, anything else on the parent website. Glad your kids are so proficient. Guess what, it gets harder your kids get older. You got to work a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of rising first grader (jumbo class). We're getting to a point in my child's YY experience where I worry that my & my husband's lack of Chinese language knowledge is hurting his educational experience. He's supposed to spend 10 minutes a night reading in Chinese. The school provides books at his level, but they just don't interest him. If I knew the language, I could find different books on the topics that interest him. But as things are, I'm not able to help him out.We came to YY because we're very interested in bilingual education, and it's the only bilingual school where we got a spot. We had an opportunity to leave last fall for another school, and didn't take it. We're still committed to the school, but our role as parents is even harder than I'd expected.
Huh? Why not just bring a laptop or tablet to school to meet with a teacher and ask her to help you order books your boy might be interested in from a web site for kids studying Chinese, like ChinaSprout? We often use that site to get Mandarin DVDs, posters, flash cards etc. Or ask a parent who reads Chinese to help you order books.
I speak a dialect but can hardly read Chinese. My in-laws get on various web sites and order for me, particularly from YesAsia.com and AsiaParent.com. We've built a good collection of Mandarin DVDs, mostly Disney and Pixar cartoons popular in China (e.g. Mulan, Ice Age, Kung Fu Panda) from the several sites. We don't let our kid watch TV or DVDs in English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of rising first grader (jumbo class). We're getting to a point in my child's YY experience where I worry that my & my husband's lack of Chinese language knowledge is hurting his educational experience. He's supposed to spend 10 minutes a night reading in Chinese. The school provides books at his level, but they just don't interest him. If I knew the language, I could find different books on the topics that interest him. But as things are, I'm not able to help him out.We came to YY because we're very interested in bilingual education, and it's the only bilingual school where we got a spot. We had an opportunity to leave last fall for another school, and didn't take it. We're still committed to the school, but our role as parents is even harder than I'd expected.
Huh? Why not just bring a laptop or tablet to school to meet with a teacher and ask her to help you order books your boy might be interested in from a web site for kids studying Chinese, like ChinaSprout? We often use that site to get Mandarin DVDs, posters, flash cards etc. Or ask a parent who reads Chinese to help you order books.
I speak a dialect but can hardly read Chinese. My in-laws get on various web sites and order for me, particularly from YesAsia.com and AsiaParent.com. We've built a good collection of Mandarin DVDs, mostly Disney and Pixar cartoons popular in China (e.g. Mulan, Ice Age, Kung Fu Panda) from the several sites. We don't let our kid watch TV or DVDs in English.
A little new an far from all of to this but I wonder: How does fluency (reading, writing, spelling) in English come about at an immersion school? Do parents hire tutors to keep up with that? I mean after all, children will be applying to colleges in the US? Or are parents just hoping this all falls into place by middle school?