At this Irvine school, that
sound you hear is Chinese
StarTalk, a national
security program to develop Chinese and Arabic speakers, is
being tested at the nation's largest Chinese cultural
center.
By David Kelly, Times
Staff Writer
July 20, 2007
Slater Stanley is only
14 but already has big plans. He intends to have mastered
Chinese by the time he finishes high school, then wants to
head to Beijing for college.
"I don't know why I'm
interested in Chinese culture," said Slater, of Newport
Beach. "I think I was just born with it."
As a student at the
Irvine Chinese School, he has certainly come to the right
place. A national security effort is underway to create more
Chinese and Arabic speakers, and the Irvine school is a
focus of that effort.
Irvine has become a
growing center of Chinese culture in Southern California.
There are about 30,000 residents of Chinese descent here,
city officials say. There are Chinese supermarkets, plays,
operas, Buddhist temples and a cultural center that is one
of the largest in the U.S. More Chinese Americans live in
Irvine than any other city in the county.
The school, at the
newly opened, $12-million, 44,000-square-foot South Coast
Chinese Cultural Center, is the country's largest site for
the StarTalk program. Funded by the Department of Defense
and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,
StarTalk aims to lure students into learning languages
deemed critical to national security and the economy.
About 250 students are
enrolled in Chinese immersion classes in Irvine.
Representatives of the StarTalk program visited the site
Thursday to check on its progress.
"In the U.S., foreign
languages have always taken a back seat to other
disciplines, and we want to change that," said Betsy Hart,
associate director of the National Foreign Language Center
at the University of Maryland and head of StarTalk. "This is
a pilot year, and we are testing to see which models will be
most effective."
In one room, beginning
students were learning basic characters, in another more
advanced children were typing in Chinese. A few weeks ago,
one class debated abortion in Chinese.
The difference between
immersion classes and regular courses is the intensity. Some
classes are held entirely in Chinese.
The students, who are
mostly in high school, have various reasons for studying the
language.
"I took Chinese because
we adopted a Chinese girl and I wanted to help her keep her
language," said Timothy Johnson, 15, of Mission Viejo. "I
learned a lot more here compared to high school because in
high school my teacher barely spoke Chinese."
Cynthia Wang's Chinese
teacher wouldn't let her speak English, which she said has
improved her conversational skills.
"The teacher doesn't
talk to us like we are little kids," she said.
The Irvine site was
chosen after David Wu, who heads the Southern California
Council of Chinese Schools, and representatives from the
Chinese cultural center heard about the program and applied
for a federal grant. They were awarded $193,000 and set
about devising a one-month, intensive curriculum.
"This is the first time
we have seen a federal grant program come along to teach
Chinese," said Tim Cheng, manager of the cultural center and
vice chairman of the Irvine Community Services Commission.
"We used to have to beg our kids to learn Chinese, and now
it has become very popular."
Shuhan Wang, executive
director of Chinese Language Initiatives for the Asia
Society, accompanied Hart and said that unlike Arabic, there
is a large infrastructure of Chinese language schools in the
U.S. and far more Chinese speakers.
"We want to dispel the
notion that these languages are difficult to learn," she
said. "They are different but learnable, and when students
do learn the alphabet or characters, they feel very smart."
StarTalk, which ends in
Irvine on July 26, could continue next year if it gets
another grant. Hart's reaction indicated it seems quite
possible.
"I was blown away by
the advanced level of what was going on in the classrooms,
even in the beginning classes," she said. "We ask, 'Are the
students happy? Are they learning?' And from what we see, it
seems to be very successful."
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david.kelly@latimes.com