How to Meet the High Demand for Chinese Teachers

There has been significant growth in Chinese language programs over the past five years. Indeed, demand seems likely to continue to increase. The most significant barrier to meeting student demand to learn Chinese is the lack of trained and certified teachers.

For programs to be vital and sustainable, teachers must be able to engage and to motivate students over the long term, incorporate best practices in the teaching and learning of world languages, and to connect the Chinese language program to other academic subject areas and aspects of school life and community.

In February of 2010, Asia Society convened an experts meeting on Chinese language teacher preparation and certification in the U.S., to address the urgent need for a long-term supply of effective Chinese language teachers. The meeting brought together 50 leaders from the United States and China to discuss the challenges and opportunities facing the field of Chinese language teaching and learning. The outcome was a set of targeted recommendations for the field going forward.

See the new Asia Society report, Meeting the Challenge: Preparing Chinese Language Teachers for American Schools, to learn about the recommendations. The report analyzes the current status of, and demand for, Chinese language programs. it proposes ways to expand and enhance the supply of Chinese language teachers, increase their effectiveness, and produce teachers for new innovations in elementary and online language programs.

To accomplish these tasks will require vision and partnerships between all the critical stakeholders—schools, colleges and universities, and state and federal government. Much is already happening in terms of both quantity and quality. Lessons have been learned, new programs have been created, and new pools of potential teachers are being developed. But much more needs to be done in order to meet the challenge of Jon Huntsman Jr., U.S. Ambassador to China: Young people today "need to be able to build bridges across the Pacific Ocean that speak to world peace, that speak to prosperity, that speak to economic development. . . . And I know of no other way of doing that . . . building those bridges . . . and making the cultures on both sides of the Pacific comprehensible, other than through language study."

 

I wanna be a Chinese teacher for teaching the foreigners Chinese.

My name is Yuanyuan Zhang. I graduated this May with a M.S.Ed in TESOL from the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. I am a native Mandarin speaker who is also fluent in English. I am interested in teaching Chinese at private schools in Pennsylvania.

I have extensive teaching experience as a teacher of a secondary language. This summer, I taught at summer Chinese camp. I enjoy working with children and sharing with them my mother language. I also have taught English to an international group of adults through the Lutheran Children & Family Services. Previously, I have taught English to college students and adults in China in both a professional and academic environment. Moreover, my graduate course work has increased my knowledge of teaching methodologies and communication styles.
Please contact me if you know any school in Pennsylvania which needs an authentic and qualified Chinese teacher.
Thanks!

How does a Chinese international student studying in the US get certified to teach Chinese without also having to get their green card first? I have a Chinese international undergrad student who wants to get her degree in education but is being told that she can't get certified in NY unless she is planning to become a citizen first. My email is jamytd@yahoo.com. Thanks!

I am a short-term Mandarin teacher in Utah now, a very good one. I am looking for a long term teaching job in the US. I speak and write proper English and Mandarin, after being a teacher of both for 25 years. I am good at teaching the language and culture by keeping students dynamically involved in fun learning activities. I am very devoted to and enjoy the job of teaching. If you are looking for a very experienced, energetic and committed professional Mandarin teacher, I will meet all your expectations. I am eager to share my experience and knowledge with your students if you offer me the opportunity.

Hi! I didn't know if you were still looking for a job but we are a newly opening public charter school for chinese immersion in South Carolina. We're looking for teachers grades PK-2nd. Would you be interested? Our website is www.eastpointsc.org

Hi! I didn't know if you were still looking for a job but we are a newly opening public charter school for chinese immersion in South Carolina. We're looking for teachers grades PK-2nd. Would you be interested? Our website is www.eastpointsc.org

I am an experienced Mandarin and English teacher here in US. I have a master's degree in English, bachelor in Chinese from a teacher's college. I have been a teacher of Mandarin and English in China for over 20 years. Since I am from the North of China my Mandarin is very standard. My English is also better than most English teachers from Mainland China. I can teach K-12, college students, and adults. I am looking for a long term teaching job. Please contact me if you have a job vacancy starting from August or September 2011. Thanks, Lucy
Our school is considering starting a Mandarin chinese program in grades K-5. We are a private school in Pittsburgh, PA. We are looking for a teacher that can be the creator of this program.
Hello out there! I'm an American majoring in Chinese Language and Culture for International Students at National Taiwan Normal University in Taipei. After I graduate I aspire to be either a middle school, high school, or community college Chinese teacher in the States. This major at NTNU is still very new and the resources in Taipei for teaching Chinese as a second language is still limited. Does anyone have advice or thoughts? After I graduate, what's the next step in becoming a Chinese teacher? Also, how does a Taiwan degree (or any international degree) look on resumes?
Hi, My name is Brigham Lim. Call me Brigs. I am a new immigrant to the USA. I am a Chinese Language instructor in a university in the Philippines. I am of Chinese descent. I teach Hanyu as a foreign language for almost 15 years now. I am also a Chinese teacher in Manila's Confucius Institute before I came here this Nov.18, last week. I would love to to teach here in California. What should I do to apply? What schools shall I go to for possible employment?

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