Skip redundant pieces
Oread

R. Steve Dick/University Relations

Ma Min, president of Huazhong Normal University in China, and Chancellor Robert Hemenway sign an agreement to begin a direct exchange between the two universities.

KU dedicates interactive classroom, starts exchange with Chinese university

Projects will help meet demand for language classes

High school students in eight Kansas communities and in Arkansas tested their Chinese language skills recently with Ma Min, president of China’s Huazhong Normal University, when he visited the Edwards Campus.

Ma visited the Confucius Institute at the Edwards Campus Nov. 27 to dedicate a new interactive distance learning classroom that is helping to meet a growing demand for Chinese language classes in Kansas and the Great Plains region.

Ma and Robert M. Clark, vice chancellor of the Edwards Campus, greeted the high school students via state-of-the-art equipment funded this summer by $50,000 from Hanban, the Office of Chinese Language Council International; the Edwards Campus; and KU’s Confucius Institute.

Ma met with KU Chancellor Robert Hemenway later to sign an agreement to begin a direct exchange program between KU and Huazhong Normal University in Wuhan, China. In June, Hemenway met with Ma in Wuhan.

The Confucius Institute’s distance learning classes and the direct exchange program are indicative of demand from parents and students in the United States for Chinese language training, said William Tsutsui, executive director of the Confucius Institute at KU.

To help meet this demand, the Confucius Institute partnered with the Southeast Kansas Education Service Center in Greenbush to offer high school classes in Mandarin Chinese to school districts across Kansas through interactive distance learning.

Since the Confucius Institute opened at KU in May 2006, the number of high school students studying Chinese in Kansas has increased from 24 to 217. The number of Kansas teachers certified to teach Chinese jumped from one to 10. Tsutsui said there are 21 Kansas school districts offering Mandarin Chinese classes and that he expects those numbers to grow.

“Thanks to an innovative agreement between the Kansas Department of Education and Hanban, with the cooperation of the Confucius Institute and Huazhong Normal University, which facilitates the certification of trained visiting teachers from China, young Kansans in Pittsburg, Galena and Clearwater, for example, are learning Chinese,” Tsutsui said.

With the distance learning classroom, eight Kansas high schools are offering Chinese language classes: Washburn Rural in Topeka, Lawrence and Lawrence Free State, Madison, Marysville, Valley Heights in Blue Rapids, White City and Winfield. Classes are also being taught in Beebe, Ark. Confucius Institute instructors are sending enrichment and after-school programs in Chinese language and culture to elementary and middle schools across Kansas.

KU HISTORY

On Dec. 7, 1972, Ron Evans became the first Jayhawk in space. Evans was part of the 12-day mission to the moon on Apollo 17. During the trip he did not walk on the lunar surface but did take an hour-long space walk, pilot the craft in lunar orbit and saw the Earth from 240,000 miles. For more, visit www.kuhistory.com