The Benefits of Studying Chinese
Many students do not realize the benefits
of studying Chinese and what makes it easy. There are many benefits to
studying Chinese. Here is a list of reasons to study Chinese and why it can
easier to study than other languages.
Why study Chinese?
-
China is the most populous country
in the world with over 1.4 billion people. Mandarin is spoken by almost one
billion people. It is
the #1
spoken language in the world. One out of five people in the world is
Chinese.
- Mandarin is spoken in the People's
Republic of China, Taiwan,
Indonesia, Thailand,
Malaysia,
Brunei, Singapore, The
Philippines,
and Mongolia.
- China is one of the world's oldest
civilizations, over 5000 years old.
- China has the second largest economy in
the world. Knowing Chinese will allow students to compete effectively in the
global
economy of the future.
- China is one of America's largest trading
partners.
- Many American companies do business in
China, including Motorola, Coca Cola, and Ford.
- Knowing Chinese may be an edge when
competing for a job. The demand for business people who know Chinese is
skyrocketing.
- China is playing a major role in world
affairs and will continue to do so.
- A May 2006 Newsweek article stated
that "In U.S. homes, Chinese has eclipsed French, German and Italian and
become the third
most commonly spoken language after English and Spanish."
- By studying Chinese, students will
develop an appreciation for Chinese culture and history.
- Leaning a
second language develops
critical and creative thinking
skills.
Why Chinese is easy?
- There are no verb conjugations.
- There is no gender.
- There is no noun-adjective agreement.
- There are no articles (the, a, an).
- There is no number agreement (three
books).
- Numbers are easy: 20 = 2-10s, èr shì; 30
= 3-10s, san shì
-
Days of the week and months are
easy. Monday = day one of the week; Tuesday = day two of the week; Wednesday
= day three of the week…; January = one month, February = two month, March =
three month…
- There are no capital and small letters.
- If you know 1000 commonly used
characters, you will recognize 90% of the characters in Chinese newspapers.
What makes Chinese hard?
- There are four different tones.
- Character writing can be difficult with
all of the strokes. There is a Romanized system called pinyin; some
letter-sounds
combinations are different from English combinations.
- Some structures can be difficult, such as
measure words. The word modifying the number changes depending on
whether it is
general, paper/book, cup/bottle, etc.
(http://www.classk12.org/htm)