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December 5, 2007
Bringing Chinese Culture
to the Classroom

BROOKLINE - Jane Leo, a
first-grade teacher at the Heath School, loves to teach 6- and 7-year-olds
because of their fearlessness and confidence. ÒThe skyÕs the limit in terms
of what they believe they can do,Ó she said.
Leo is a lifelong learner
and pretty fearless herself. Her most recent exploration was inspired by a
course on Chinese literature given at Primary Source, an education foundation
dedicated to teaching through original texts. After the course, Leo applied
to visit China as part of a Primary Source study tour. A grant from the
Brookline Education Foundation supported this trip in July 2007. Leo talks
about her travels:
How did you become
interested in studying about China?
In my freshman year of
college, I was a waitress at a Chinese restaurant. I had to translate my
orders into Chinese because the cooksÕ English was as limited as my Chinese.
If business was slow, I could ask one of the other waitresses to translate
the order for me. But when they were busy, I was forced to use a much less
efficient system I called the Òclothespin system.Ó Clothespins were labeled
with both the English and Chinese name for a particular dish. With
clothespins lining both edges of the paper, my orders resembled large
centipedes. As I handed this absurdity over to the cooks, I vowed to learn
Chinese. It was an exhilarating challenge. Never before had a foreign
language seemed so useful. My co-workers were more than willing to help. I
realized it wasnÕt the novelty of learning the language that excited me, but
being able to connect with people who might otherwise be inaccessible to me.
My curiosity and willingness to learn proved to be enough to open the lines
of communication.
Can you describe the
course at Primary Source that was the precursor to this trip?
The course, ÒFrom Monkey
King to Misty Poets: Bringing Chinese Literature to K-12 Classrooms,Ó was a
10-day institute offered during the summer of 2006. We studied literature
starting with ancient Chinese poetry from the Tang Dynasty, and working all
the way up to memoirs of the Mao era.
One of the genres you
studied was Shi poetry. How do you use this material with young children?
What struck me about Shi
poetry is how accessible and meaningful it is today, even though itÕs 1,500
years old. Adults can glean deeper meaning from the poems, but at face value,
they capture slices of life that children can relate to. In the classroom, we
read Shi poems and look for common threads in the structure and meaning of
the poems. The kids identify that many Shi poems have four lines; the first
two lines describe something — a place, a thing, a person. The third
line offers a question about our chosen topic; and the fourth line sums up
our feelings about the topic. We write Shi poems about animals, objects and
places using this format.
One goal of your trip
was to learn about how people live in both urban and rural areas of China.
What did you observe?
We visited some of the
wealthier cities in China: Shanghai, Beijing and Huangzhou. By contrast, the
rural villages we visited were like walking back in time at least 30 years.
The tour highlighted these disparities. From talking with the local villagers
in Huangcun, we learned that many family members were working in the cities
as migrant workers to support their families, or had studied hard and gone to
college to start a new career.
How will this trip
enrich your teaching about China?
A recurring theme in my
travels was the importance of education in China. Education is seen as a way
to a better life. I plan to develop lessons on what school is like for
children in China. I would also like to teach the numbers in Chinese with
sign language, hand signs for numbers 1-10 that are often used in the
marketplace for bargaining. I would like to highlight the differences between
the English language and Chinese — it matters how you say it!
In Brookline, the
first-grade unit on China focuses on things that a tourist would experience
in China, such as calligraphy and food. IÕm looking to give my students a
deeper understanding of Chinese culture by exposing them to Chinese
literature, art and my own personal experience. That IÕve visited China adds
a lot of credibility to my lessons.
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