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Chinese school
Wikipedia
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In Western countries like the United States, Canada, Australia and the UK, a Chinese school is a school established explicitly for the purpose of teaching the Chinese language (of the various Chinese dialects, nowadays Mandarin Chinese is almost always the one taught) to American-born Chinese (ABC), Canadian-born Chinese (CBC) youth and the youth born in the respective countries.
Typically, Chinese children attend Chinese school either after school (that is, elementary school|elementary or middle school) on weekday afternoons, or on Saturday mornings.
Chinese schools are very popular with Chinese parents, who encourage their children to go to Chinese school from a young age. Many Chinese children, however, dislike Chinese school and drop out by middle school|middle or high school.
Besides teaching the Chinese language, Chinese schools serve as social centers allowing Chinese immigrants and their children to meet other Chinese families. Chinese schools also counter the loss of Chinese culture brought on by assimilation into North American society.
Chinese schools are credited with maintaining the relatively-high proportions of North American Chinese youth who are able to read or write Chinese, at least to a limited extent. (Spoken, as opposed to written, Chinese is likely learned as much at home as in a Chinese school.)
Category:U.S. immigration history
category:Chinese American history
This article is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Chinese school".
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Last Modified: 2005-04-06 |
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