
Where EAST meets the Northwest

FOREIGN EXCHANGE. University of South Florida students Maya Ueda, second from
right, Jahae Jang, third from right, and Jennifer Nguyen, left, talk with
Chinese professors Zhao Ying Han, right, and Hong Lou He, front left, as they
prepare for a Mandarin exam in Tampa, Florida. The students are studying
Mandarin as part of the Confucius Institute, a global outreach program of the
Chinese government. (AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)
From The Asian Reporter, V19, #44 (November 10, 2009), page 8.
China expands language institutes at U.S. colleges
By Christine Armario
Associated Press Writer
TAMPA, Florida — In a small room at the University of South Florida, Maya
Ueda and two classmates prepare for a Mandarin exam. A pot of green tea idles
nearby and Chinese folk instruments, games, and movies fill the cabinets and
bookcases.
Although the students are doing their work at a state school on Florida’s
Gulf Coast, the center they are studying in is part of a global outreach by the
government of China called the Confucius Institute. The cultural and language
centers have sprung up around the world, hosted at universities eager to boost
their Mandarin offerings as China’s economic influence grows.
The Confucius Institute at South Florida is one of nearly 60 such centers in
the United States, and 396 globally in 87 countries. They fill language
instruction needs at a time when many universities are grappling with budget
cuts. Most receive initial funding and faculty from China.
Ueda, a 23-year-old psychology major, is planning a career in business, and
many of the companies she is interested in require fluency in at least one Asian
language. She believes having a firm grasp of Mandarin will help her stand out.
"By understanding that language and culture, I’ll be able to interact with
Chinese business people," Ueda said. "I think that will definitely expand my
career opportunities."
China observers see the Confucius Institutes as part of the nation’s efforts
to reshape its image from that of a threatening superpower. Such displays of
"soft power" are hardly new, though analysts say the Confucius Institutes are
unique in the close relationships they establish with universities.
That arrangement has raised concerns about whether cozying up with China and
its communist, authoritarian government would interfere with a university’s
academic freedom.
The University of Pennsylvania never applied to host an institute, nor did
China ever ask the school to do so, said G. Cameron Hurst III, the former
director of Penn’s Center for East Asian Studies.
"There was a general feeling that it was not an appropriate thing for us to
do," he said.
"We feel absolutely confident in the instructors that we train here, and we
didn’t want them meddling in our curriculum, particularly," Hurst said of
Chinese officials. "And we were not sure of what their political motivations
really are, anyway."
Others say the institutes haven’t been a threat to academic integrity.
"It’s a very long-term strategy to get people to appreciate Chinese culture,"
said Stan Rosen, director of the University of Southern California’s East Asian
Studies Center. "They steer away from those kinds of political issues, just to
teach straight language. Because they know this is exactly what critics of China
might be looking for."
The Confucius Institutes have many precedents. Germany has its Goethe
Institutes and France the Alliance Francaise. Britain, Italy, Spain, and other
countries also have established centers in nations around the world to promote
the study of their languages and cultures. The former United States Information
Agency did something similar, though with the explicit goal of attempting to
influence public attitudes abroad to support U.S. foreign policy objectives.
Demand for Mandarin classes has been growing. According to the Chinese
Ministry of Education, about 40,000 foreign students travel to take classes in
China each year. Courses are popping up in schools in the United States as well,
starting as early as kindergarten.
A study published by the Modern Language Association of America in 2007 found
enrollment in Chinese language courses at U.S. colleges and universities had
increased 51 percent between 2002 and 2006 to 51,000. Most students still choose
to study Spanish, French, or German, but the report found their dominance has
been slowly decreasing.
"Our programs were maxed out," said Randy Kluver, director of the Confucius
Institute at Texas A&M University.
Finding qualified Mandarin teachers has been a struggle in many parts of the
country. It is a difficult language for many nonnative speakers to learn. A
word’s meaning can change depending on the tone in which it is pronounced.
Sentence structure, too, differs considerably from English and other European
languages.
The first Confucius Institute outside China was established in Seoul, South
Korea in 2004. The first U.S. center was created at the University of Maryland.
The institutes are largely at state universities. According to the official
Xinhua News Agency, the Chinese government plans to establish 500 Confucius
Institutes by 2010. Today they range from Finland to Rwanda.
Each institute is paired with a Chinese university, which sends visiting
instructors. Curriculum is determined by each institution, though China offers
teaching materials and instruction models. Any messages about China are conveyed
indirectly.
Maria Crummett, dean of international affairs at the University of South
Florida, likened the institutes to "people-to-people diplomacy. This is not
about diplomacy at the highest levels. This is about faculty, students, staff,
administrators, the community."
Visiting Chinese teachers said they come face to face with skepticism about
China in class, fielding questions such as, "How would China feel if Americans
were taking jobs away from them?" and "Are all Chinese people good at kung fu?"
Those are the exceptions, said Yirong Luo, a visiting Mandarin teacher at the
Confucius Institute at Texas A&M. Most students, Luo said, "very much want to
know the real China."
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