Business Day

Mandarin now part of more college entrance exams

- Li Yingyan People’s Daily

Thanks to China’s increasing global influence, Mandarin has been introduced as a subject in more and more countries’ college entrance examinatio­ns as an elective foreign language.

Russia’s Federal Service for Supervisio­n in Education and Science has finished technical preparatio­n work and is planning to include Mandarin in the country’s unified state exam as an elective foreign language, said Sergey Kravtsov, Deputy Minister of Education and Science of the Russian Federation.

The unified state exam, including 14 compulsory and obligatory subjects, is a series of exams every student must pass after graduation from high school to enter a university or a profession­al college. About 750,000 high school graduates take the exam annually.

Students selecting Mandarin as an elective course are expected to take the national exam in 2019, Kravtsov said, adding that it took them three years to complete the preparatio­n work, including technologi­es for written and oral tests, reference materials and talent reserves.

Germany, which adopts a two-year qualificat­ion process for college entrance, is also seeing more and more schools taking Mandarin as the subject of foreign language in graduation exams. The number of students choosing Mandarin as an elective foreign language is also on the rise.

Mandarin has been introduced as a subject in Ireland’s final examinatio­n in the middle school system, according to a 10-year foreign language teaching strategy released by the Irish government in late 2017. Starting from 2020, Mandarin will be an optional course for middle school students in the country, and will become an exam subject in 2022.

In addition to being incorporat­ed into the college entrance exam systems of foreign countries, Mandarin courses have also been offered in elementary and middle schools in many countries.

The UK government launched the Mandarin Excellence Programme (MEP) at the end of 2016, offering lessons taught in Mandarin in state-funded secondary schools across England. With an investment of £10m, the programme aims to have 5,000 pupils on track towards fluency in Mandarin by 2020.

There are more than 40,000 people studying Mandarin in Spain. More than 150 French universiti­es and 700 French elementary or middle schools are offering Mandarin courses. The French Ministry of National Education has even designated a general inspector of national education for Mandarin. In Italy, more than 30,000 students are learning the language.

According to incomplete statistics, more than 10.6million people in the Republic of Korea (ROK), or 21% of the country’s population, are learning Mandarin and Chinese characters. Each year, there are more than 170,000 ROK residents taking the Chinese Proficienc­y Test (HSK), Young Learners Chinese Test (YCT) and other Chinese-related tests.

Chinese Director of the Confucius Institute in Islamabad Zhang Daojian said the number of registered HSK candidates at each Confucius Institute across the country has exceeded 1,000.

In 2010, the UN establishe­d the Chinese Language Day. More than 600 UN internatio­nal employees and diplomats study Mandarin each year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa