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Should Chinese not be a Leaving Cert subject?

  • 28-10-2009 12:06pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭


    Mods, feel free to move if this is in the wrong place.

    I have been researching this and am surprised that Chinese is not a leaving certificate subject. Does anyone know if anything is being proposed or planned?

    From my research I have found that these are the current Languages for the Leaving Cert in their respective headings:

    Modern Languages
    Arabic
    French
    German
    Irish
    Italian
    Japanese
    Russian
    Hebrew
    Spanish
    Russian

    Non-curricular EU languages (available for students who meet certain criteria)
    Bulgarian
    Czech
    Danish
    Dutch
    Estonian
    Finnish
    Modern Greek
    Hungarian
    Latvian
    Lithuanian
    Polish
    Portuguese
    Romanian
    Slovakian
    Swedish

    Arts and Humanities
    Ancient Greek
    Latin

    I must admit that I find it difficult to understand why our country's future talent have the option to study languages such as Latin, Arabic and Hebrew but not Chinese :confused:

    Not that anyone needs reminding but here are a few compelling reasons why it might be added to the Leaving Cert:

    -World's most spoken language by any measurement. Mandarin has 845 million first language speakers mainly in China, Taiwan and Singapore.
    -This compares to the 2nd most spoken language being English with 328 million first language speakers.
    -China is the third largest economy in the world after the US and Japan.
    -China has had the fastest-growing major economy for the past 30 years with an average annual GDP growth rate above 10%.
    -China is the most populous in the world with over 1.3 billion people, approximately one-fifth of the world's population.
    -China's foreign exchange reserves have reached US$2.1 trillion, making it by far the world's largest.
    -China is now the world's third biggest consumer of luxury goods with 12% of the global share.
    -China currently has the most cell phone users in the world with over 700 million users in July 2009. It also has the largest number of internet and broadband users in the world.

    Sources: Various Wikipedia pages


Comments

  • Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators Posts: 4,575 Mod ✭✭✭✭dory


    Those languages are there to cater for immigrants who speak those languages, and might slip up on English/Irish exams as far as I know, not to give Irish people a chance to study an exotic language.
    I've never heard of an Irish person sitting Latvian in the Leaving. Lovely idea but the demand wouldn't be there to hire a teacher and the Irish young uns couldn't share a class with native Latvians.
    It's all down to how many Chinese people sit the Leaving Cert I believe.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    Dory, your point is only valid for the 'Non-curricular EU languages' which is driven by EU guidelines. Hence Chinese can never fall into this category.

    The other languages I mentioned such as Latin, Arabic and Hebrew do not fall into this category. They are fully fledged Leaving Cert subjects which are designed for English speaking students.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 79 ✭✭lauralee28


    leonardjos wrote: »
    Dory, your point is only valid for the 'Non-curricular EU languages' which is driven by EU guidelines. Hence Chinese can never fall into this category.

    The other languages I mentioned such as Latin, Arabic and Hebrew do not fall into this category. They are fully fledged Leaving Cert subjects which are designed for English speaking students.

    Are you aware of the current educational cutbacks?:rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    lauralee28 wrote: »
    Are you aware of the current educational cutbacks?:rolleyes:

    Indeed, why fund an educational system that prepares students for the modern economy?! After all, all that money is desperately needed by the poor unfortunate banks! ;)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 79 ✭✭lauralee28


    leonardjos wrote: »
    Indeed, why fund an educational system that prepares students for the modern economy?! After all, all that money is desperately needed by the poor unfortunate banks! ;)

    Yeah you're right, schools should get funding for teachers of chinese. Never mind the learning support and special needs assistance that has been cut in the budget or the thousands of unemployed teachers of other subjects:rolleyes:. I have no problem funding the educational system and see first hand the effects of the cuts in my school. But fund the schools where necessary, not for flippin chinese!You can't be a teacher surely!?
    What planet are you on????:rolleyes:


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    Just because I'm not a teacher doesn't mean I can't have an opinion on the educational system. Sometimes you have to be outside the system to see the bigger picture. We shouldn't be content for our educational system just to thread water, we should be open to reforming and improving it. And when I say improving and reforming that is not code for throwing more money at the problem.

    Adding Chinese to the Leaving Cert shouldn't be something that would incur huge expense. And it also doesn't mean that every school in the country would be obliged to teach it or hire a new teacher. After all Latin, Arabic and Hebrew are on the Leaving Cert and they are not burdening the system with unnecessary expense. Schools and students would simply have the option to cover it if they wanted to.

    By the way, I agree that funding for special needs assistance and so forth shouldn't be cut. I was having a go at the government for diverting hugely needed funds into NAMA. I think the teaching of languages is only one area where we need to be re-evaluating how we are equiping our students for the real world that awaits once they graduate. It's a tough world out there, and its probably going to get tougher.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,567 ✭✭✭delta_bravo


    Slightly related to this I wonder why Hebrew studies has not been removed from the Junior and Leaving Certificate list of examinable subjects. Less than 10 people have taken the subject at lc level in the last 5 years and this will probably continue as the Jewish community in Ireland has been in decline in recent decades.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,185 ✭✭✭asdasd


    -This compares to the 2nd most spoken language being English with 328 million first language speakers.

    sounds a bit low.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 141 ✭✭pjtb


    The OP has a valid point. Recession or no recession a valid point is a valid point.

    If students can take Japanese at Leaving Cert level then surely it is within the realms of possibility that Chinese could be taken as well.

    I'm sure it would be a very costly exercise to develop a curriculum though. It's not as straight forward as a DES official or NCCA official just deciding what would be studied in the subject. It is a long process to develop a curriculum to a stage where it is implemented in schools. And even when it is implementable very few schools would choose to offer it, even if the Celtic Tiger (RIP) was still alive.

    Japanese is a fairly recent addition to the LC programme, and doesn't have massive numbers taking it. But it is there nonetheless. I'm sure Chinese would have a greater uptake than Japanese if it was introduced.


  • Moderators, Recreation & Hobbies Moderators Posts: 4,575 Mod ✭✭✭✭dory


    pjtb wrote: »
    If students can take Japanese at Leaving Cert level then surely it is within the realms of possibility that Chinese could be taken as well.

    Japanese being on the list is irrelevant to the vast bulk of students as the schools wouldn't offer it anyway. People would have to go out of their way to get private Jap lessons, which I suppose one could do for Chinese too.

    But how many 15 year olds really think of the global economy? More than anything they'd be thinking of the hot French ones they could score with a few words of that.

    Chinese is taught in a good few Universities. If they have the facilities for that then great, young people of Ireland get thir Chinese education, and post-primary schools can work on other areas.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 141 ✭✭pjtb


    dory wrote: »
    Japanese being on the list is irrelevant to the vast bulk of students as the schools wouldn't offer it anyway. People would have to go out of their way to get private Jap lessons, which I suppose one could do for Chinese too.

    My school had Japanese as an option for LC. And other schools in my area had it as well; the same Japanese teacher taught in a few different schools. Obviously not every school offers it, but there are many subjects in the LC programme that are not offered by every school.
    dory wrote: »
    But how many 15 year olds really think of the global economy? More than anything they'd be thinking of the hot French ones they could score with a few words of that.

    How many 15 year olds want to go to school in the first place?! How many 15 year olds want to study Maths and English?! And I don't think that many students pick French for the reason you stated:D.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,812 ✭✭✭✭evolving_doors


    If it can be done for Japanese it should be done for Chinese...simple as..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,397 ✭✭✭✭rainbowtrout


    Arabic is taken by students in a school in Tripoli, Libya which follows the LC curriculum. If you have a look at any LC timetable for the last number of years you'll see that it's examined at the same time as Irish. There may be a few students sitting the exam in this country, but that is it's main function.


    Latin, Ancient Greek and I suspect Hebrew have been around for some time as exam subjects and would have been far more popular many years ago. They can be provided as long as there is a demand (albeit small) for them and schools can provide them. It's far easier to provide examinations in subjects with an established curriculum than to develop a new curriculum for a new subject.

    Us teachers of Agricultural Science haven't had a change in the curriculum for the subject since 1969. Considering the importance of agriculture in this country, and the length of time we are waiting, it'll be a long time before Chinese is a Leaving Cert subject in this country.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    Chinese is not needed for the modern economy. English is the language used in world business. Chinese people spend their time going to third level in english speaking countries to learn english for their future business careers not the other way round.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    kermitpwee wrote: »
    Chinese is not needed for the modern economy. English is the language used in world business. Chinese people spend their time going to third level in english speaking countries to learn english for their future business careers not the other way round.

    In that case, why are we bothering to teach foreign languages at all? The whole world will just learn English and come knocking on our doors with lucrative business deals. ;)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    It's far easier to provide examinations in subjects with an established curriculum than to develop a new curriculum for a new subject.

    No argument there, but that's hardly the point!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    leonardjos wrote: »
    In that case, why are we bothering to teach foreign languages at all? The whole world will just learn English and come knocking on our doors with lucrative business deals. ;)

    I don't have any opinion on why we are teaching foreign languages.

    My point is that chinese is not needed for our economy to grow and I cant see a reason why it should be introduced to the leaving. Imo just because other languages are available in the leaving cert is not a valid argument for the introductiuon of chinese. Whether these languages have a valid basis for examination purposes is a different debate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,397 ✭✭✭✭rainbowtrout


    leonardjos wrote: »
    No argument there, but that's hardly the point!

    Well in a way it is. It can take years to develop a curriculum, often when it is finally put in place it is deemed to be out of date. Ask around about the DCG course that has replaced Tech Drawing and has only been examined once so far. To develop a curriculum takes time and money, and if it is to be a minority subject, it will have very little return. Money could be better spent on updating subjects that are popular but are in need of an overhaul.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,812 ✭✭✭✭evolving_doors


    Well in a way it is. It can take years to develop a curriculum, often when it is finally put in place it is deemed to be out of date. Ask around about the DCG course that has replaced Tech Drawing and has only been examined once so far. To develop a curriculum takes time and money, and if it is to be a minority subject, it will have very little return. Money could be better spent on updating subjects that are popular but are in need of an overhaul.

    Didn't seem to be any great hullabaloo about doing it for Japenese..What's been the "return" on this language to students to date?

    Comparing the new DCG V's Old Tech drawing syllabus is a different kettle of fish...
    To create a syllabus for a language the criteria should be more or less the same as with any languge. I reckon you could take the curriculum from the Japanese one and modify it quite easily to create a chinese curriculum. What's the difference in structure...a written comprehension...a composition section..an aural...an oral...? What's the big deal..


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 141 ✭✭pjtb


    Japanese is very different to languages like French and German, so the syllabus for it is very different. The fact that it is only studied for two years is another reason for it being so different. You only get a very basis fluency level in the language from studying it at Leaving Cert. Students who took it in my old school were talking very simply when nearing the time for their oral, saying things like 'I like school. School in Ireland is different to Japan.'. They could only speak about an extremely limited range of topics in the language. One's standard in French or Spanish after Leaving Cert would be much higher. So Leaving cert study of the language is really only a taster of it. It's an ab initio course.

    According to this document, page 5, 208 students took Japanese in the 2009 examination. That's compared to 99 which took it in 2008, which is quite a jump. According to this chief examiner's report, only 31 students took it 2004, and even less before that. So the numbers taking it have risen fairly substantially.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,633 ✭✭✭maninasia


    kermitpwee wrote: »
    Chinese is not needed for the modern economy. English is the language used in world business. Chinese people spend their time going to third level in english speaking countries to learn english for their future business careers not the other way round.

    This betrays your ignorance, China is already the world's biggest market for some industries such as energy, manufacturing and possibly soon for luxury goods. If you want to SELL into a market you'd better have some local language ability.....
    Say an Irish company wants to export its good/services to China/Asian region, who does it choose to manage this, the person who speaks Chinese or the one that doesn't (all else being equal). This is a bad example given the dearth of Irish industry but for many UK/Germany/US companies the Chinese market is already a key part of their business revenue.

    Not only that, China's influence on the world stage is growing, having Chinese will be a very useful tool for career advancement in the future. In fact Chinese can be used quite happily as a means of communication in Asia rather than English as Chinese tourists and businessmen are becoming ubiquitous and there are large numbers of ethnic Chinese worldwide. Do you think it is easier to be understood in Japan in English when shopping/eating? Wrong, it is much easier to find somebody who speaks Chinese! In addition Chinese tourists are quickly becoming the largest contribution to tourism coffers among non-EU tourists into Europe, i.e., if you want to work in tourism it would be a good idea to learn at least some Chinese.

    Learning Chinese to a high level is not easy, but getting a good start in it in school will give any student an excellent leg up in life.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,937 ✭✭✭implausible


    Feel free to correct me, but I thought that there was no one Chinese language, but various versions - Mandarin, Cantonese etc:confused:

    Sounds like a lot of hassle for a subject that wouldn't have a high uptake. It would only be offered in a small number of schools to an elite group of students. Surely if there was a demand, this would have come up before.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,633 ✭✭✭maninasia


    The demand may not have been there but certainly should be now. It may not be high yet but it is growing. Elite schools, that's defeatist thinking!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    maninasia wrote: »
    This betrays your ignorance, China is already the world's biggest market for some industries such as energy, manufacturing and possibly soon for luxury goods. If you want to SELL into a market you'd better have some local language ability.....
    Say an Irish company wants to export its good/services to China/Asian region, who does it choose to manage this, the person who speaks Chinese or the one that doesn't (all else being equal). This is a bad example given the dearth of Irish industry but for many UK/Germany/US companies the Chinese market is already a key part of their business revenue.

    Not only that, China's influence on the world stage is growing, having Chinese will be a very useful tool for career advancement in the future. In fact Chinese can be used quite happily as a means of communication in Asia rather than English as Chinese tourists and businessmen are becoming ubiquitous and there are large numbers of ethnic Chinese worldwide. Do you think it is easier to be understood in Japan in English when shopping/eating? Wrong, it is much easier to find somebody who speaks Chinese! In addition Chinese tourists are quickly becoming the largest contribution to tourism coffers among non-EU tourists into Europe, i.e., if you want to work in tourism it would be a good idea to learn at least some Chinese.

    Learning Chinese to a high level is not easy, but getting a good start in it in school will give any student an excellent leg up in life.

    I thought China was an export economy due to its low labour costs?

    Imo Ireland will never be exporting to China. What would we export? China is full of multinationals who then export to other countries.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    kermitpwee wrote: »
    I thought China was an export economy due to its low labour costs?

    A successful export economy will eventually lead to greater imports in that economy. The trade imbalance would naturally lead to a strenghtening of the currency of the exporting country. Over time this allows the people in the exporting economy to import more. Over time this should correct the trade imbalance.

    This is economics 101. Of course other factors like political supports for currencies and trade barriers could delay or dampen this effect.
    kermitpwee wrote: »
    Imo Ireland will never be exporting to China. What would we export? China is full of multinationals who then export to other countries.

    Ireland is also full of multinationals that export everything from software to pharmiceuticals. Indigenious Irish businesses can export things that are in demand in China such as beef, seafood, professional services, consultancy services etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    leonardjos wrote: »
    A successful export economy will eventually lead to greater imports in that economy. The trade imbalance would naturally lead to a strenghtening of the currency of the exporting country. Over time this allows the people in the exporting economy to import more. Over time this should correct the trade imbalance.

    This is economics 101. Of course other factors like political supports for currencies and trade barriers could delay or dampen this effect.



    Ireland is also full of multinationals that export everything from software to pharmiceuticals. Indigenious Irish businesses can export things that are in demand in China such as beef, seafood, professional services, consultancy services etc.

    China is hugely corrupt and remember economics 101 is based on keeping certain factors constant before it can make a conclusion, this does not happen in the real world. In fairness you have alluded strongly to political problems. I just cant see Ireland exporting to China or how putting Chinese on the Leaving Certificate is going to be benefit to the irish economy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,633 ✭✭✭maninasia


    China is corrupt, what about Ireland? As far as I can see it's Ireland that should be worrying about it's economic future! Massive debts written off for banks and rich developers, interlinked political-business class, country with a 20 billion euro deficit this year, entitlements loaded towards public officials.

    FYI, many corrupt and autocratic regimes have brought about rapid and amazing improvements in their economies...Korea, Taiwan, Singapore etc. Later these countries opened up their society and became democratic excepting Singapore (and if you ask most Irish people they will say Singapore is a nice place, yet it is at least as autocratic as China with a single party govt, no political protest allowed and regular executions!). There is no Economics 101!

    Something you need to understand about China is that it is a huge country with a central government and also powerful provincial governments. Each region has it's own culture, core business and resources (much as could be said for the EU or the US). Many of these provinces are powerful well run entities in their own right competing against each other in investment and prestige. You need to go there to understand this. It is not one 'monolithic' country and culture as you may think.

    Anyway...can you not get your head around the fact that a country can be a major importer and exporter at the same time? I wish you could go to China and see Beijing or Shanghai or even their interior cities .. you will see they are here for the long haul. Their infrastructure is far superior to Ireland's. There are problems with pollution and that is unfortunate but it will not stop their future development and they ARE changing their ways and learning. In terms of tools for development of one's career Chinese will certainly be an asset looked favourably on by employers for many decades.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Education Moderators Posts: 27,316 CMod ✭✭✭✭spurious


    Going wildly off topic here, ladies and gents.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    maninasia wrote: »
    There is no Economics 101!
    Economics 101 is An Introduction to Economics course in the first year of 3rd level studies in Economics. This is what I thought you were referring to.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    maninasia wrote: »

    Anyway...can you not get your head around the fact that a country can be a major importer and exporter at the same time? .

    Yes I can understand this statement. Imo chinese has no valid place in the leaving cert as I can't see Ireland trading anyway siginificantly with China. I do realise that China is a significant force in the world economy. Imo China will not be sending any jobs to Ireland, they have cheap labour themselves. We dont make anything that they can use. Also they wont be buying services of us when there western educated people can provide them for them. Ireland has done well as it has been a gateway for the USA to get into europe, those days are gone, China wont be using us for
    anything.

    This is why I dont see how the introduction of Chinese in the leaving cert will boost our economy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    kermitpwee wrote: »
    Yes I can understand this statement. Imo chinese has no valid place in the leaving cert as I can't see Ireland trading anyway siginificantly with China. I do realise that China is a significant force in the world economy. Imo China will not be sending any jobs to Ireland, they have cheap labour themselves. We dont make anything that they can use. Also they wont be buying services of us when there western educated people can provide them for them. Ireland has done well as it has been a gateway for the USA to get into europe, those days are gone, China wont be using us for
    anything.

    This is why I dont see how the introduction of Chinese in the leaving cert will boost our economy.

    In the words of Faithless "You dont need eyes to see, you need vision!" :D

    Chinese Company CIRS to Establish EU Headquarters in Dundalk with the Creation of 26 Jobs
    24/09/09
    Chinese company with headquarters in Hangzhou, one of China’s leading cities, is setting up its EU Headquarters at Finnabair Business Park in Dundalk, Co. Louth. The company is anticipated to employ up to 26 high-level positions over the next twelve months, for which it will recruit science graduates. The investment is supported by Government through IDA Ireland.
    In 2006, IDA Ireland established its office in Shanghai to unlock a gateway for Chinese companies to expand and develop their businesses in Europe.
    Jim Wei, Director, CIRS Ireland, said “CIRS is already a world leader in providing these services from our HQ in Hangzhou. REACH and the EU market is a key new market for us, and having weighed up the options in location, we believe that locating our European base in Ireland is very strategic, based on the skills sets of Ireland’s workforce, as well as the support shown to us by government and the business community.”


    Finfacts Article Nov 5 2008
    Considering the potential for Chinese investment in Ireland, Jim O'Hara, General Manager, Intel Ireland said, "A great opportunity for Ireland is to become a turn-key solution to enter Europe for Chinese firms. Ireland is very well versed in dealing with Europe. We could turn this into a massive opportunity. Ireland only needs a very small piece of the worldwide FDI pie to be very successful. We can offer expertise to China and many others to enter Europe, to establish their brands and gain financial, IP and legal support.

    It's well known that Singapore and Hong Kong, due to their colonial English histories, are the established locations where Western multi-nationals base their Asian operations.

    Chinese companies are increasing their direct exports to other countries including European. This is a shift away from Western companies simply sourcing their manufacturing from China. To successfully export to Europe they will need a European base, as many American companies already have in Ireland.

    Just one example - Lenovo , a Chinese multinational, now the fourth largest seller of personal computers in the world. Lenovo acquired the former IBM PC Company Division, which marketed the ThinkPad line of notebook PCs, in 2005 for approximately $1.75 billion. They have a presense in Asia, Japan and the US but none in Europe yet. If we think another American computer company are going to come along to replace Dell, we'll be waiting. This will be the next big opportunity for the Irish computing sector. (Of course I'm referring to a sales, marketing, logistics HQ not a manufacturing base).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,658 ✭✭✭kermitpwee


    leonardjos wrote: »
    In the words of Faithless "You dont need eyes to see, you need vision!" :D

    Chinese Company CIRS to Establish EU Headquarters in Dundalk with the Creation of 26 Jobs
    24/09/09








    Finfacts Article Nov 5 2008



    It's well known that Singapore and Hong Kong, due to their colonial English histories, are the established locations where Western multi-nationals base their Asian operations.

    Chinese companies are increasing their direct exports to other countries including European. This is a shift away from Western companies simply sourcing their manufacturing from China. To successfully export to Europe they will need a European base, as many American companies already have in Ireland.

    Just one example - Lenovo , a Chinese multinational, now the fourth largest seller of personal computers in the world. Lenovo acquired the former IBM PC Company Division, which marketed the ThinkPad line of notebook PCs, in 2005 for approximately $1.75 billion. They have a presense in Asia, Japan and the US but none in Europe yet. If we think another American computer company are going to come along to replace Dell, we'll be waiting. This will be the next big opportunity for the Irish computing sector. (Of course I'm referring to a sales, marketing, logistics HQ not a manufacturing base).

    Good points there. Didn't think China would be too bothered with Ireland but have been proven wrong.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,255 ✭✭✭getz


    am i thick or what, isent there over 300 in the sino-tibeta family of languages ?with mandarin,and cantonese only two of them,so which chinese language should you learn ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,633 ✭✭✭maninasia


    You should learn Mandarin, any other dialect is a bonus but not neccessary. Chinese writing script and grammar is shared across all the dialects, that is the secret of how they communicate with each other smoothly.

    Learning Chinese is good for the Irish economy but more importantly it will be good for your individual career in the long run. It's a commitment though just like learning any language. It's also not enough to have a successful career, you should also have a core skill.

    There are many goods and services Irish firms can trade with China. For example NZ's no.1 export market for it's agricultural goods is China. That shows the potential in that sector alone. If you want to SELL something to somebody it helps an awful lot if you SPEAK THEIR LANGUAGE. This is just pure common sense. There is a large middle class in China that is willing to buy better quality products, novel products or branded products, plenty of market there waiting to be exploited.

    Most Asian companies so far tend to locate their European regional offices in Belgium, Holland and Germany due to transport links and educational and trade exchanges. Ireland needs a direct flight from China to help to compete on that score.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    A third of bosses want Chinese taught in schools by John Walshe, November 26 2009

    Its seems that this idea may be slowing gathering some support...
    A THIRD of employers want Irish students to learn Chinese.

    New research published yesterday reveals a lack of language skills is hampering business with China.

    It found one-in-three employers think Mandarin Chinese should be on the Junior and Leaving Cert curriculum.
    The research, undertaken by the Chinese studies department at UCD, reveals almost 13pc of all secondary schools in the UK provide Mandarin teaching, but Chinese is not an option on the Irish curriculum
    The research, which was launched by Foreign Affairs Minister Micheal Martin, recommends a longer-term sustainable approach which works towards the development of Chinese as a full-time subject. Learning from the experiences of other countries, it recommends the sharing of teachers between schools, enabling them to be offered full-time contracts so that quality staff are attracted and maintained.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 121 ✭✭poncho000


    I hope they DONT introduce it. Why? becasue i am young and currently learning chinese and in the next few years china will be big and strong and chinese will be an important language. So I want to have an advantage by being able to speak chinese while other people can't :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,428 ✭✭✭Powerhouse


    poncho000 wrote: »
    I hope they DONT introduce it. Why? becasue i am young and currently learning chinese and in the next few years china will be big and strong and chinese will be an important language. So I want to have an advantage by being able to speak chinese while other people can't :)



    You will have the advantage of being able to go and work in China if you can speak Chinese. But the idea that a working knowledge of Chinese will be required to work for a Chinese multi-national in Ireland is delusional - if they need fluent Chinese speakers they can import plenty. They will never need to rely on locals for that. Luckily for the Irish English is the international language and that won't change. There are more English speakers in China than anywhere else. We have little cause to learn any other international language for business - as distinct from cultural - purposes.

    And anyway if people want a working grasp of Chinese they will have to study it outside school which is not a place designed to achieve fluency in any language. Look how limited the vocabulary of many kids is even in English on leaving school.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,420 ✭✭✭Dionysus


    I'd rather learn Tibetan.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 121 ✭✭poncho000


    Powerhouse wrote: »
    You will have the advantage of being able to go and work in China if you can speak Chinese. But the idea that a working knowledge of Chinese will be required to work for a Chinese multi-national in Ireland is delusional - if they need fluent Chinese speakers they can import plenty. They will never need to rely on locals for that. Luckily for the Irish English is the international language and that won't change. There are more English speakers in China than anywhere else. We have little cause to learn any other international language for business - as distinct from cultural - purposes.

    And anyway if people want a working grasp of Chinese they will have to study it outside school which is not a place designed to achieve fluency in any language. Look how limited the vocabulary of many kids is even in English on leaving school.

    You're right, thats why im going to china in the next 2 years. In the next few years China will be a very desirable place to work, much like america was a few years ago and Australia is now. So by learning chinese I will be able to move there and live comfortably. Thats why I dont want other people learning chinese because then there would a big influx of westerners going to China.
    If they introduce chinese to the LC it may spark interest in our young people and I dont want this. I want China all to myself :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭leonardjos


    Powerhouse wrote: »
    Luckily for the Irish English is the international language and that won't change.

    So we don't need to learn any other languages because we speak English, and so there is no point teaching or learning them?

    Do you really think that people cannot improve their employment, career or business prospects by learning a second language (even if they never become fluent in it)?

    Would you also be in favour of removing French, German and the other foreign languages from schools?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,428 ✭✭✭Powerhouse


    leonardjos wrote: »

    1) So we don't need to learn any other languages because we speak English,

    2) and so there is no point teaching or learning them?

    3) Do you really think that people cannot improve their employment, career or business prospects by learning a second language (even if they never become fluent in it)?

    4) Would you also be in favour of removing French, German and the other foreign languages from schools?


    1) Exactly - unless like the other poster you are determined to emigrate to a particular country. But broadly speaking we don't need any language other than English as it is the universal language.

    2) This is in fact a separate question. Many people would maintain that there are many personal benefits from learning another language. What I am arguing is that there is no need to do so. I got good honours French for my Leaving Cert and never found any practical use for it in my life. Even when I went to France people in hotels etc. were able to converse in English.

    3) Let's get real here, for the vast majority of jobs a second language is irrelevant unless you want to teach the language or are emigrating. And certainly a second language it is not worth a damn in practical terms unless one achieves fluency.

    4) Not at all, I would be in favour of their retention as long as we don't delude ourselves by what this actually means. I think exposition to languages and by extention other cultures in schools helps to broaden minds and see how the other half lives which is what education should be about in my view.

    What I strongly object to is the view that the learning of any language in a secondary school setting is capable of preparing someone for gaining employment using that language as a major selling point. If an employer wants someone with a language they will look for a native speaker, or a university graduate or someone who has near native proficiency. If the employer does not require someone with a language then by definition it is no advantage.

    But secondary school language learning has massive limitations. If you want to learn a language you go to the place it is spoken and you immerse yourself. Otherwise it is a waste of time in terms of achieving a working grasp of it. I know French people who studied English at second-level school in France and it was a waste of time (in terms of achieveing anything that could be passed off as fluency) but they now speak quite decent English having lived in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,633 ✭✭✭maninasia


    Learning Chinese is very time intensive, getting a head start in reading and writing and speaking basic Chinese in secondary school would be an excellent introduction to the language, the individual learner takes it from there just like any other language.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,900 ✭✭✭General General


    Likely a better return on investment from learning French, Spanish, Portuguese, even Hindi/Urdu or Russian...


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