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Teaching Chinese, teaching in Chinese, and teaching the Chinese

journal contribution
posted on 2007-03-01, 00:00 authored by Guo-Qiang Liu, J Lo Bianco
This article examines specific issues encountered in various areas of Chinese teaching in Australia. These issues are linked to the spheres of language planning as acquisition and as recovery and language planning as retention (Lo Bianco, 10.1007/s10993-006-9042-3). Specifically relevant to Chinese in Australia is its current prominence in formally declared national language policy, its changing status over time and its similarities and differences with Chinese in the United States (Wang, 10.1007/s10993-006-9043-2). The internationalization of education, and its commodification, has in recent years led to a major expansion in the range of offerings in Chinese in Australia, now catering to growing, and in some institutions to numerically dominant, groupings of native speakers with radically different language and academic needs from the traditional clientele of tertiary and school Chinese programs.

History

Journal

Language policy

Volume

6

Issue

1

Pagination

95 - 117

Publisher

Springer

Location

Dordrecht, Netherlands

ISSN

1568-4555

eISSN

1573-1863

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

Copyright notice

2007, Springer