Learning Mandarin would help elevate Gisborne and East Coast children into the future, he said yesterday. He joined the teachers in singing in Mandarin the 1970s hit The Moon Represents My Heart.
The three women will teach Mandarin at Gisborne schools for one year. Tang Bin will teach at Kaiti, Ilminster and Waikirikiri schools, Long Yuning at Gisborne Central, St Mary’s Catholic Primary and Makaraka School, while Bai Hong will teach at Campion College, Gisborne Girls’ High and Lytton High School.
“I am happy to meet you and to teach you, and I hope you can teach me how to sing Maori songs and how to speak Maori,” Tang Bin told the students.
Three of 144 selected to teachThe teachers are three of 144 selected to teach Mandarin in schools around the country, said Victoria University’s Confucius Institute chairman Tony Browne. People selected for the programme do not have New Zealand teaching qualifications but were recruited from top universities in China and have a good understanding of English. They will work with local teachers in the classroom.
“The selection process is very comprehensive. We are delighted our programme has grown. This is the first time we have had anyone in Gisborne. Meng Foon got the school principals together and drove this.”
The number of Chinese visitors to New Zealand outstrips other countries. The number of Chinese people living in New Zealand is growing, as is trade with China, so having some understanding of Chinese culture is of great importance to the New Zealand economy, Mr Browne says.
All foreign languages spoken in New Zealand are in decline except for Chinese.
“Learning languages is also a good academic discipline. If you have two or three languages, your horizons broaden.”