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State College is more
cosmopolitan than you think. Thousands of students take Chinese or
China-related courses at Penn State and through the Education Abroad
programs. Our commitment to cultural diversity is reflected in
the background of our faculty and interns who provide a rich experience
of cross-cultural dialogues. They have studied, taught, or conducted
research in the U.S.A., Europe, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Macau,
mainland China, and other Asian countries.
Click
here to read Penn State
students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
We offer:
- three years of
Chinese language courses leading to the Chinese
Minor
- a wide range of
cultural events and enrichment activities, including performances by
Chinese dancers and acrobats visiting State College, Chinese New Year
student performance night, film screenings, lectures, world poetry
recital, and more
- high-quality instruction that is student-centered
and proficiency-oriented; our instructors have formal training in
Chinese pedagogy, and they attend annual pedagogy workshops to update
their teaching skills.
- a Chinese internship
program; the intern-tutors are American students who have studied
Chinese and are eager to share study tips. Many of them have
participated in education abroad programs in Singapore, Taiwan, China,
and other locations.
- intensive and non-intensive
summer courses at the University Park campus
- courses
on pre-modern and modern Chinese literature, film, art, history,
philosophy, international relations, international business, and more
- a faculty-led summer program in Hong Kong (to be
launched in 2007; scholarships and financial aid available); be sure
to check back in Fall 2006 for more details
- a
summer program in Shanghai (launched in 2006; scholarships and
financial aid available)
- semester and year-long
education abroad programs throughout the Chinese-speaking world
(Taipei, Beijing, Shanghai, and Singapore)
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| Career |
Widely Spoken | Gain Mental Power
| Business |
Build Resume | Fun Facts
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"He who doesn't know foreign languages knows
nothing of his own."
"Wer fremde Sprachen nicht kennt, weiss nichts von seiner eigenen."
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Kunst und Altertum

1. Career options.
Our alumni are employed by government agencies and by Fortunte
500 companies. Some of them are teaching in schools, or are continuing
their studies in graduate or professional schools at such institutions
as Columbia University. A wide array of career options await you,
including banking, interpretation and translation (business, government,
medical, legal, literary), airlines, education, legal service, health
care, social service (Peace Corps, missionary, law enforcement),
journalism, advertising, media, international organization, museum,
tourism, travel agency, military (Marines, US Navy, US Air Force), and
the hospitality industry.
"The much-heralded advent of China as a global
power is no longer a forecast but a reality. Now we, and they,
must manage its triumph."
Cover story, "China
2008: The Rise of a Fierce Yet Fragile Superpower,"
Newsweek Special Double Issue December 31, 2007 /
January 7, 2008. |
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National Geographic Traveler devoted its annual photo
issue to "Passage to China" (Vol. 25 No. 1, Jan / Feb 2008) in
which "14 phtographers steeped in one o the world's oldest
civilizations share their favorite pictures and tell how they
got them." |
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Click to hide |
Click here to read
Penn State students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
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2. Widely spoken.
With more than 1 billion speakers, Chinese--not English--is
the most widely spoken language of the world.
[Click here to see
a statistics chart.] Chinese is the second most common foreign
language spoken in the U.S., according to 2005 U.S. Census Bureau data.
See the interesting article in Time:
China by the numbers.
Chinese speakers reside in mainland
China,
Hong Kong,
Taiwan,
Singapore, Macau, and throughout
Southeast Asia (such as
Malaysia). There are also large Chinese communities in North
America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Africa, and Latin America.
Click here
to access the Modern Language Association
language map for the U.S.A.
In today's world, languages and
literature are important and useful ways to connect to the rest of the
world. Out of economic necessity, speakers of other languages
have, for a long time, learned and understood our language (English) and
the way we think, but we need to understand those parts of the world
that matter to us today.
Michael Elliott writes in
Time: "You may know all about the world coming to
China--about the hordes of foreign businesspeople setting up
factories and ... showrooms in places like Shanghai and Shenzhen.
But you probably know less about how China is going out into the
world. Through its foreign investments ..., the world's most
populous country has already transformed economies from Angola to
Australia." Read the cover story, "China
Century," Time (22 January, 2007)
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| Click on the picture of Shenzhen (China's boomtown) to read an
article about Chinese universities actively recruiting
American and European students. |
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Chinese is being offered in more and more high
schools across the United States, and Chinese is one of the fastest
growing majors at many top universities.
Chinese education in the USA Today headline (19 November
2007): "As China
Booms, So Does Mandarin in U.S. Schools"
Students worldwide swarm to study Chinese for
better career opportunities. To the right is a
picture of Chinese majors at the Ludwigshafen University in
Germany. "Why
China Is Top of the Syllabus," The Independent
(March 8, 2007). |
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| Headline in
Centre Daily Times, 27 January 2008: Chinese is offered
in an elementary school in State College! Read the
article on daily Chinese classes in the Young Scholars
Charter School |
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Click here to read
Penn State students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
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3. Gain mental power
Taking Chinese can actually improve your mental power by learning how
to arrange your thoughts into an alternative pattern or organization.
Studying Chinese gives you an edge in Asian and in the U.S. Research
also confirms the many
benefits of bilingualism. Click on the picture to the right to read
Der Spiegel article on German students' enthusiasm for everything
Chinese.
The ideosyncracies of Chinese language (characters) and culture have
provided sources of inspiration for such Western thinkers and travelers
as Marco Polo, Max Weber, G. W. F. Hegel, Ezra Pound, Bertolt Brecht, G.
W. Leibniz, Luis Borges, Franz Kafka, and
Jacques Derrida (see his remarks on Chinese characters,
phoncentrism, and logocentrism in Of Grammatology).
Because Chinese is
challenging yet fun to learn, studying Chinese can be
very
rewarding in many ways. If you have been dreaming of
travelling or studying abroad, there are more scholarships for
the study of Chinese than you thought.
Click on the picture to the right to read the Newsweek
special report on China, "a
new power emerging in the East." |
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| China is, and will be a
major player in the business world. China is a
wonderful country to teach English in. China will play a
major role in world affairs. China's population of more
than one billion accounts for a large percent of the world's
population. There are opportunities for employment in all areas.
Picture on the right: Der Spiegel special issue on
China and the US: 8 August 2005. |
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Click here to read
Penn State students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
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4. Doing business
Mandarin learning soars outside
China. In just five years, the number of non-Chinese people learning
Mandarin Chinese has soared to 30 million. Read the full story from
BBC News (January 9, 2007).
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National Public Radio (NPR) on contemporary Shanghai: "China is
now undergoing one of the most massive urbanization in human
history, and nowhere is that more evident than in cosmopolitan
Shanghai. The city's population is now almost 18 million, and is
forecast to rise to 25 million by 2020. This series looks at how the
city is preparing for its future." |
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| The Chinese-speaking world
is one of the fastest-growing economies in the world
today--a strategic location for many businesses in the 21st century.
One of the most important skill to have in the 21st century is a
functional knowledge of the Chinese language and culture. Read the
Newsweek Oct. 30, 2006 article "The
Great Wal-Mart of China." |
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View
short videos in which
Dr. Fariborz Ghadar, Professor of Finance and Director of
the Center for Global Business Studies at Penn State, discusses
such topics as "China as a new bidder in the global oil market,"
"Will everyone benefit from China's boom?" and "Is there such
thing as an American product?"
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| Hu Jintao, the President of the
People's Republic of China, visited the United States on April
20th, 2006. Click on the picture to the right to
read the article in The Economist. |
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| "That China does matter is
evident from its impact on the global economy. Since 2000,
China's contribution to global GDP growth has been bigger than
America's [...] Yet there is no other important country whose
likely trajectory over the next 20 years is more uncertain than
China's. [...] Much will depend on choices made by China itself
and by other powers, especially America." -- The Economist,
March 25, 2006 |
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As a
rising superpower, China is in the headline. President
George Bush visited Beijing on November 21, 2005. Chinese is one
of the most important languages to know for the 21st century.
Click here to read The Economist (Nov 19-25, 2005 Issue)
articles on US-China relations and trade tensions.
|
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| Read articles from U.S. News
and World Report:
The Rise of a New Power,
What the Awakening Giant Will Mean for America,
the Shanghai High Life, and
A Capitalist Paradise: The Urban Middle Class Has a Lifestyle
That Looks Familiar. |
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Click here
to read Penn State
students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
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5. Build your resume
Resume-builder: Knowing Chinese may give you an
edge when competing for an important position! Speaking
even a little Chinese can greatly enhance your international
business relations!
When you graduate, a Chinese minor on your
resume will
catch the eye of anyone reading your job or graduate school
application.
Many jobs in the public sector also require foreign language
skills, especially Chinese. For example, the US Army has a
policy for
Foreign Language Proficiency Pay. Chinese is one of the
designated "critical languages" to national security.
Most employers perceive bilingual and multilingual candidates
as being more flexible, intelligent and adaptable to change.
Read the article on MSN.
| Studying a foreign
language improves
your chances for success in your career, as most
businesses now operate globally--many with bases in
Chinese-speaking cities. In fact, Chinese language is
catching on in the U.S. classrooms. Click on the CNN
logo on the right to read the
CNN
article on January 2, 2006. |
Chinese language catching on in U.S. classrooms |
Click here
to read Penn State
students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
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6. Fun Facts
Listen to podcasts to learn Chinese
through
ChinesePod, available for free!
Click here
to read Penn State
students' experience and tips for studying Chinese.
As China's
modernization continues to pull hundreds of millions of
people from farms to cities and suburbs, a construction
boom has given rise to a vast landscape of
foreign-looking settlements. These real estate
developments are the latest manifestation of the
technique that has fueled China's economic boom: making
copies. Read the Washington Post
article (11 April 2007)
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Use the
China Guide to discover China interactively (with 360°
panoramas, original Chinese music, audio of Chinese phrases,
video, photography and humor). Find out how to ride a bike with
the masses, navigate the subway system, take a taxi without
speaking Chinese and find your way to the (correct) toilet.
Chinese
Characters
Chinese words are artistically formed by a combination of
meanings: e.g., “crisis” is “danger + opportunity” (weiji)! If
you know 1000 commonly used characters, you will recognize 90%
of the characters on Chinese newspapers!
Chinese grammar is simpler than English and European
languages. Context and word order determine the semantic
meanings of sentences. There is no need to memorize verb
conjugations, case endings, or inflections based on person,
tense, number, or gender.
| The commonly used
software for inputting Chinese characters cannot handle
very rare characters. To write a character on a
computer, you enter its pronunciation using Roman
letters, then choose from a list of possible options
(most characters have many homonyms). Click on the
picture to the right to read an interesting
article about problems related to Chinese names with
rare characters (The
Economist
April 15, 2006). |
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Communist China's rise
as a major market and economy baffles analysts, critics,
scholars, and politicians.
Picture on the right: Der Spiegel special
issue: Does Communism still work in Red China? (15
January 2007), with juxtaposed images of ultra-modern
Shanghai and a Cultural Revolution propaganda poster. |
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Chinese
"Mysteries"
You Know
You're in China When... A list of humorous things
about China compiled by a Penn State students. Hopefully this
list will make you want to go to China.
| Did you know that the
Chinese probably discovered all the continents including
North America before Christopher Columbus? Read the
article from
The Economist, Jan. 14, 2006. |

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If you have not studied any non-Western language, now is the
time to expand your horizon. If you have already learned Chinese
at home or in school, there are a few ways to accelerate your
program of study.
Take
courses on Chinese language, film, literature, culture,
history and art, and expand your knowledge of the
Chinese vocabulary, grammar, literature, and culture.
To the right: Der Spiegel special issue
(Oct. 1, 2005) on Jung Chang and Jon Halliday's
controversial new book,
Mao: The Unknown Story. |
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Taoism is one of
Asia's foremost religions. Even 57 years of communist
rule failed to loosen the grip that this blend of
alchemy, philosophy and superstition holds over many
Chinese. Read "The Influence of Taoism in Communist
China" by Andreas Lorenz, Der Spiegel International
9 February 2007
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Read fellow Americans' and Canadians'
experiences living, working, and studying in China, Hong Kong,
and Taiwan (many blogs are enriched by photos and videos):
Dr. Andrew Field's Films of China: A
train ride from Shanghai to Beijing; lunch at the Drum Tower in
Beijing; the Yellow River north of Zhengzhou; the Longmen Caves
near Luoyang; the Shaolin Temple; the Terracotta Warriors and
more.
Mask of China by Dezza (a Canadian with
a degree from the University of Toronto)
Mask of China: Hong Kong Edition by
Dezza (a Canadian with a degree from the University of Toronto)
Taiwan Blog Feed
Wandering to Tamshui: Taiwan
Doubting to Shuo:
China and Taiwan
Dashan.com:
"Dashan" is the stage name of Mark Rowswell, arguably the most
famous foreigner in China. He has become a regular fixture on
Chinese television and a cultural icon across the nation.
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There's never been a better time to visit China. Read a
short review of restaurants and bars in Shanghai in the
travel magazine, Travel and Leisure February 2006.

Use the
China Guide to discover China interactively
(with 360° panoramas, original Chinese music, audio of Chinese
phrases, video, photography and humor). Find out how to ride a
bike with the masses, navigate the subway system, take a taxi
without speaking Chinese and find your way to the (correct)
toilet.
Interactive
Maps of Shanghai and Beijing with virtual tours of hot spots
Chengshi Ba (City8.com)
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