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Some Ga. Schools Make Mandarin Mandatory

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Some Ga. Schools Make Mandarin Mandatory : NPR

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Some Ga. Schools Make Mandarin Mandatory
by ADAM RAGUSEA

Public schools in Macon, Ga., and surrounding Bibb County have a lot of problems. Most of the 25,000 students are poor enough to qualify for free and reduced lunch, and about half don't graduate.

Bibb County's Haitian-born superintendent Romain Dallemand came into the job last year with a bag of changes he calls "The Macon Miracle." There are now longer schools days, year-round instruction, and one mandate nobody saw coming: Mandarin Chinese for every student, pre-K through 12th grade.

"Students who are in elementary school today, by 2050 they'll be at the pinnacle of their career," Dallemand says. "They will live in a world where China and India will have 50 percent of the world GDP. They will live in a world where, if they cannot function successfully in the Asian culture, they will pay a heavy price."

This school year, Dallemand is rolling out Mandarin in stages, a few sessions a week, with the youngest kids starting first. In three years, it will be at every grade level.

Chinese Isn't Just For High Achievers

Instructors and other young teachers from China are being provided to Bibb County schools by a nearby Confucius Institute, one of a number of nonprofit cultural centers partially funded by the Chinese government. Beijing wants to spread Mandarin abroad, and at just $16,000 per instructor per year, the price is right for Dallemand.

"Well, it's a win-win for everyone," he says.

But not everyone in Bibb County sees it that way.

Some parents see a Communist regime enacting its geopolitical agenda on their children. The more common critique, however, is not political. It is the practical concern.

"Bibb County is not known for producing the highest-achieving graduates," says Macon resident Dina McDonald. "You'll see that many of them can't even speak basic English."

McDonald herself has a ninth-grader in the public schools and says she can imagine some students going into fields where Mandarin could be useful, like international business, technology or law. But with lower achievers, she says, "Do you want to teach them how to say, 'Do you want fries with that?' in Mandarin?"

Dallemand would rather ask what kind of education should be provided for every single student — not just some of them.

"We believe that every child can be successful if the adults around them create the conditions for them to be successful," he says.

"My wife is a Latina, and so I fully understand," he says. But "it is important for communities to educate our children for their future, not our past."

For that future, Dallemand says, there is no choice but Mandarin Chinese.
 
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