STARTALK 2009 - Chinese Programs

Program Search

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75 programs found.

ACTFL (teacher)

STARTALK: ACTFL/CLASS Chinese Teacher Program at Glastonbury

Glastonbury, CT • Chinese • July 6July 17, 2009
Glastonbury, CT • Chinese • July 20July 31, 2009

There are two sessions offered for teachers of Chinese (July 6-17 and July 20-31). These sessions focus on delivering a standards-based Chinese program and include demonstration teaching and portfolio development. Both sessions are full for summer 2009.

703-894-2900 Ext. 110 • mabbott@actfl.orghttp://www.actfl.org

ACTFL (student)

STARTALK: ACTFL/CLASS Chinese Student Program at Glastonbury and Choate

Glastonbury, CT • Chinese • July 6July 31, 2009

This is an intensive four-week program for students from July 6-31. The program at Glastonbury is for students in grades 2-12 and the program at Choate is for students in grades 9-12. Both programs are full for summer 2009.

703-894-2900 Ext. 110 • mabbott@actfl.orghttp://www.actfl.org

Arizona State University (student)

From STARTALK to Flagship: ASU Chinese Language Camp Summer 2009

Tempe, AZ • Chinese • July 12July 26, 2009

ASU Chinese Language Camp: From STARTALK to Flagship is a 15-day (July 12-26) residential program for Arizona high school students to increase their motivation and proficiency levels in Chinese through a highly individualized and task-based curriculum. The program targets students entering 11th or 12th grade whose proficiency level in Chinese ranges from novice-low to intermediate-high or who have no prior knowledge of Chinese. Throughout the program, students will receive Chinese language instruction in the mornings and participate in cultural activities in the afternoons and evenings. Chinese language classes will focus on communication in real-life situations and will be delivered through group lessons, individualized instruction, and peer mentoring. Cultural activities will focus on enhancing students’ understanding of Chinese culture and society. Students will watch movies on different themes, work on and present research projects on cultural and social issues in China, and participate in hands-on activities to learn traditional Chinese arts and crafts, calligraphy, cooking, and some martial arts. After the summer program, students will commit to taking follow-up Chinese language classes at ASU, their own high school, or CCSA (the Contemporary Chinese School in Arizona) with some online components.

480-965-7179 • xia.zhang@asu.eduhttp://chineseflagship.asu.edu/startalk

Arlington Public Schools (student)

Arlington Public Schools Summer Exploratory and Enrichment for Arabic and Chinese

Arlington, VA • Arabic, Chinese • July 13July 31, 2009
Arlington, VA • Chinese • July 13July 31, 2009

The STARTALK Arabic and Chinese summer programs are intended for rising 9-12th grade students who have not previously studied either target language or who have limited proficiency but are interested in further developing their basic skills. The goal of the program is to motivate students to begin or continue the study of these languages. Students will learn practical vocabulary and will be introduced to basic language structures with a focus on communicating about everyday needs and experiences. In addition, students will learn about the practices, perspectives, and products of the culture. Field trips, hands-on activities, music and songs, and technology-based activities will allow for creative and culturally relevant experiences. This is a high-expectations program for students seriously interested in developing language skills and knowledge about the target cultures. Classes meet from 9:00a.m. to 1:00p.m., Monday through Friday, at the Arlington campus of Northern Virginia Community College. Public transportation is provided for this no fee program. The program is available on a space available basis to students from outside Arlington County.

703-228-6097 • bcox@arlington.k12.va.ushttp://www.arlington.k12.va.us

Bangor Chinese School (student)

STARTALK: The Future Speaks Chinese

Bangor, ME • Chinese • June 29July 24, 2009

The Future Speaks Chinese was an exciting, four-week, immersion-based experience for motivated students in grades 4-12 who want to learn the Chinese language. It was a language-intensive and culturally focused program taught by experienced teachers with three levels: beginner, intermediate, and heritage. Structured learning goals were modeled on ideas drawn from the national CLASS summer session (2007). Students experienced “performed culture” and had hands-on experience with cooking, arts, crafts, calligraphy, abacus instruction, Tai Chi, and music instrumentation as part of a complete immersion experience. The program was held at Husson University, Monday to Friday, June 29-July 24, 2009, 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. A limited number of need-based scholarships were available. Prizes were awarded to students based upon their performance in the program.

207 990-0710 • jingzhang@bangorchinese.comhttp://www.bangorchinese.com

Bangor Chinese School (teacher)

STARTALK: The Future Teaches Chinese

Bangor, ME • Chinese • June 22July 3, 2009

The Future Teaches Chinese is a special summer experience sponsored by STARTALK and the Bangor Chinese School for teachers of Chinese, aspiring teachers, and interested others. Developed by language and curriculum experts, our Bangor-based program provides participants a no-cost opportunity to improve skills and learn the most innovative methods of teaching language. With its affiliations, STARTALK offers an excellent environment to grow in language proficiency and teaching know-how while meeting a network of Maine educators and speakers of Chinese who are willing to share what they have learned with participants. This is a two-week program. The first week provides teaching strategies, standards, curricula, technologies, and performance-based principles derived from the standards of CLASS, Hanban, and Maine Learning results. This section also includes the topic of classroom management and methods of assisting students with learning disabilities. Maine teacher certification of Chinese was detailed. The second week offered participants the opportunity to teach Chinese and apply the knowledge learned in the first week. The program will be held at Husson University, Monday to Friday, June 22-July 2, 2009, 9:00 a.m.- 3:00 p.m. A limited number of need-based residential spaces are available. A prize or stipend will be awarded to selected participants.

207-990-0710 • jingzhang@bangorchinese.comhttp://www.bangorchinese.com

Beloit College - Center for Language Studies (student)

Summer Intensive Arabic or Chinese Language Study at Beloit

Beloit, WI • Arabic • June 13August 7, 2009
Beloit, WI • Chinese • June 13August 7, 2009

If you are serious about learning a language, come to one of the nation's finest summer intensive language programs, the Center for Language Studies at Beloit College. Our STARTALK scholarships offer domestic undergraduates from diverse backgrounds and talented high school students a great opportunity to study Arabic or Chinese this summer. With classes in the newest building on campus, the Center for the Sciences, our residential program features superb instructors, 26 hours per week of classroom study, and a variety of cultural activities. Past events include international dinners, demonstrations by the Qi Shu Fang Peking Opera Company, and an excursion to the Chicago Arabesque. This summer, our program will also make use of two of Beloit College’s most distinctive strengths--the Logan Museum of Anthropology and the Wright Museum of Art. A museum specialist will facilitate the use of artifacts from the museums in class. During our eight-week program (June 13 – August 7), these competitive scholarships cover the cost of tuition ($6,366), with scholarship recipients responsible for the cost of housing and meals ($1,795). All participants must be 17 years of age or older by the beginning of the program and must live on campus.

608-363-2277 • cls@beloit.eduhttp://www.summerlanguages.com

Brigham Young University Chinese Flagship Center (teacher)

Brigham Young University Chinese Teacher Training Workshop 2009

Provo, UT • Chinese • July 6July 31, 2009

801-422-9189 • http://chineseflagship.byu.edu

Bryant University (teacher)

Bryant STARTALK Chinese Language and Culture Teacher Program

Smithfield, RI • Chinese • June 29July 18, 2009

This three-week program offers two tracks: The Language Track is for current and prospective Chinese language teachers from public, private, and heritage schools. During the first week, participants will receive intensive training on language teaching methodology, strategies, standards, contents, and technology. During the second and third weeks, participants will be asked to teach practice classes with middle and high school students in the morning, for a stipend of approximately $500, and participate in cultural workshops and activities in the afternoon. The Culture Track is for teachers of social studies, history, arts, literature, science, and other subject areas who are interested in incorporating Chinese content into their curriculum. This track will focus on providing participants with knowledge and classroom activities about Chinese culture and history. At the same time, participants will spend about 30 hours during the program learning basic language skills, which will enable them to conduct basic daily conversations in Chinese and develop a better understanding of Chinese culture through the language. There is no program fee. Participants only need to pay $150 for textbooks and a $200 deposit. Free, on-campus dormitory housing is available for participants who live 30 miles or more from Bryant. Breakfast and lunch provided. Teaching grants ($400 each) are available.

401-232-6566 • kliu1@bryant.eduhttp://china.bryant.edu

Bryant University (student)

2009 STARTALK Chinese Language and Culture Student Program at Bryant University

Smithfield, RI 02917, RI • Chinese • July 6July 18, 2009

This two-week non-residential program features intensive Chinese language training and cultural immersion workshops as well as field trips for middle school and high school students in the state of Rhode Island and the neighboring states from July 6 through July 18. Student-centered small class instructions accommodate participants with different Chinese proficiency levels. Students will interact with visiting Chinese students to practice language skills and experience cross-cultural exchange. The program requires no previous Chinese learning. Following the program on Bryant campus, a two-week subsidized optional study trip to China is available to high school students to explore China's history and culture firsthand by visiting Beijing, Chengde and Inner Mongolia.

401 232-6883 • kxie@bryant.eduhttp://china.bryant.edu

CAIS Institute (student)

CAIS Institute Summer Chinese Program

San Francisco, CA • Chinese • June 15July 10, 2009
San Francisco, CA • Chinese • July 13August 7, 2009

CAIS Institute, in collaboration with the San Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD), is offering two intensive Chinese language programs for high school students and for 1st-3rd grade SFUSD Mandarin Immersion students. HIGH SCHOOL CHINESE PROGRAM: This intensive language program is open to Bay Area high school students, grades 9-12. Students will enhance their language skills from a beginner (with no prior Chinese experience) to a high-beginner/low-intermediate level. Participation in one session, with a passing grade, is the equivalent of 60 hours of foreign language coursework. Students earn 5 district course credits for foreign language from the SFUSD. Students who have successfully completed two sessions, totaling 120 hours of language instruction, are eligible to receive up to an entire year of foreign language credit from SFUSD. GRADES 1-3 MANDARIN IMMERSION CAMP: In an effort to support San Francisco’s two new elementary Mandarin Immersion public school programs, CAIS Institute will offer a Mandarin immersion summer camp for children entering grades 1-3. In collaboration with San Francisco Unified School District, CAIS Institute has developed a tailored curriculum that complements and integrates with the existing curriculum from both schools, thereby reinforcing and furthering the children’s language learning. Students in each program will experience Chinese language and culture through a wide variety of traditional and cultural activities. Language acquisition will come naturally to the students as a result of their participation in these fun, immersion-based activities in addition to structured classroom learning.

415 861-0966 • mconley@caisinstitute.orghttp://www.caisinstitute.org/en/students/language_programs/summer_intensive

California Foreign Language Project (student)

STARTALK 2009 Stanford University/Palo Alto Unified Mandarin Language and Culture Program for High School Students

Stanford, CA • Chinese • June 22July 17, 2009

This program offers a four-week, two-level (IIA and IIIB) intensive Mandarin language and culture learning experience for students who have completed Chinese IB and IIIA courses of study or can demonstrate the equivalent level of proficiency expected at the end of these course sequences. The program takes place from June 22 to July 17, 2009, from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Students will devote a substantial amount of time each day acquiring linguistic competency in a language lab, as well as learning word processing functions essential to electronically communicate with peers and adults in Chinese. Additionally, students will participate in culturally relevant field trips and complete daily homework assignments that involve the use of iPods and other instructional resources.

650 736-9042 • duarte.silva@stanford.eduhttp://www.stanford.edu/group/CFLP/

California Foreign Language Project (teacher)

STARTALK 2009 Stanford University Leadership Professional Development Program for Teachers of Mandarin Language and Culture

Stanford, CA • Chinese • July 7July 15, 2009

This program is designed for Mandarin language educators who have participated in either the 2007 or 2008 Stanford University STARTALK programs. It will continue to strengthen the participants’ linguistic and cultural knowledge and, especially, their teaching practices, but will concentrate its efforts on building a cadre of teachers who can begin to play leadership roles in program planning, curriculum development, and assessment practices in their districts and schools. The participants will continue to interact during the 2009-2010 academic year in both face-to-face and follow-up programs sponsored by the California Foreign Language Project and via the My eCoach online virtual community. The program will take place July 7-15, 2009.

650 736-9042 • duarte.silva@stanford.eduhttp://www.stanford.edu/group/CFLP/

Cape Henlopen School District (teacher)

Delaware Lighthouse Chinese Partnership: A STARTALK Summer Program for Teachers of Early Language Learners

Lewes, DE • Chinese • July 13August 1, 2009

302 645-6686 Ext. 234 • http://www.capehenlopenschools.com/

Cape Henlopen School District (student)

Delaware's Lighthouse Chinese Partnership: A STARTALK Summer Program for Early Language Learners

Lewes, DE • Chinese • July 20July 31, 2009

The Cape Henlopen School District, in partnership with the University of Delaware, the Delaware Department of Education, and the Chinese School of Delaware, is pleased to present the First State's first Chinese language summer camp for early language learners. The Delaware Lighthouse Chinese Partnership will provide an innovative summer learning experience for 50 elementary school students (3rd through 5th grade) who have participated in the district's Lighthouse Chinese Program during the regular school year. This two-week immersion language camp will provide participants the opportunity to develop higher levels of Chinese language proficiency and gain deeper insights into perspectives of Chinese culture. The program's theme, Life at the Seashore, will capitalize on the local surroundings and will facilitate participants' connections for their language learning.

302 645-6686 Ext. 234 • mkelley@cape.k12.de.ushttp://www.capehenlopenschools.com

Center for Applied Linguistics (teacher)

CAL STARTALK Proficiency Assessment Training Program

Washington, DC • Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Persian, Swahili, Turkish, Urdu • June 5October 8, 2009

This STARTALK workshop will combine online and face-to-face workshop formats to provide training in language assessment. The purpose of the workshop is to help STARTALK program directors, instructors, and/or teacher trainers learn about and plan for assessment in their STARTALK summer programs. The workshop focuses on assessment with particular attention to assessing language growth in short-term STARTALK programs for students with novice-level proficiency. This blended learning workshop combines distance learning and face-to-face interaction. The workshop will begin with a four-module online course on the basics of assessment. Consistent with the blended learning approach, the initial four modules are followed by a two-day face-to-face workshop at the Center for Applied Linguistics in Washington, DC, in July, 2009. After the face-to-face workshop, CAL will continue the online modules in order to provide assessment assistance, advice, and support during participants’ STARTALK programs. Finally, optional oral proficiency workshops, conducted online, will be available in the fall of 2009. This workshop is limited to staff from STARTALK-funded programs. We hope that at least one person from every program participates. Organizers: Meg Malone, Lynn Thompson, Vicky Nier, and Anne Donovan Application: You can request the application and DRAFT syllabus from mmalone@cal.org.

202-362-0700 • mmalone@cal.orghttp://www.cal.org

Center for Human Services (CHS) (teacher)

CHS/McDaniel Summer STARTALK Institute on Arabic and Chinese Language Instruction

Westminster, MD • Arabic, Chinese • July 27August 21, 2009

CHS/McDaniel Summer StarTalk Institute on Arabic and Chinese Language Instruction, will provide an intensive 4-week flexible 90 hour program, leading to three graduate credits, from July 27, 2009 to August 21, 2009. The program will require face-to-face meetings at McDaniel College and participation on online. Interested in improving your ability to teach Arabic or Chinese? Want to learn new strategies that engage and excite students using film, role-playing, problem-solving and more? Interested in learning how to become a certified instructor or go on to earn a master’s degree? The Institute will provide an innovative to assist all participants to develop a solid foundation to pursue continued professional growth as instructors of Arabic or Chinese. Designed to assist a broad spectrum of needs – from master teachers to pre-service instructors - the curriculum will reflect a balance of current theories in second language acquisition (SLA), research and best practices in teaching Arabic and Chinese. Using a team approach, participants will explore proven strategies, the use of appropriate technologies, assessment and culturally appropriate communication strategies to reach diverse learners. Our team based instruction will actively involve participants through presentations, facilitated discussion, peer instruction, group work, role-playing, problem-solving and reflection.

(410) 871-3123 • startalk.mcdaniel@gmail.comhttp://www.mcdaniel.edu/10041.htm

Chicago Public Schools Office of Language and Cultural Education (student)

Chicago STARTALK Chinese Language Institute

Chicago, IL • Chinese • June 22July 17, 2009

Study Chinese this summer in courses specifically designed for Chicago Public Schools high school students by the University of Chicago and the CPS Office of Language and Cultural Education with funding from STARTALK. This program will allow students who will be taking their third year of high school courses in Chinese in 2009-2010 to consolidate their knowledge, continue the momentum of their language skills development, and prepare them for continued Chinese language studies. The University of Chicago is a world-renowned leader in language instruction and overall academic excellence. Participants in the program will be taught by university faculty, receive an official University of Chicago transcript with their grade, and have access to state-of-the-art learning facilities as well as special events that will allow students to practice their language and cultural skills. This program is offered for free to selected students. All students who successfully complete the program with passing grades and attendance will receive a $1,000 stipend.

(773) 553-1949 • rdavis@cps.k12.il.ushttp://www.olce.org

China Institute (student)

2009 China Institute-STARTALK Summer Language Academy

New York, NY • Chinese • July 6August 14, 2009

China Institute, through a generous grant from STARTALK, a project of the National Strategic Language Initiative, will offer scholarships with an equivalent value of $3,000 each to 25 New York metro-area high school students to attend a six-week summer 2009 Language Academy in New York City. Equivalent to one semester of high school Mandarin Chinese, the 2009 China Institute-STARTALK Summer Language Academy will emphasize oral communication in Mandarin Chinese, while also introducing students to reading and writing, and to the richness of Chinese culture through hands-on studio classes and local field trips in New York City. To be selected, applicants must have no more than one year of Mandarin Chinese learning experience. This non-residential program will be held from July 6 to August 14, 2009, Mondays through Fridays, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Dalton School, 108 E. 89th Street in New York City. Needs-based stipends to cover daily expenses for transportation and lunch may be available, depending on the availability of donations.

212 744-8181 Ext. 138 • pzeng@chinainstitute.orghttp://www.chinainstitute.org/edu/languageacademy

China Kids 2009 (student)

Utah Start Talking Elementary Program

Salt Lake City, UT • Chinese • July 28August 7, 2009

China Kids 2009: July 28—August 7 The China Kids 2009 STARTALK program is a Chinese language immersion program for kindergarten and first grade students to be held at multiple locations in northern Utah. Students will produce a Chinese cultural pageant and perform it for their parents at the end of the program. Along the way, they will have their first taste of learning Chinese in an immersion classroom setting. Two certified teachers will work in partnership to help the children produce their cultural pageant. The four and a half hour day will be filled with Chinese language instruction and fun and exciting Chinese cultural activities that will enhance the children's understanding of Chinese culture and literature. Students who complete the program will receive their own Certificate of Completion, and more important, they will be well-prepared and inspired to take the next step: enrolling in Chinese immersion programs in kindergarten and first grade classrooms offered at selected Utah schools. For more information, please contact Sandra Talbot at sandra_talbot@byu.edu or the BYU Chinese Flagship Center at 801.422.9189.

801-851-0032 • sandra_talbot@live.comhttp://chineseflagship.byu.edu

Concordia Language Villages (student)

STARTALK Chinese Student Program: Building World Citizens With a "Village" Approach to Learning and Living Chinese

Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • June 22July 18, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • July 20August 15, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • June 22July 4, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • July 6July 18, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • July 20August 1, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • August 3August 15, 2009
Cass Lake, MN • Chinese • August 17August 29, 2009

Students live in a “Chinese Village,” learning Chinese through daily life in this residential camp program. Concordia Language Villages prepares young people to be culturally sensitive, lifelong language learners. The experiential, residential setting immerses the participants in the culture of the countries where Chinese is spoken through food, music, sports, dance, games, and activities. Thousands of young people from 32 countries and all 50 states attend Concordia Language Villages sessions every year. Two- and four-week summer youth programs are designed to offer experiences for beginning to advanced learners. The four-week session is the equivalent of one high school year of language instruction. After the session, students will continue the educational and social experience in an online e-village. Since 1961, Concordia Language Villages has been a nationally recognized language and cultural immersion program, with a mission of preparing young people for responsible citizenship in our global community. Programs are offered in 15 languages: Arabic, Chinese, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish. Concordia Language Villages is a flagship program of Concordia College, Moorhead, Minnesota, a liberal arts college recognized for its commitment to international education.

218-299-4544 • olsonkm@cord.eduhttp://www.ConcordiaLanguageVillages.org

Concordia Language Villages (teacher)

STARTALK: Second Language and Immersion Methodologies for Teachers of Chinese

Bemidji, MN • Chinese • July 19July 29, 2009

The course in second language and immersion methodologies is designed to provide both beginning and experienced teachers with a forum for discussing classroom teaching and learning, and the importance of context in a communicative approach to second language and immersion instruction. Through background reading, and subsequent discussions led by experienced teachers of Chinese, participants will be able to clarify their understanding of the course content, including the application of the Standards for Foreign Language Learning for the 21st Century to effective lesson and unit design. Participants will also share strategies with each other through micro-teaching. Because the program is a residential program, the participants will have opportunities to share ideas and extend discussions beyond the classroom time. The class discussions will be complemented by observations and participation in activities at the Chinese Language Village. Participants will share their observations of the instructional program at the Chinese Language Village with the leadership and staff to foster a dialogue related to best practices in teaching and learning the Chinese language and culture. Upon successful completion of the course, participants will be awarded four graduate credits.

218-299-4544 • clementi@cord.eduhttp://www.ConcordiaLanguageVillages.org

Consortium of Texas Chinese Language Institutes (teacher)

STARTALK Ice Breaking Program

Houston, TX • Chinese • April 3May 31, 2009
Plano, TX • Chinese • April 3May 31, 2009

The theme of the Texas STARTALK Chinese Teacher Program is "Word to World." The goal is to lead the trainees to move beyond word/grammar teaching to focusing on real-world communication in a language classroom. Participants will understand that the ultimate goal in foreign language teaching and assessment is to create contexts and provide opportunities for students to use the language to engage in meaningful communication in real-world situations. The Texas STARTALK Teacher Program offers 90 hours of instruction centering on topics of national standards, performance-based approaches and assessment, second language acquisition, teaching Chinese as a second language, technology for language teaching, curriculum development, and daily lesson plan design. Our program includes four university instructors from Rice University, the University of Houston, the University of Texas at San Antonio, and two high school teachers from Chicago and New Jersey. The program also arranges teaching practicums during the summer in June and July. The Teacher Program starts in April and ends in May.

713-528-3445 • mengyeh@sbcglobal.nethttp://www.txstartalk.org

Consortium of Texas Chinese Language Institutes (student)

STARTALK Ice Breaking Program

South Lake, TX • Chinese • June 7July 10, 2009
Coppell, TX • Chinese • June 15July 10, 2009
North Richland Hills, TX • Chinese • June 8July 3, 2009
Plano, TX • Chinese • June 8July 3, 2009
Bellaire, TX • Chinese • June 8July 3, 2009
Katy, TX • Chinese • June 16July 21, 2009
Houston, TX • Chinese • June 8June 25, 2009
Houston, TX • Chinese • June 15July 3, 2009
Spring, TX • Chinese • June 9July 1, 2009
Houston, TX • Chinese • June 10July 1, 2009
Rosenberg, TX • Chinese • June 15July 10, 2009
The Woodlands, TX • Chinese • June 9July 15, 2009

The Texas Startalk Ice Breaking Chinese Student Summer Programs aims to raise the awareness of and stimulate the interest in learning Chinese language and culture among middle and high school students. The theme of the student programs is "Your Space, My Space." Through the material and instruction, students use the Chinese language to explore their own space and compare with the spaces of young Chinese people in the spheres of lifestyles, personal preferences, family structure, school activities, and so forth. Students learn, through exploration and comparison, that the individual spaces of young people reflect cultural and social uniqueness as well as a similar exciting energy, free spirit, and wild creativity, whether they are in Beijing, Taipei, or Houston. Most of the student programs last three or four weeks, as enrichment programs for the summer schools, four hours per week, Monday through Friday. All of the programs, from June to July, include daily one-hour cultural sessions. Students will have hands-on cultural experience practicing the lion dance, playing Chinese yoyo, writing calligraphy, and making arts and crafts.

713-528-3445 • mengyeh@sbcglobal.nethttp://www.txstartalk.org

Crane House, The Asia Institute, Inc. (student)

STARTALK: Crane House Chinese Language Institute

Louisville, KY • Chinese • July 6July 24, 2009

Crane House, The Asia Institute, Inc., Jefferson County Public Schools, and the University of Louisville are pleased to present the 2009 STARTALK Chinese Language Institute. The institute is a three-week intensive summer program that immerses middle and high school students in Chinese language and culture. The program will run weekdays from July 6 to July 24, 8:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m. There is no cost to the student. High school students could receive one Carnegie unit of world language and three college credits at the University of Louisville. This program is administrated by the National Foreign Language Center at the University of Maryland, in conjunction with a federal initiative for critical need languages. This intensive program accelerates students’ language proficiency in Mandarin Chinese and expands their cultural knowledge of China. Learning is facilitated through theme-based classroom instruction/discussion, culture assemblies, computer labs, field trips, extracurricular activities, and a final showcase. The curriculum is designed by the professor of Chinese language at the University of Louisville, the world language specialist of Jefferson County, Public Schools and other experienced educators and will be executed by highly qualified teachers of the Chinese language and culture.

502 635-2240 • helenpan01@hotmail.comhttp://www.cranehouse.org

DePaul University Chinese Language Academy (student)

DePaul Chinese Language Academy: Intensive Chinese Student Program

Chicago, IL • Chinese • June 22July 22, 2009

DePaul University and STARTALK's 2009 Summer Chinese Language Academy (CLA) for Academically Gifted High School Students Intensive Beginning or Intermediate Chinese - June 22-July 22, 2009: Classes held daily, M-F, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm at DePaul’s Lincoln Park Campus, Chicago June 19, 2009: Mandatory Orientation & Placement Testing Since 2003, DePaul University has attracted talented high school students to participate in its innovative early college courses. DePaul's Chinese Language Academy offers students: a) 100 hours or 4 weeks of college-level intensive language training in Chinese; b) Immersion in authentic Chinese language and cultural experiences; c) Innovative instruction led by DePaul’s team of faculty with expertise in teaching Chinese as a 2nd language; and d) Stimulating classroom environment enhancing students’ linguistic and cultural proficiencies in Chinese. DePaul's Chinese Language Academy (CLA) targets academically gifted students from: Chicago and suburban public/private, and Chinese heritage schools. In its third consecutive year of funding through STARTALK, CLA offers a cutting-edge curriculum prioritizing interpersonal communication in Mandarin Chinese. Students choose one of the following college-level courses: Chinese 110 – Beginning Chinese – targeting students with limited knowledge of Chinese or no prior formal instruction; Chinese 197 – Intermediate Chinese – open to students with a minimum of one year enrollment in a Chinese world language course in high school OR equivalence in oral/reading/written proficiencies OR past participation in DePaul’s 2008 STARTALK Chinese Language Academy. Note: Final course placement may be determined by testing on Friday, June 19, 2009 which is Orientation Day; all admitted students are required to attend. Students will also gain co-curricular experiences on- and off-campus including participating in: Chinese American community field trips; cultural activities and lessons; and performance-based projects.  CLA provides students with: daily lunches plus all books, course materials, and access to audiovisual/technology equipment to fulfill performance-based course objectives & produce video projects. Both courses provide high school elective credits equivalent to 100 classroom hours. {Note: CLA courses are available for college credits following DePaul’s undergraduate tuition fees.} A stipend of $500 to defray transportation and personal expenses will be given at the completion of the session to students who fulfill all course, attendance and program requirements.

773 325-8389 • ylau@depaul.eduhttp://www.depaul.edu

DePaul University Chinese Language Academy (teacher)

DePaul University Chinese Language Academy: Teacher Training & Professional Development

Chicago, IL • Chinese • June 15June 26, 2009
Chicago, IL • Chinese • June 22July 22, 2009
Chicago, IL • Chinese • June 15June 26, 2009

Teacher Training and Professional Development Course (N=30 hours or CPDUs): June 15-June 26, 2009: Classes held daily, M-F, 9:00 am – 1:00 pm at DePaul’s Lincoln Park Campus, Chicago, Illinois Mandatory Practicum (N=30 hours or CPDUs): Track I - June 22-26: 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm; June 29 – July 2: 10:00 am – Noon; July 6-17 – Select any 12 hours OR Track II - June 22-26: 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm; June 29 – July 2: 11:00 am – Noon, 1:00 – 3:00; July 6-July 10 – Select any 8 hours DePaul University's Chinese Language Academy (CLA), offers for the third consecutive year, an integrated professional development & graduate course in Teaching Chinese. Providing a two-week intensive course, "Teaching Chinese: Linguistics, Approaches & Strategies," CLA's curriculum highlights best practices and latest research on Chinese pedagogy, teaching methodology, and second language acquisition. Targeting novice teachers starting new programs and current teachers motivated to engage in innovative professional development, CLA instruction is led by DePaul’s team of university faculty and seasoned secondary teachers with expertise in teaching Chinese as a 2nd language. The course emphasizes 3 important areas: curriculum development, instructional delivery, and assessment. Participants will gain: a) understanding of state and national requirements for K-12 Chinese language teaching; b) experience in performance-based communicative Chinese teaching approaches; c) pedagogical strategies and practices to help students develop linguistic and cultural proficiency in Chinese; and d) integrated instruction in theories and practice. In addition, teachers will have the concurrent opportunity to participate in a supervised practicum, linking their course instruction to the DePaul STARTALK CLA for Academically Gifted High School Students. Engaged in 30 practicum hours in the STARTALK CLA Student Program, participants will observe, assist, teach, and tutor under the supervision of the lead instructor and DePaul STARTALK CLA teaching team. Participants will receive: daily lunches plus all books, course materials,access to audiovisual/technology equipment,60 CPDUs or continuing professional development units, and at minimum, one graduate credit hour to all participants (Up to 3 additional graduate credit hours may be applied for). Application deadline: June 5, 2009 or open based on availability.

773 325-8389 • ylau@depaul.eduhttp://www.depaul.edu

Frederick County Public Schools (student)

STARTALK Center for Chinese Studies

Frederick, MD • Chinese • July 13July 31, 2009

301-644-5261 • http://www.fcps.org

George Mason University (teacher)

Brain-Compatible Differentiated Instruction for Diverse Language Learners

Fairfax, VA • Arabic • June 29July 17, 2009
Fairfax, VA • Chinese • June 29July 17, 2009

This workshop for pre- and in-service as well as heritage teachers of Arabic and Chinese will highlight the needs of heritage language learners as well as culturally, linguistically, and cognitively diverse learners, using brain-compatible differentiated instruction as a research source. The literature on brain-compatible and learner-centered instruction and interactive activities provides a sound theoretical foundation for an integrated, multidimensional style of education across languages, learning styles and cultures. Based on current studies, this workshop will provide teachers the opportunity to create learning environments that foster the development of all learners. The workshop is also designed to meet the challenge of providing hands-on teacher training in the introduction and application of interactive approaches in brain-compatible differentiated instruction. Focus will be placed on successful practices of teachers who thoughtfully use brain-compatible theories of research to provide learners with opportunities to learn and acquire language in the manner in which they are most receptive and how that maximizes their potential to learn and become successful. The workshop will highlight how varied approaches can be applied to language learning thereby enhancing teacher expertise, student performance, and lead to the creation of new materials for teaching both Arabic and Chinese.

540-253-5014 Ext. 0000 • mhaley@gmu.eduhttp://www.gmu.edu

Global Village Academy: Adams-Arapahoe School District J-28 (student)

Chinese Science Immersion Camp (CSI)

Aurora, CO • Chinese • July 6July 24, 2009

The 2009 Global Village Academy (GVA) Chinese Science Immersion Camp (CSI) will offer students in grades 2-5 a three-week non-residential full-immersion Mandarin camp that focuses on thinking and communicating like a scientitist in the target langauge. Enrollment is limited to 60 students in grades 2-5 who possess novice to novice-high Mandarin skills. Students will use functional language tied to thinking like a scientist and will be introduced to hands-on inquiry-based explorations that reinforce the scientific method. Each week will culminate with a field trip in the Denver Metro region, such as the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST), the National Energy Research Lab (NREL), and the Natural History Museum. Teachers from the GVA and from the Colorado Consortium of Chinese Teachers, will offer three work shops tailored for each age group. Curricula will be developed in partnership with Science Matters, a Colorado science resource center. Topics are as follows: Leonardo’s Toy Chest: Many of Leonardo da Vinci's great inventions were scientific marvels...and they would make excellent toys. Fill your toy box with wooden creations of your own. The morning session will be filled with clockwork cars, attacking a castle with your own catapult,creating a camera obscura, and showing your artistic side while making a revolving stage. The afternoon will be filled with other inventions including the improvised car, creating a pinball machine, designing a robot drum, and racing a paddlewheel boat. You'll explore the mind of one of the world's greatest people—Leonardo da Vinci! Amusement Park Science: Ever want to design your own amusement park? Master circuits and motors as you create the rides of your dreams. Harness the forces of gravity to construct a room-sized roller coaster. Twirl, ride, bump, and dive your way into this thrill ride of a camp! Experiment and see how things can flash, fizz, stick, and glow while building your own fun physics carnival with mini rides and games. Experience "techno-candy" that chemically reacts in your mouth and explodes with flavor. Investigate solar sunglass science and flashing LED polymer squish balls. The fun never ends when you take this carnival home and challenge your friends. After lunch, step out to the wild side of science. Meet "Speedy," a real desert tortoise, as you create your own wild animal park complete with an awesome ocean, a radiant rainforest, and a dry desert. This camp is so hot, it's cool. Robot Monster Garage: Gear up for the next generation of robot transformers! Use the power of science to build your own monstrous creation, ready to battle and race in our monster robot pit. That's up to you! Join the great "Electron Rip-off" as you make an electro-powered robot bug and meet our superhero, "Mini Magneto." After lunch, design your ride! Use Newton's Laws to create your very own crazy cool set of wheels, souped up for speed and ready to race. Step up to a supersonic rock and roll sound studio, the beautiful bat cave, and the slimy polymer Olympics. Up to 60 full student scholarships are available.

303 309-6657 • cburton@globalvillageacademy.orghttp://www.globalvillageacademy.org

Global Village Academy: Adams-Arapahoe School District J-28 (teacher)

Chinese Science Immersion (CSI) Teacher Training Program

Aurora, CO • Chinese • June 15June 19, 2009

The Chinese Science Immersion (CSI) Teacher Training program is sponsored by Global Village Academy, a K-8 immersion charter school in Aurora, Colorado. The program is opened to teachers of Chinese with an interest in content-based immersion pedagogy. Teachers will increase their capacity to use content-based full-immersion strategies, further develop immersion-based curricula tied to Colorado Model content standards, and increase the language immersion time in oral and written Mandarin of students in grades 2-5. Each teacher will be responsible to complete a one-week training program (June 15-19) and a one-week hands on practicum (July 6-10, 13-17, or 20-24). Teachers will work in cohorts with a science curriculum developer and a Chinese immersion specialist to design hands-on lesson plans in science using Chinese immersion strategies. All teachers will be responsible to deliver one lesson and to participate in their cohort in giving feedback to teacher peers. A stipend of $1,000 will be given to teachers who complete the program.

303-309-6657 Ext. 109 • cburton@globalvillageacademy.orghttp://www.globalvillageacademy.org

Gonzaga University (student)

Gonzaga University STARTALK Program

Spokane, WA • Chinese • June 29August 7, 2009

Mandarin Chinese is the most spoken language in the world today. Knowledge of Chinese will be a significant advantage in the future, especially in the Pacific Northwest, due to its location on the Pacific Rim. However, opportunities to study the Chinese language are lacking for high school students in the Eastern Washington area. The Gonzaga University STARTALK Program addresses this need by providing beginning-level Chinese instruction to high school juniors and seniors in our region. This six-week program includes three hours of formal instruction in Chinese language and culture, four days per week. During the lunch hour, instruction in language continues through informal conversation with the instructor and native-speaker conversation leaders. The program lasts from 10:00 to 2:00, Monday through Thursday. Due to federal funding obtained to help support the program, the cost for the six-week session is only $370, which covers tuition, books, lab fees, and lunches. The program is limited to a maximum of twenty students and, therefore, has a competitive application process. Inquiries can be addressed to the program director, Benjamin M. Semple (semple@calvin.gonzaga.edu; 509 313-6721) or to the administrative point of contact, Lisa Meyer (meyerl@gonzaga.edu; 509 313-6783). To apply, go to http://www.gonzaga.edu/startalk.

509 313-6783 • meyerl@gonzaga.eduhttp://www.gonzaga.edu/startalk

Howard Community College (student)

STARTALK Intensive Critical Language Learning Experience for Howard County Students

Columbia, MD • Arabic, Chinese, Hindi • June 29August 7, 2009

410-772-4861 • http://www.howardcc.edu

Hunter College (student)

STARTALK Honors Chinese Program for High School Students at Hunter College

New York, NY • Chinese • June 29July 23, 2009
New York, NY • Chinese • July 24August 20, 2009

Hunter College offers two Chinese courses for high school students to build language and culture competencies. CHIN107, Intensive Elementary Chinese (6 credits), is an eight-week program (6/29–8/20), divided into a four-week face-to-face conversation session (6/29–7/23) and a four-week online literacy development session (7/27–8/20). The online course, CHIN102 (3 credits), is a four-week course (7/23–8/20) designed for students with one to two years of Chinese in high school. The conversation session’s daily activities for CHIN107 include three hours of classes, thirty minutes of tutoring, and one hour of cultural activities. There will be three field trips and presentations. During the everyday online session, students will work at home for two to three hours using online materials and converse for thirty minutes with a native speaker. CHIN102 students will come to campus once a week for classes, presentations, and field trips. Students will be paired with virtual language partners who are high school students from Taiwan to use Chinese in real-life situations and work on a blog-related culture project. On August 20, all students will take proficiency tests on campus. Students who demonstrate outstanding progress will receive scholarships.

212 772-4965 • chsummer@hunter.cuny.eduhttp://www.hunter.cuny.edu/classics/chinese

Hunter College (teacher)

STARTALK Chinese Teacher Training Program at Hunter College

New York, NY • Chinese • June 24July 23, 2009
New York, NY • Chinese • July 24August 20, 2009

Hunter College’s Chinese Teacher Training Program (6/24–7/23) will offer three 3-credit courses at undergraduate and graduate levels: Methods, Second Language Acquisition, and Teaching Chinese With Technology. These courses can be used to fulfill the requirements for the New York State Chinese Certificate and for Hunter College’s MA degree in Teaching Chinese. Non-Hunter students can take courses with non-degree status. The courses will be taught by college professors with high school teaching experience. Participants can choose to take one or more of the offered courses depending on personal interest and time availability. Training will be conducted every day (Monday through Thursday and some weekends) from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. through a variety of activities including lectures, classroom instruction, observation, student teaching, presentations, workshops, and individual research projects. Different levels of student teaching (tutorial sessions, small group, or whole class teaching) will be assigned to participants based on their ability and background. Instructors will be available for office hours, lesson plan writing clinics, and individual conferences to assist teacher-trainees. Participants will produce teaching videos on classroom management, teaching stories, and theme-based teaching. Program participants will receive scholarships if they complete course requirements with satisfactory performance.

212 772-4965 • chsummer@hunter.cuny.eduhttp://www.hunter.cuny.edu/classics/chinese

Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD (student)

STARTALK Gateway to Asia

Euless, TX • Hindi • June 11June 26, 2009
Euless, TX • Chinese • June 11June 26, 2009

The Hurst-Euless-Bedford Independent School District, in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex in Texas, is proud to host the STARTALK Gateway to Asia, an intensive three-week language academy open to rising 7th graders in the district as well as students from surrounding public and private schools. Students enrolled in either Hindi or Mandarin Chinese will be given an opportunity to explore both the language and the cultures of South Asia and East Asia. The program is limited to 100 students— 50 for each language, 25 in each classroom—so that the class sizes remain small and the quality of the program is maintained. The academy runs from June 11-June 26, 2009, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. During the academy, daily conversational exercises will allow students to practice their vocabulary. Student portfolios will include self-assessments, completed work and projects, and summative assessments. Field trips to the Crow Museum of Asian Art and other centers of learning are planned to enhance the learning experiences of our students.

817 399-3379 • BhavaniParpia@hebisd.eduhttp://www.hebisd.edu/edge

Indiana University Center for Chinese Language Pedagogy (teacher)

Chinese Pedagogy Institute: STARTALK at Indiana University

Bloomington, IN • Chinese • June 14July 1, 2009

The Indiana University Center for Chinese Language Pedagogy will host a two-and-a-half-week residential Chinese Pedagogy Institute (CPI) for middle and high school teachers. This professional development opportunity is designed to enhance the knowledge and skills of 20 current and prospective secondary teachers, who will earn four to five graduate-level credit hours through IU's School of Education. This course of study also partially fulfills the requirements for secondary teacher certification in Chinese. The course content has been guided by the standards for K-12 Chinese language teachers, recently developed by the Chinese Language Association Secondary-Elementary Schools (CLASS). Areas addressed include the following: effective methods and techniques for teaching Chinese, principles for selecting and adapting instructional materials, processes for curriculum design and instructional planning, and implementation of lesson plans and class management. Participants will discuss theories and research related to teaching Chinese as a foreign language, observe and critique pre-recorded Chinese classes, and apply instructional and management skills in a classroom with 10 middle and 10 high school students, among other activities. The sites for this institute will be IU's Bradford Woods, where participants will be involved in a week-long intensive pedagogy training session, and the IU-Bloomington campus, where a week-long practicum will follow.

812-856-0412 • cclp@indiana.eduhttps://www.indiana.edu/~cclp

Indiana University Center for Chinese Language Pedagogy (student)

Chinese Language Institute: STARTALK at Indiana University

Bloomington, IN • Chinese • June 21July 17, 2009

Indiana University's Center for Chinese Language Pedagogy will hold a four-week nonresidential Chinese Language Institute (CLI) for 10 middle and 10 high school students with little or no Chinese language experience. The program's innovative 3 + 1 format offers three weeks of language training on the IU-Bloomington campus, plus a week of online distance learning. During the latter, students will refine their self-directed study skills. A solid foundation in Mandarin Chinese, along with a variety of interactive cultural programs including calligraphy, Chinese yo-yos, and taiji lessons, will be offered. All materials and instruction are provided at no cost to the students. The program runs from June 21 to July 17, 2009.

812-856-0412 • cclp@indiana.eduhttps://www.indiana.edu/~cclp

Iowa State University (teacher)

STARTALK: Mentoring, Leadership, and Change in K-12 Chinese Teaching

Ames, IA • Chinese • June 15June 19, 2009

STARTALK Mentoring, Leadership, and Change in K-12 Chinese Teaching National K-12 Foreign Language Resource Center Iowa State University When: Sunday, June 14, 2009 to Saturday, June 20, 2009 Where: National K-12 Foreign Language Resource Center, Iowa State University Who: Practicing K-12 Chinese teachers with strong leadership potential Why: This institute will empower Chinese K-12 teachers to assume expanding leadership roles in their districts and states in the following ways: • Exploring best practices in Chinese teaching and learning • Collaboratively designing classroom materials • Experimenting with social technologies as tools for professional networking, mentoring, leadership, and learning • Discussing strategies to initiate, implement, and sustain change Institute Staff: • Institute Leaders Cindy Kendall, Ingham ISD Cherice Montgomery, Brigham Young University Marcia Rosenbusch, Iowa State University • Chinese Cultural & Linguistic Consultant Susan Gong, BYU Chinese Flagship Center • Demonstration Master Teacher Jessica Haxhi, Waterbury Schools • Apprentice Institute Leaders Aaron Bray, Sheboygan Falls School District Janna Chiang, Stopher Elementary School En-Ming (Grace) Heebner, MSD of Washington Township & Westlane Middle School Apply: Complete the online application form at http://nflrc.iastate.edu/ Submission deadline: MAY 22, 2009 National K-12 Foreign Language Resource Center N131 Lagomarcino Hall, Iowa State University Ames, Iowa 50011 nflrc@iastate.edu

515-294-6699 • nflrc@iastate.eduhttp://www.nflrc.iastate.edu

Kent State University (student)

Regents STARTALK Foreign Language Academy in Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, and Russian

Kent, OH • Arabic • June 21July 18, 2009
Kent, OH • Chinese • June 21July 18, 2009
Kent, OH • Hindi • June 21July 18, 2009

The 2009 Regents STARTALK Foreign Language Academy is a 4-week immersion program offering elementary instruction in Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, and Russian to rising juniors and seniors in Ohio high schools who are new learners of these languages. The academy will serve 58 students, and preference will be given to students from high schools that do not teach the languages offered in the Academy. The theme of the 2009 program is “My Space—Our World,” and instruction is organized around problem-solving projects. A mandatory academic year follow-up program consists of monthly mini-immersion sessions supported by distance learning.

330 672-1813 • bbaer@kent.eduhttp://fla.mcls.kent.edu/

Lewis University (student)

Lewis University Summer Language Camp for High School Students

Romeoville, IL • Arabic • June 14June 27, 2009
Romeoville, IL • Chinese • June 14June 27, 2009

In the summer of 2009, Lewis University will offer two, two-week sessions in beginning Arabic and Chinese to 24 highly-motivated eleventh and twelfth graders from Will County high schools, Illinois. Admission to the program is competitive. For those accepted, instruction in both languages is free. Students who will successfully complete the course will receive three transferrable university credits. The main goals of the Program are to help students to acquire the ability to communicate in the target language and to familiarize them with the culture of the countries where Arabic and Chinese are spoken. Both sessions will take place from June 15th through June 27th. Classes will be conducted every day from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and will be supplemented by a variety of extra-curricular cultural activities. Lunch and transportation are provided. .

(815)836-5544 • gettysse@lewisu.eduhttp://www.lewisu.edu

Loyola Marymount University (teacher)

Chinese Language Teacher Preparation: Summer Institute for 2009

Los Angeles, CA • Chinese • June 15August 7, 2009

The School of Education at Loyola Marymount University (LMU) continues with its second year of Chinese Language Teacher Preparation by offering a 6 -week long program leading to the certification of 25 qualified teachers of Mandarin in K-12 bilingual immersion or foreign language classrooms in California. The STARTALK Chinese Language Teacher Summer Institute for 2009 takes place between June 15th and August 10th 2009. 15 continuing Chinese Language teacher candidates (Cohort 1) will begin their second year in the MA and Elementary or Secondary credential program and will complete an additional 6 units of study. Cohort 1 will be joined by our second cohort of 10 Chinese Language Teacher candidates who will also complete 6 graduate units towards their California teaching credential and masters degree. STARTALK teacher candidates will also receive support in taking state-required licensure tests for teachers.

310 338-2924 • mlavaden@lmu.eduhttp://www.lmu.edu/soe

Middlebury College Language Schools - Chinese (teacher)

STARTALK Workshop for Teachers of Chinese

Middlebury, VT • Chinese • July 27August 31, 2009

With the assistance of a STARTALK grant the 2009 Middlebury Chinese School has provided scholarships to make it possible for current and prospective K-12 teachers of Chinese to enroll in the residential MA program (June 29 to August 15th, 2009) and to participate in a program which will have an intensive focus during two weeks (July 27-Aug 7) on classroom practices and instructional resources. The workshop will be a component of the six-week MA program and as such, will be open only to enrolled MA students. In addition to graduate level courses, students will have the opportunity to work on curriculum design and materials development during the full six-week program. Through lectures, discussion, and hands-on experiences, participants will learn to understand the nature and process of learning Chinese as a foreign language, to identify critical issues in Chinese foreign language pedagogy, and to enhance their ability to develop appropriate teaching materials. They will plan and develop effective classroom activities to help students develop proficiency in the target language across the three communicative modes (interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational,and the five goal areas (communication, cultures, connections, comparisons, and communities) as outlined in the Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Century. Stipends are also available for students to develop materials if they are willing to share their materials with the public. As members of the Middlebury Chinese School, students will be fully engaged in a cultural and language immersion environment, with close daily contact with staff and faculty at all times. In addition to the completed MA application form (available at http://www.Middlebury.edu/academics/ls/applications/), students interested in this workshop should also submit an essay that describes: the applicant’s background in teaching Chinese as a foreign language, how the professional training enhances her or his teaching as a current or prospective teacher of Chinese at the pre-college level, and what materials will be developed to share with other teachers. This will help us to individualize the training program to accommodate all students' needs. Please send all application material to: Ms. Anna Sun Chinese School Coordinator Sunderland Language Center Middlebury College Middlebury, VT 05753

802 443-5510 • sun@middlebury.eduhttp://www.middlebury.edu

Middlebury-Monterey Language Academy (student)

Middlebury-Monterey Language Academy - Chinese

Poultney, VT • Chinese • June 29July 25, 2009

Middlebury College offers a dynamic summer language immersion for students who have completed grades 7-12. Our 4-week program, called the Middlebury-Monterey Language Academy (MMLA), teaches students Mandarin Chinese in a highly intensive, but fun, environment. Modeled on Middlebury’s renowned Language Schools for undergraduate and graduate students, MMLA offers students the opportunity to live on a college campus and make a year’s worth of progress in their language in 4 weeks. This success owes primarily to the fact that, like their counterparts at the older level, MMLA students take a Language Pledge, promising to speak only the target language 24 hours a day. Please visit MMLA's web site (www.mmla.middlebury.edu) or call (802) 296-2459 to learn more about making a language breakthrough this summer.

802 443-2900 • Mr. Roberto D'Erizanshttp://www.mmla.middlebury.edu

Montgomery County Public Schools (teacher)

Montgomery County Public Schools Chinese and Arabic Teacher Institute

Rockville, MD • Arabic, Chinese • August 10August 14, 2009
Rockville, MD • Arabic, Chinese • October 8October 8, 2009
Rockville, MD • Arabic, Chinese • November 5November 5, 2009
Rockville, MD • Arabic, Chinese • December 15December 15, 2009
Rockville, MD • Arabic, Chinese • February 18February 18, 2010

This five-day summer program will provide K-12 Chinese and Arabic language teachers pedagogical content knowledge within the context of U.S. public education by integrating training on curriculum and assessment development with direct instructional implementation. Each six-hour-day will address specific topics and strategies. While the five goals of the Standards for Foreign Language Learning will be embedded throughout the program, the first two days will explicitly target their application in instruction and curriculum development. Participants will learn how to develop their students’ proficiency and maximize their use of the target language by creating student-centered tasks and assessments that incorporate the three communication modes (interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational) and culture. They also will learn how to use the comparison goal to help their students gain a better understanding of their own languages and cultures. Participants will use relevant topics to address the connections and communities goals. Furthermore, participants will learn how to use backward design to create lessons that include both formative and summative integrated performance assessments. In addition, experienced master teachers will share strategies for engaging students, using equitable practices, and creating an environment that maximizes learning in the context of U.S. public education.

301 279-3911 • Judith_I_Klimpl@mcpsmd.orghttp://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/

Northern Virginia Community College (teacher)

Powering Up Your Chinese and Arabic Language Courses With Technology

Arlington, VA • Arabic, Chinese • June 22June 26, 2009
Arlington, VA • Arabic, Chinese • July 6July 10, 2009

NOVA STARTALK is a summer institute in its third year designed to help teachers integrate technology tools and 21st century language pedagogy in the Arabic and Chinese curricula. Arabic and Chinese teachers in each language will create a collection of activities to expand the curriculum presently in place. The networking that has resulted from this course in the past two years has enriched instruction and created a bond between teachers who have worked in teams in and out of our STARTALK setting. Major goals: •Faculty participants will apply foreign language standards and multiple intelligence theory while creating Chinese and Arabic materials. •Faculty participants will learn to use technology tools that promote student engagement in Chinese and Arabic classes (i.e. QUIA, MERLOT, wikis, blogs, video, SlideShare, asynchronous voice tools, Photo Story, Nings, netvibes, social bookmarking, etc.). •Faculty participants will create a personal toolkit of materials to be used in Arabic and Chinese courses and shared with colleagues in the target languages. •Faculty participants will integrate activities that they discover in the daily workshops in syllabi for Arabic and Chinese courses during the summer of 2009 and beyond.

703 845-6325 • lfranklin@nvcc.eduhttp://www.nvcc.edu/alexandria/hss/world/startalk.html

OneWorld Now! (student)

OneWorld Now! Chinese Student Program

Seattle, WA • Chinese • August 3August 21, 2009

The 2009 OWN! Chinese Summer Language Camp will take place August 3-21, from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (weekdays only), at Seattle University. The program is open to incoming 9th-12th grade students in the Seattle area, with a focus on serving minority and low-income applicants. Students from outside the area are welcome to apply and attend if they are able to arrange their own housing, transportation, and meals outside of the program. The summer camp is free for accepted students, thanks to STARTALK scholarships. The OWN! Summer Language Camp will include two levels of Mandarin Chinese instruction (Level 1 for students with little or no knowledge of the language and Level 2 for students who have studied the language for at least one year). During the camp, students will learn and develop their writing, reading, listening, and speaking skills while also gaining exposure to the products, practices, and perspectives of the Chinese culture. Classes and activities will emphasize student-centered learning. Language will be reinforced through skits, role playing activities, cultural simulations, music, presentations from guest speakers, and technology. The last day of the camp will feature student performances in a culminating showcase for classmates, family, and community members.

206 223-7703 • http://www.oneworldnow.org

Queens University of Charlotte (student)

Queens University of Charlotte 2009 Summer Institute in Chinese

Charlotte, NC • Chinese • July 6July 17, 2009

The Queens University of Charlotte 2009 Summer Institute in Chinese is an opportunity for high school students in North Carolina to study Mandarin intensively for a 2-week period, July 6-17, Monday-Friday. Classes will be offered at the beginning and intermediate levels. The program will include formal classroom study with a licensed, professional instructor; one on one support from student language facilitators; and out of class activities to include martial arts, calligraphy, painting, and Chinese crafts. In addition, students will be introduced to current topics of interest through a series of guest speakers and will view and discuss Chinese films. At the conclusion of the camp, students will achieve beginning and intermediate level language proficiency in Mandarin Chinese. Students who will be in grades 9-12 are welcome to apply; no prior experience in Mandarin Chinese is necessary. There is no cost for this program beyond a $50 registration fee. Lunch and an afternoon snack will be provided. For more information or to request registration materials, please contact Dr. Alexa Royden at roydena@queens.edu. Early student drop off will be available beginning at 7:30 a.m. Drinks and a morning snack will be offered along with informal Chinese conversation practice.

704-654-6478 • roydena@queens.eduhttp://www.queens.edu/undergraduate/international_studies/InstituteinChinese.asp

Regents of the University of Minnesota (teacher)

STARTALK Mandarin Elementary Immersion Summer Teacher Education Program

Minneapolis, MN • Chinese • June 22July 17, 2009

The STARTALK Mandarin Elementary Immersion Summer Teacher Education Program (MEISTEP) is a new, exciting 4-week program for Chinese language teachers to learn how to integrate language, literacy, content, and culture into their classrooms. During the first week, participants will examine effective instructional strategies specific to the Chinese immersion context and will work together to develop content-based curriculum. The second week will focus on effective ways of teaching mathematics in the elementary immersion context. In weeks three and four, teachers will apply these new concepts in a summer program designed for elementary Mandarin immersion students. Participating teachers will have the option of taking courses for credit and may earn 2-4 graduate credits. MEISTEP is a collaboration of University of Minnesota’s Confucius Institute, the Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition (CARLA), and the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in partnership with Yinghua Academy, a K-5 Mandarin immersion charter school. Participants must be English-proficient post-baccalaureates with native- to near-native proficiency in Mandarin Chinese who are teaching in, or are seeking to teach in, a Mandarin Chinese elementary immersion program in the United States where Mandarin is used to teach a minimum of 50 percent of school subjects during the elementary years.

612-625-5080 • brzez001@umn.eduhttp://www.confucius.umn.edu/meistep/

Rochester City School District (student)

Rochester City School District Chinese and Swahili Language Camps

Rochester, NY • Swahili • July 13July 24, 2009
Rochester, NY • Swahili • July 27August 7, 2009
Rochester, NY • Chinese • July 13July 24, 2009
Rochester, NY • Chinese • July 27August 7, 2009

The Rochester City School District will host two language immersion programs in Swahili and Mandarin Chinese for students who are entering grades 8 and 9. The STARTALK Rochester Summer Language Camps will offer free-of-charge language camps to economically disadvantaged children; generate interest and awareness among students and city residents of the language learning opportunities available in the district; and engage new refugee, immigrant, and heritage-speaking students. During the two, 10-day camps, students will spend 1.5 to 2 hours per day on language and 1 to 1.5 hours per day on applying the learned language with cultural activities. Each language will be offered twice. Session one will run July 13-24. Session two will run July 27-August 7. Week one will feature “Greetings and Introductions.” Week two will feature “Me and My Family.” Each camp highlights authentic music, dancing, art, artifacts, and speaking. Cultural activity leaders will visit classrooms and reinforce teacher instruction. Cultural highlights will include: cooking and food tasting, building a mud house at the Baobob Cultural Center, visiting the University of Rochester Memorial Art Gallery and Cornell University, and classroom visits by professional musicians, dancers, and storytellers.

585-262-8682 • david.baez@rcsdk12.orghttp://www.rcsdk12.org

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (teacher)

STARTALK Expanding Chinese in the New Jersey World Languages Classroom: The Rutgers/Princeton West-Windsor Plainsboro Regional School Districts 2009 Summer Program

New Brunswick, NJ • Chinese • June 30August 7, 2009

732 932-7496 Ext. 8101 • http://www.gse.rutgers.edu

Rutgers/Princeton West-Windsor Plainsboro Teacher and Student Programs (student)

STARTALK Expanding Chinese in the World Language Classroom: The Rutgers/Princeton West-Windsor Plainsboro Regional Districts 2009 Summer Project

Princeton, NJ • Chinese • July 20July 31, 2009

The Rutgers University and Princeton/West Windsor-Plainsboro School Districts collaborate to offer Chinese language learning experiences for middle and high school students as well as professional development opportunities for pre-service Chinese language teachers. Middle and high school students attend a standards-based, 2-week Chinese immersion camp at Princeton High School. The camp serves beginner, intermediate, and heritage learners. Camp participants engage in thematic instruction which actively involves them in sports, the arts, a field trip, and more—all in Chinese. Pre-service teachers participate in a methods course at Rutgers University and in a practicum experience at Princeton High School. The teacher program is designed for teacher candidates to connect theory to practice, have opportunities to observe best teaching practice, engage in micro-teaching, reflect upon their experiences, and prepare a long-term professional development plan.

732 932-7496 Ext. 8101 • peter.chang@gse.rutgers.eduhttp://k12chinese.rutgers.edu/Site/The_Initiative.html

San Francisco State University (student)

San Francisco Chinese Language Academy for Summer Students (SF-CLASS)

San Francisco, CA • Chinese • June 15July 15, 2009

The 5-week intensive Chinese Language Academy, SF-CLASS, will offer standards-based, technology-infused Mandarin summer programs for middle school students in a linguistically (oral and print) and culturally rich environment. Students will utilize a wide variety of highly interesting Chinese reading, oral, and musical material as well as current technological advancements to practice and to create their own Chinese language podcast files, digital storytelling videos, and graphic novels and plays. SF-CLASS will motivate students to learn Chinese, will change students’ perceptions of and attitudes toward the learning of Chinese, and, most importantly, will cultivate independent and lifelong learners of Chinese.

(415)338-7288 • stlearn@sfsu.eduhttp://userwww.sfsu.edu/~clao/

San Francisco State University (teacher)

Institute for Innovative Teaching of Chinese

San Francisco, CA • Chinese • June 12June 26, 2009

The purpose of this 2-week intensive Chinese teacher language program is to train teachers of Chinese to develop and implement standards-based, technology-infused curriculum and to use the best practices in instructional pedagogy via literacy approach and project-based learning. Teacher participants will also develop skills in integrating technology into language teaching and learning, focusing particularly on second language acquisition, Chinese children’s literature comics and story-telling in the L2 classroom, L2 literacy development, Chinese language curriculum and material design and development, and extending the use of the Chinese language outside the classroom. Three units of course credit (one course) may be earned toward teacher certification or a master's degree.

415-338-7288 • stteach@sfsu.eduhttp://userwww.sfsu.edu/~clao/

Seattle Public Schools (teacher)

Seattle STARTALK 3

Seattle, WA • Arabic, Chinese, Hindi • July 13July 31, 2009

Seattle Public Schools (SPS) STARTALK is a nonresidential teacher certification program for fluent speakers of Arabic, Chinese, and Hindi. The district has contracted with a local university to offer coursework leading to a Washington State residency teaching certificate with an endorsement in K-12 world languages. This program, an alternative route to certification, takes two summers of coursework plus one semester of full-time student teaching. To obtain the K-8 elementary endorsement, additional coursework is required. STARTALK funding covers tuition for the classes for two summers. Participants pay for texts and some materials. State conditional loans are available for the student teaching semester or for the third summer of study for the K-8 endorsement. Prospective candidates must have at least a bachelor’s degree and must have taken state-required tests: WEST B, a basic skills test of reading, English, and math; OPI, the oral proficiency interview that tests competency in Arabic, Chinese, or Hindi; and if seeking the K-8 endorsement, WEST E, the K-8 subject competency tests. For more information, contact Betty Lau at belau@seattleschools.org, or visit the SPS Web site at www.seattleschools.org/area/internationaled/resources.xml.

206-252-6211 • belau@seattleschools.orgwww.seattleschools.org/area/internationaled/resources.xml

Springfield Public Schools (student)

Elementary Chinese Language and Culture Immersion Program

Springfield, MA • Chinese • June 30July 23, 2009

Springfield Public Schools Elementary Chinese Language and Culture Immersion Program is designed to provide a variety of learning experiences for students entering grades two through six. The students will be immersed in the Chinese language as they participate in our thematically based, age appropriate program. The program will run from June 30 – July 23, 2009 from 8:30a.m. - 12:30p. m. at Boland Elementary School and will include classroom instruction as well as hands-on demonstrations and field trips. The use of technology enhanced activities and the incorporation of the Arts will facilitate the teaching/learning of this ancient language and culture of more than a billion speakers. No prior language study is required.

413-787-7111 • felix-fournierc@sps.springfield.ma.us

Teaching Chinese Resources (teacher)

STARTALK Good Will Program

El Monte, CA • Chinese • May 1June 10, 2009
Santa Ana, CA • Chinese • May 4June 11, 2009

626-377-1620 • http://www.teachingchinese.org/

Teaching Chinese Resources (student)

STARTALK Good Will Program

Cerritos, CA • Arabic, Chinese • June 22July 24, 2009
Yorba Linda, CA., CA • Chinese • June 29July 30, 2009
Rosemead, CA • Chinese • June 22July 31, 2009
San Gabriel, CA • Chinese • June 23July 22, 2009
Monterey Park, CA • Chinese • June 22July 24, 2009
Fullerton, CA • Chinese • June 22July 30, 2009
San Marino, CA • Chinese • June 22July 24, 2009
San Marcos, CA • Chinese • June 22July 30, 2009
San Diego, CA • Chinese • June 17July 31, 2009
Hawthorne, CA • Chinese • June 28July 31, 2009
Glendale, CA • Chinese • June 23July 30, 2009
Chino Hills, CA • Chinese • June 29July 31, 2009
Glendale, CA • Chinese • June 23July 30, 2009

626-377-1620 • http://www.teachingchinese.org/

The College Board (teacher)

Chinese Guest Teachers Summer Institute: An Extension of the Chinese Guest Teacher Program

Stanford, CA • Chinese • July 22July 31, 2009

The Chinese Guest Teacher Summer Institute Program offers professional development for newly arriving teachers from China prior to their placement as teachers of Chinese language and culture in elementary and secondary schools across the United States. The primary goal of the GTSI is to increase guest teachers’ understanding of American education and to facilitate their development of pedagogical skills particularly relevant to American classrooms. The program covers topics such as the structure of U.S. K-12 education, K-12 foreign language teaching standards, communication strategies, course design, classroom management, materials development, and more. The program is organized by the College Board in collaboration with partner associations such as the National Council of State Supervisors for Languages (NCSSFL) and the California Foreign Language Project at Stanford University School of Education. For questions, please contact Michaela Kabat at guestteacher@collegeboard.org.

212-520-8583 • guestteacher@collegeboard.orghttp://professionals.collegeboard.com/k-12/awards/chinese

The Regents of the University of California (teacher)

The Berkeley K-16 Bridge: Improving Teacher Effectiveness in Foreign Language (Mandarin) Classroom

Berkeley, CA • Chinese • August 3August 16, 2009

STARTALK 2009 Berkeley Teacher Program will provide enrichment training for Mandarin teachers from 4-year universities, 2-year community colleges, K-12 public and private schools, and heritage schools. This program will provide a model for K-16 articulation to support burgeoning state and national efforts to bring effective Chinese language instruction to K-16 classrooms in an articulated and organized fashion, and to ensure that K-12 programs fuse effectively with offerings at the collegiate level. The emphasis will be placed on teachers from the nine Bay Area counties who are currently teaching Mandarin as well as teachers who will be starting new programs in the fall of 2009. This program includes a 10-day, hands-on workshop and a 2-day international conference on Chinese language pedagogy. The curriculum contents will include the following: ACTFL, California, and CLASS Standards; Sample Chinese Curriculum Guide Review; Planning Standards-Based Thematic Unit; Designing Standards-Based Lesson with Backward Design; Selecting and Evaluating Teaching Materials; Mandarin Proficiency Assessment Tools Including Computer-Based Assessment; Distance Learning; Using Films to Teach Language and Culture; and Participating in the Second International Conference on Chinese Language Pedagogy. Each participant will receive a $500 stipend and a certificate upon completion of the 84-hour program.

510-642-8390 • stellakwoh@berkeley.eduhttp://ieas.berkeley.edu/ncclp

The University of Massachusetts Boston (student)

STARTALK Student Mandarin Summer Camp

Boston, MA • Chinese • June 29July 17, 2009

617-287-7292 • http://ccde.umb.edu/china/

The University of Mississippi (student)

Mississippi Chinese STARTALK 3

University, MS • Chinese • June 24July 25, 2009

Mississippi STARTALK is a program funded by the Federal government to provide high school students with intensive instruction in Chinese on the University of Mississippi campus in Oxford during the second summer session (June 25-July 23). In addition to studying Chinese inside and outside of the classroom, students will participate in a cultural program introducing them to China, its people, and its culture. Students will receive STARTALK scholarships that cover the cost of their instruction and books, and provide them with housing and meals on the Ole Miss campus. All students who complete the program they will receive college credits in Mandarin Chinese. Additionally, students will also be eligible to continue their study of Chinese during the 2009-10 academic year through a special course of study offered to them by the STARTALK program.

662 915-7298 • djhedjli@olemiss.eduhttp://www.outreach.olemiss.edu/youth/startalk/

UCLA Center for World Languages (teacher)

Heritage Language Teacher Workshop

Los Angeles, CA • Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Persian, Swahili, Turkish, Urdu • July 20July 24, 2009

In today’s “foreign” language classes, teachers are faced with many students who are heritage language speakers. For these students, the target language is not foreign, but rather a home language whose development was interrupted by a switch to English. A typical heritage learner has grown up hearing the language and begins classroom instruction with measurable oral and aural proficiency but with few literacy skills. This workshop is designed to help language teachers better understand the differences between L2 and HL learners, and learn how to differentiate curriculum to address the range of skill levels present in HL classes. Participants will explore ways to design their own curriculum and select materials and assessment tools. They will learn how to start where the students are and involve them as ACTIVE participants in the learning process. The workshop will include information on how to research a heritage language community and create a community-based program. A grasp of demographic data will give teachers an advantage in teaching and promoting heritage language instruction in their own departments, institutions, and districts. The goal for the workshop is to develop a cohort of language teachers who will be leaders and mentors in heritage language instruction.

310-794-0191 • kathryn@humnet.ucla.eduhttp://www.international.ucla.edu/languages

University of Florida (teacher)

Florida STARTALK for Teachers of Chinese, Grades 6-12

Gainesville, FL • Chinese • July 12July 22, 2009

The University of Florida will hold an intensive 10-day training program for up to 25 secondary school teachers of Chinese. This residential program on the university campus is open to currently practicing teachers and prospective teachers from anywhere in the United States. Participants will earn a total of 4 credits in Foreign Language Teaching Methods and Chinese Pedagogy. Both courses (EDG 6905 & CHI 4930) meet the Florida State Board of Education requirements for certification in the teaching of foreign languages, and may be used for in-service credit or for degree credit. STARTALK pays 75% of the tuition and covers lodging, lunches, and miscellaneous supplies. Accepted applicants will pay the remainder of the tuition cost through a registration fee of $250. They may apply to be reimbursed for travel and textbook expenses up to $225. For more information, contact: Pat Bartlett Outreach Coordinator Asian Studies patbart@ufl.edu (352) 392-2464

352 392-2464 • patbart@ufl.eduhttp://www.ufl.edu/

University of Hawaii at Manoa (teacher)

2009 Hawaii Chinese Language Teacher Training Institute

Honolulu, HI • Chinese • July 1July 24, 2009

Fifteen in- or pre-service Chinese language teachers will work with five highly experienced lead instructors to focus on the principles and practice of standards- and task-based, learner-centered instruction in Chinese. We will begin with a three-day immersion session on principles. However, the heart of the institute will constitute of three weeks of beginning and intermediate level instruction for 30 high school learners of Chinese. During the first week, the lead instructors will demonstrate a range of experimental and effective teaching approaches, using an exciting and brand-new suite of materials in draft format (Encounters: Global Chinese Language And Culture from Yale University Press and the China International Publishing Group). In the second week, lead instructors will work with teacher-trainees to design and teach task-based, learner-centered modules in each of the four skills. And in the third week, teacher-trainees will teach by themselves, with much support from all other Institute participants. Introspection, reflection, constructive feedback, and experimentation are highly encouraged.

808 956-2663 • jialin@hawaii.eduhttp://chinesestudies.hawaii.edu/confucius/program/summer/index.html

University of Hawaii at Manoa (student)

University of Hawaii 2009 Chinese Immersion Sports Camp

Honolulu, HI • Chinese • July 6July 24, 2009

This intensive three-week sports camp begins every weekday at 8 a.m. and ends at 5 p.m. During that time, students will participate in 4 language classes, 1 language session in the multi-media lab, 1 ping-pong class, and 1 martial arts class. The language classes will be led by five energetic lead instructors selected from all over the United States with 15 motivated teacher-trainees assisting. Classes will be activities-based; through a range of media, students will be learning and immediately using Chinese to communicate and complete tasks. The sports classes will be conducted by national championship-level athletes from China. On weekends, participants will explore Hawaii's natural and social environments and gain some understanding of the role of China and Chinese culture in U.S. society.

808 956-2663 • jialin@hawaii.eduhttp://chinesestudies.hawaii.edu/confucius/program/summer/index.html

University of Kansas Center for Research, Inc. (student)

STARTALK: Chinese Jump! 2009: Confucius Institute Chinese Summer Language Institutes

Overland Park, KS • Chinese • June 26July 11, 2009
Overland Park, KS • Chinese • July 6July 18, 2009
Overland Park, KS • Chinese • July 20August 1, 2009

Chinese Jump! 2009 Summer Language Program at the Confucius Institute at the University of Kansas is designed to give high school students an opportunity to jump into the study of Mandarin. Selected students must intend to enroll in Mandarin I during the 2009-10 school year. Preference will be given to students attending a school district offering Chinese via IDL technology through the Confucius Institute. There will be three two-week sessions, June 26-July 11, July 6-18 and July 20-August 1. Students will receive Chinese language instruction for 3.5 hours per day on nine weekdays from instructors certified by the KSDE as K-12 teachers of Chinese and provided by the Confucius Institute in an IDL classroom or via face-to-face instruction depending on their location. As the culmination of each two-week session, students will participate in a three-day field trip to the Confucius Institute in Overland Park, KS which will include a visit to an art museum, calligraphy and Chinese music workshops, interaction with young adult native speakers, face-to-face interaction with Chinese instructors and individual assessments of learning. Contact Chinese Jump! Administrative Coordinator Director Nancy Hope at nfhope@ku.edu or 785-864-3918 for information or an application. Additional information at www.confucius.ku.edu/startalk.shtml.

785-864-3918 • nfhope@ku.eduhttp://www.confucius.ku.edu/startalk.shtml

University of Massachusetts Boston (teacher)

Summer Institutes for Teachers of Chinese Language

Boston, MA • Chinese • June 28July 3, 2009
Boston, MA • Chinese • July 5July 15, 2009

Our STARTALK program for Teachers of Chinese Language will offer two summer institutes: • Summer Institute I focuses on Chinese culture of geography, philosophy, political systems, inventions/discoveries, modern history from 1840-1949, and the Rise of China and its impact on the world. A group of top scholars from Harvard and other universities will give lectures in the morning. Lead teachers will offer workshops and hands-on activities to show how to transform academic knowledge into classroom skills in the afternoon. • Summer Institute II concentrates on American school culture and methodology. A group of linguistics specialists, school administrators, and lead teachers will teach the National Standards of Foreign Language Education, foreign language acquisition, thematic and backward design, classroom management, LinguaFolio, and the STARTALK template. Moreover, participants have the opportunity to observe in the student Mandarin summer camp and practice. You can obtain 3 graduate credits from UMass Boston’s Applied Linguistics Department and 45 PDPs from each summer institute. We offer free dorms for participants who live 50 miles away from Bentley University, Waltham. Our program of 2008 was recognized as “an outstanding model” by STARTALK Central (from the STARTALK Central visit report).

617 287-7292 • wanli.hu@umb.eduhttp://ccde.umb.edu/china/

University of New Mexico (student)

University of New Mexico Summer Institute in Arabic and Chinese for High School Students

Albuquerque, NM • Arabic • June 8July 3, 2009
Albuquerque, NM • Chinese • June 8July 3, 2009

By the end of this month-long Institute, to take place June 8 to July 3, 2009, 34 high school students (17 for each language) from the Albuquerque metropolitan region will have covered the curriculum of a first year semester course in Arabic or Chinese at the University of New Mexico. Through a cooperative agreement with the secondary schools in the region, these students will earn 3 UNM credit hours, as well as corresponding high school credits. The course emphasizes the three communicative areas of interpersonal, interpretive and presentational skills in both written and oral forms, as well as a cultural theme that is used to meaningfully integrate the linguistic material. Classes are taught by regular UNM faculty assisted by teaching assistants. Classes meet every day for three hours. Participants also connect with community resources to enhance the articulation between the real-world and academic forms of learning. Two cultural excursions per week are scheduled. The Institutes are open to both heritage and non-heritage students. The learning objective for the month-long program is for students to achieve a mid-Novice level in their respective languages, and to gain significant information about Chinese and Arabic speaking cultures.

505 277-4771 • nakol@unm.eduhttp://www.unm.edu/~fll

University of Pennsylvania (student)

STARTALK Penn High School Chinese Academy Program

Philadelphia, PA • Chinese • July 6August 14, 2009

The Penn High School Chinese Academy program will take place from July 6 to August 14 on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania. The six-week, non-residential program consists of language instruction, lectures on Chinese culture by Penn Professors, one-on-one practice sessions, dance and martial arts practice, and field trips to Franklin museum and Chinatown. Students are in class Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. All accepted students will receive a $1000 STARTALK scholarship to cover part of the $1876 Penn tuition. The final cost to each student will be $876. Other Curriculum Highlights: Beginning Chinese I and II Student teacher ratio is 4:1 Language lab instruction in writing and Website-navigation Theme-based curriculum Language table every Wednesday with teachers to practice the language The program has places for 30 high school students. Application deadline is May 30.

215 573-4203 • nriley@sas.upenn.eduhttp://www.ceas.sas.upenn.edu/

University of Virginia (teacher)

Virginia STARTALK Chinese Teacher Academy

Richmond, VA • Chinese • June 28July 19, 2009

Virginia STARTALK Chinese Teacher Academy (VSCTA) is a 3-week residential program that trains novice and continuing Chinese language teachers to enhance their expertise in teaching Chinese as a foreign language toward Chinese teacher certification or professional development. The program integrates a balance of theories and practice into the curriculum through a well-structured and sequenced supervised practicum based on a multi-reflective approach. By completing the 5-credit graduate course, teachers are able to keep abreast of new developments in second language acquisition theories and practice in general and in Chinese language acquisition and pedagogy in particular. Through a mid-program practicum, participants will also create standards-based curricula and materials, deliver effective instruction, and implement authentic performance-based assessment and instructional technology in a learner-centered, highly communicative and interactive environment conducive to productive learning. Participants' competence in teaching Chinese as a foreign language culminates in the completion of an E-portfolio that documents their extensive learning experiences in launching or advancing their career.

434-924-0571 • mt3z@virginia.eduhttp://www.virginia.edu/deallc/documents/2009StartalkFlyerFinal_000.pdf

Virginia Beach City Public Schools (student)

Virginia Beach STARTALK Elementary Chinese Academy (VBSECA)‎

Virginia Beach, VA • Chinese • June 29July 16, 2009

The STARTALK Summer Academy will increase opportunities for language-learning in ‎elementary schools; set a model for other elementary schools to offer languages; focus ‎attention on Mandarin Chinese, prompting expansion and an increase in enrollment at the ‎secondary level; promote community awareness of the need to begin languages ‎in ‎elementary school; and remind stakeholders of the necessity to learn a critical needs ‎language such as Mandarin Chinese. The fifth-graders who will attend the Academy will ‎be encouraged to continue their language study in an after-school program. ‎ Forty-five students will be selected on a first-come, first-served basis. However, students ‎recommended to attend summer school are not eligible. There are no fees required, and ‎bus service will be provided.‎

757 263-1469 • maria.still@vbschools.comhttp://www.vbschools.com

Virginia Commonwealth University (student)

Virginia STARTALK Chinese Academy

Richmond, VA • Chinese • June 28July 19, 2009

The Virginia STARTALK Chinese Academy is integrated into the 2009 "Global Village" of the Virginia Governor's Foreign Language Academies (VGFLA) sponsored by the Virginia Department of Education. Sharing campus facilities and participating in several joint activities with the VGFLA, the three-week residential Chinese program for current Virginia tenth- and eleventh-grade foreign language students is housed on the campus of Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond from June 28, 2008, through July 19, 2009. The academy accepts beginners as well as students with prior study of Chinese (Mandarin). The program runs concurrently and in collaboration with the University of Virginia STARTALK Chinese Teachers Seminar.

804 225-3666 • flacademies@vcu.eduhttp://www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/Instruction/Language/GAindex.html

Washington-Saratoga-Warren-Hamilton-Essex Board of Cooperative Educational Services (student)

StarTalk Summer Language Immersion and Culture (SSLIC) Program

Saratoga Springs, NY • Chinese • July 13August 7, 2009
Saratoga Springs, NY • Chinese • July 20July 24, 2009
Queensbury, NY • Chinese • July 27August 1, 2009
Queensbury, NY • Chinese • August 3August 7, 2009

The StarTalk Summer Language Immersion and Culture (SSLIC) Program offers both elementary and secondary students the opportunity to explore Chinese language and culture in an activities-based program. Cooking, tai chi, calligraphy, watercolor painting, ribbon dancing, and puppetry are among the SSLIC activities. Technology-supported activities are also incorporated to reinforce learning. Community connections are developed via peer tutors from the heritage community and online exchanges with students in China. Secondary students also participate in a trip to Chinatown. The SSLIC Program, which is non-residential, is offered at two sites in New York: Saratoga Springs (elementary) and Queensbury (secondary). During the 2009-2010 school year, follow up activities will include an online course and after-school program.

518 581-3581 • psharkey@wswheboces.orghttp://www.wswheboces.org/lcrc

Yinghua Academy (student)

Abacus for Kids: Learning Chinese Language and Culture Through Math Activities

Minneapolis, MN • Chinese • July 6July 17, 2009
Minneapolis, MN • Chinese • July 20July 31, 2009

Yinghua Academy’s Abacus for Kids: Learning Chinese Language and Culture Through Math Activities is a 2-week Chinese language immersion summer camp designed to provide K-4 children (ages 5-10) with easy and enjoyable activities as they discover Mandarin Chinese language and culture. The complex beauty of the Chinese language and cultural concepts will be discovered through mathematics. By learning about the abacus, students will learn the Chinese counting system and recognize the place values of each bead. Students will also learn to compare the abacus and the calculator. Math in Our Daily Life is the central, mathematics-oriented theme. Activities will include math numbers and operations, geometric and measurement concepts, and simple algebra. All activities follow the state of Minnesota’s math teaching standards and the National Council for Teaching Math K-4’s standards. Lessons include culturally specific children’s games, storytelling, hands-on activities, and cultural exploration, along with total physical response activities and immersion teaching strategies. Camp activities will conclude with a mini-Chinese carnival to allow students to experience a traditional market and use learned math concepts and Chinese language skills. Students will be grouped based on their previous learning experiences with Chinese. Students who indicate financial difficulties will be considered for scholarships.

651-379-4112 • luyi@yinghuaacademy.orghttp://www.yinghuaacademy.org