Ten Chinese Phrases that will Impress Your Teacher

Teach Kids ChineseGet ready for school by having your kids learn these phrases in Chinese. Their teachers are bound to be awestruck and will reward your kids with a “好棒!” (hǎo bàng) or “Awesome!”

1. Hello!
您好
Nín hǎo

2. Good morning Teacher!
老师早安
Lǎoshī zǎoān

3. My name is_____
我叫____
Wǒ jiào

4. Did you have a good summer vacation?
你的暑假好不好?
Nǐ de shǔjià hǎo bù hǎo

5. Mine was awesome!
我的暑假真棒
Wǒ de shǔjià zhēn bàng

6. I like learning Chinese.
我爱学习中文
Wǒ ài xuéxí zhōngwén

7. Very interesting!
很有趣
Hěn yǒuqù

8. I can count from 1 to 100.
我可以从一数到一百
Wǒ kěyǐ cóng yī shù dào yī bǎi

9.Thank you
谢谢
Xièxiè

10. Good bye. See you tomorrow!
再见。 明天见
Zàijiàn Míngtiān jiàn

Also check out our multi-award winning Let’s Go Guang! Chinese for Children series for everything a kid needs to learn beginning Chinese in a box.  Save 20% now and receive a free “Colors” poster with promocode “ ahaSave20”

 

Posted in Education, Language, Parents, Resources | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

5 Ways for Kids (and Adults) to Learn and Practice Chinese without Cracking Open a Book

ways to practice chineseLearning a foreign language can be as fun (and effective) out of the classroom, as in the classroom. With summer in full swing, we explored some alternatives to traditional textbook learning.

1) Join a playgroup. Foreign language targeted playgroups have sprung up around the country. This is a great way to find like-minded parents, eager to create opportunities for their kids to speak Chinese. To find one in your area, try searching using yahoo groups or meetup.com .

2) Travel. There’s of course no better way to practice language than to be forced to use it. Mandarin Chinese is spoken in Mainland China and Taiwan. If you should be fortunate enough to visit Beijing this summer, see our blog on some tips for must-see sites with kids. Even if international travel is not in the cards this summer, a visit to your local Chinatown or even Chinese restaurant may provide some fun opportunities. Most people would love the chance to hear your little ones show off their Chinese, though be aware that in many Chinatowns around the world, the main Chinese dialects spoken are Cantonese and Toisan.

3) Watch Videos and Listen to CDs. Ok, we may be a little biased, but video is a great medium to teach a foreign language. Teaching “I’m hungry” through video is as easy as showing a person rubbing their stomach, a thought bubble of food, and them saying “I’m hungry (我俄了).” The viewer knows what the phrase means, what context to use it in, and how to say it accurately. CDs can similarly help with context and pronunciation. What could be better for the car during that long summer roadtrip. A large collection of Chinese videos, books and CDs can be found at the following online retailers: Chinasprout, Childbook, Asianparent and aha!Chinese.

4) Use technology! There are now numerous iPad and iPhone apps for children available for a small price (assuming you already have the hardware!). See Haomama’s recent blog on currents apps. There are also sites such as Childroad.com that provide narrations of various Chinese children’s books. Some books are free, otherwise there’s a small monthly fee for becoming a member. Other sites (including this blog) have free videos teaching Chinese.

5) Seek out conversation partners. If you live anywhere close to a college or university, make a visit to the student union and create a posting looking for a Chinese student to practice Chinese with your children (you could probably do this online). Due to aggressive recruitment of Chinese students by American universities, there are over 130,000 Chinese students now studying in America. The goal of all this language learning, afterall, is to eventually speak to the people of China. Why not start now!

Posted in Education, Language, Parents, Resources, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Latest aha!Chinese Newsletter – Chinese is Fun!

aha!Chinese Newsletter Chinese is FunThe latest addition of the aha!Chinese Newsletter is out! Click here for the full version. This month we will bring you interesting tidbits to enhance your children’s Chinese education, including activity sheets, fun flashcards, coloring pages and more. Learn about the pictographs between 10 key Chinese characters and see if your children can figure out which characters they came from. Our kids loved the activity sheet, and their favorite was the mazes! See what your kids think – we’d love to know too. We’ve also launched free online Chinese lessons supplementary to our Let’s Go Guang! Chinese for Children series.

Sign up to receive future aha!News and Special Offers. We promise not to share your email. You can always drop us a line at feedback@ahachinese.com and please be sure to friend us on Facebook where we will be doing fun contests for the kids and giveaways in the coming months. Don’t miss the fun!

Posted in Education, Language, Parents | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Chinese for Kids – Free Online Chinese Lessons by aha!Chinese

Chinese-for-Kids-Online-Chinese-Lessons

We are excited to bring you our new free online Chinese videos for kids! The videos feature Yuan Yuan and her little friends.  In them, Yuan Yuan teaches words, phrases and expressions that build upon our award winning Let’s Go Guang! Chinese for Children series. Children who have watched our videos will be able to follow along, and have the benefit of watching the phrases and expressions used in another setting.  For extra fun and more of a challenge, she will also dazzle young learners with Chinese tongue twisters, famous songs and even Tang dynasty poems!

Here are a few video bites to give you an introduction. For more practice for your kids, have them sing the song along, or even act it out!

 

 

 

Check back regularly for more content updates, or sign up for our aha!Newsletter, our Facebook and/or Twitter page so that we can notify you when we upload new videos.

Posted in Education, Language, Let's Go Guang! | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Four Must-See Places in Beijing with Kids

Planning a family vacation to China can be a daunting task, so we’ve made it easier for you. Check out this short list of must-see places in Beijing, the modern capital of China. For an authentic and memorable experience, we’ve included  insider tips to make your trip more enjoyable!

View of Forbidden City from the South

View of Forbidden City from the South

Forbidden City

Kids will love exploring the immense Forbidden City, home to 24 emperors who reigned for over 500 years during the Ming and Qing dynasties. During that time, the complex was the heart of the Chinese government. It was not only home to emperors and their staff, but also the place for ceremony. Built between 1406 and 1420, this imperial palace complex includes almost 1,000 buildings and 10,000 rooms, occupying nearly 8 million square feet. Not long ago, it was closed to outsiders–including most Chinese.

Tips:

  1. Eat beforehand or pack a lunch to bring inside, since food vendors are scarce.
  2. Bring a hat and drinking water–it gets very hot in the summer.
  3. Comfortable shoes are a must!
  4. Take advantage of a guided audio tour.
  5. Watch Bertolucci’s “The Last Emperor” before you visit to get a sense of its history.
  6. Download WildChina’s Forbbiden City Touch mobile app for visual and audio guides.

Metro: Tiananmen Xi or Tiananmen Dong

Hours: 8:30am – 4pm May – September, 8:30am – 3:30 pm October – April

Entrance Fee: November to March- RMB 40, April- October- RMB 60

Website: www.dpm.org.cn

Houhai (Back Lakes) Park

Beijing’s trendiest lake and park is located north of Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City. Nestled near many quaint boutiques and restaurants, the beautiful Houhai Park offers a nice mix of old Beijing and the West.

Tips:

Houhai Park, Beijing

Houhai Park, Beijing

  1. Take a relaxing boat ride.  We highly recommend the electric boats over the nostalgic-looking paddle boats.  Don’t be fooled – unless you’re only 5 feet tall these boats will have you nursing bruises on your way home.
  2. Join the locals in some chair skating when the lake is frozen over during the winter. Yes, you read that correctly! Ice blades are attached to chairs and passengers use metal ice picks to guide themselves along. For the more conventional among you, ice skates are available to rent.
  3. Grab a bite to eat at the Hakka restaurant, Han Cing, opposite the Starbucks. It’s the best food on the lake!

Hours: 24 hours year-round

Entrance Fee: Free

Summer Palace

Long Corridor at the Summer Palace

Long Corridor at the Summer Palace

Located in northwest Beijing, the Summer Palace was once a summer retreat for the royal families. Commissioned by Emperor Qianlong in 1750 in celebration of his mother’s 60th birthday, the Summer Palace became a favored place for the Empress Dowager Cixi, who retired there in 1889. Centered around an idyllic lake, Summer Palace is comprised of temples, pagodas, walking pavilions, bridges and residences.  

Tips:

  1. Visit on weekdays for the smallest crowds and start early. Summer Palace is almost always full of visitors–locals and tourists alike.
  2. Arrive by boat from the Millennium Monument in Xizhimen or near the Beijing Zoo.
  3. The Long Corridor walking pavilion is a favorite for kids to run along for almost half a mile!  Note that every beam has a unique, colorful painting.

Metro: Beigonmen and Xiyuan

Hours: 6:30 am – 8:00 pm

Entrance Fee:  Full Ticket RMB 50 (Winter), RMB 60 (Summer)

Website: http://www.summerpalace-china.com/

Tiananmen Square

This public square, the largest in the world (about the size of 90 football fields), truly embodies modern Beijing.  Tiananmen square is surrounded by the Forbidden City in the North, Monument to the People’s Heroes and Chairman Mao’s Mausoleum in the south, museums of Chinese History and Chinese Revolution to the east, and the Great Hall of the People in the west.  The square is a place for parades and gatherings, with standing room for up to 300,000 people.

Tips:

  1. Watch the flag-raising ceremony at sunrise or sunset.  Soldiers come goose-stepping straight out of the Forbidden City.
  2. Fly a kite, literally!  The plaza is so large you can purchase a kite and fly it too. Ask a local child to help you out, and practice your Mandarin at the same time!
  3. Enjoy an aerial view of Tiananmen Square.
  4. Use the pedestrian underpasses to get from Tiananmen Square to the Forbidden City via Chang’an Jie.

Metro: Tiananmen East

Admission Fees: Free

Tiananmen (Gate of Heavenly Peace): RMB 15

The Great Hall of the People: RMB 15

Chairman Mao’s Mausoleum: Free

The National Museum of China: RMB 15

Opening Hours: 24 hours year-round

aha!Chinese gives huge thanks to Jacqueline Renee Cohen (@lantaumama) who lived in Beijing with her husband and two kids for several years, for sharing her wealth of knowledge!

Parents, you can prepare yourself and your kids for the vacation, armed with some everyday Chinese words and phrases.

Do you have a favorite spot to visit in Beijing? Share a travel tip in the comments section.

Posted in Parents, Resources, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

5 Fun China Facts for Kids

Whether you’re planning a trip to China with your family, or teaching a classroom full of kids, here are some interesting facts about China’s population, geography, culture, language, and religion. See if your kids can come up with more fun facts about China, and let us know!

Population:

  • China has the largest population in the world with over 1.3 billion people! That’s one-fifth, or 20%, of the world’s population. Beijing is the capital, but Shanghai contains 4 million more people (at 16.5 million). 92% of the country’s population is Ethnic Chinese, also called Han Chinese, dating back to the Han dynasty 2,200 years ago.

The Great Wall of China in 1907

Geography:

  • China is the fourth largest country in the world—just after Russia, Canada and the United States. In fact, if you superimpose a map of China over the United States, the two countries almost match up in size and shape. Try it! China borders 14 countries and 4 seas in Asia.

Language:

  • Mandarin Chinese is the official language of China, but there are 206 other dialects, including: Cantonese, Shanghainese, and Mongolian. The average person in China learns only about 5,000 of 20,000 characters in the Chinese language. How many Chinese characters do you know?

History:

  • China is one of the world’s oldest and most advanced civilizations, going back over 5,000 years. That’s when acupuncture was developed to treat illnesses—still in use today! Dynasties span from the first Qin dynasty in 221 BC to the child Emperor Pu-Yi in 1912, when the country became a republic. China also developed a calendar, a calligraphy writing system, silk, paper, movable-type printing, the wheel, the magnetic compass, porcelain and gunpowder. Did you know they invented so many things?

Religion:

  • There is no official religion of China. While about 30% of the population is Buddhist and/or Taoist, Chinese folk beliefs and Confucianism combine with these traditions and many don’t practice their religion regularly. Did you know the Leshan Buddha (featured below) is the largest carved stone Buddha in the world? Standing 233 feet tall, it was the tallest statue when construction was finished in the year 803. Now the Spring Temple Buddha, also in China, is the tallest at 420 feet!

Let us know your fun facts in the comments section.  If you want to teach your kids Chinese,  check out these 10 Chinese Characters or our Chinese For Children learning kit. Enjoy!

 

Posted in Language, Parents, Resources | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Fun for Children Learning Chinese: The Pictographs Behind 10 Chinese Characters

Ancient Chinese PictographsA simple way to make reading and writing Chinese characters easier for kids learning Chinese is to teach them about the pictures behind them. A fun game to play with children is to see if they can guess which Chinese character matches up with its English translation. Often kids can visualize the connection. Ask children to draw a stick figure person or three mountain peaks. Then they’ll see the evolution to the simplified characters and be more likely to memorize their meaning.

Here are 10 Chinese characters to start with:

Chinese Pictograph of "Person" Arrow Right 人 = Person

  • (pronunciation: rén [Click to listen]) As you can see, the original character for person had hands and feet. Now it’s simplified. The top is a head, and the person is standing with legs apart.

Chinese Pictograph of "Rock" Arrow Right 石 = Rock

  • (pronunciation: shí [Click to listen]) In an early form of this character, there were 3 small rocks falling off a cliff. Now they have been reduced to one large rock at the bottom of a cliff.

Chinese Pictograph for "Soil" Arrow Right 土 = Soil

  • (pronunciation: tǔ [Click to listen]) Can you see the plant growing out of the earth? It no longer has a bulb, but still looks like a plant.

Chinese Pictograph for "Tree" Arrow Right 木 = Tree

  • (pronunciation: mù [Click to listen]) Here a tree stands tall in the forest with branches on each side and a root in the ground. Incidentally, two of these characters side by side (林) means forest.

Chinese Pictograph of "Mountain" Arrow Right 山 = Mountain

Chinese Pictograph for "Rain" Arrow Right 雨 = Rain

  • (pronunciation: yǔ [Click to listen]) The top portion represents clouds, while in the middle raindrops fall from the clouds.

Chinese Pictograph for "Sun" Arrow Right 日 = Sun

  • (pronunciation: rì [Click to listen]) This character, originally a circle with a dot in the middle, later evolved into a rectangle.

Chinese Pictograph of "Moon" Arrow Right 月 = Moon

  • (pronunciation: yuè [Click to listen]) Notice how this character was originally tilted far to the right so that it looked like a crescent moon. It has since taken a straighter stance. Do you notice the resemblance?

Chinese Pictograph for "Water" Arrow Right 水 = Water

  • (pronunciation: shuǐ [Click to listen]) The middle line depicts water flowing downward. The lines on the sides represent eddies that branch off the main current.

Chinese Pictograph of "Fire" Arrow Right 火 = Fire

Hope you enjoyed these pictographs. What other ones would you like to see?  Let us know!

 

Posted in Education, Language, Parents | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

aha!Chinese exhibits products at the 2011 National Chinese Language Conference (NCLC)

Chinese teacher visiting our exhibit at National Chinese Language Conference (NCLC 2011)

aha!Chinese was one of 30 exhibitors at the 2011 National Chinese Language Conference (NCLC) put on by the Asia Society, College Board and Mandarin Institute on April 14–16 in San Francisco! “Dedicated to encouraging dialogue in the field of Chinese language education and ensuring its wide-scale success,” the conference offered over 60 workshop sessions on topics ranging from teacher resources and techniques to integrating Chinese language and culture in the classroom.

There were also pre-conference school visits for attendees to observe successful Chinese language programs in the San Francisco Bay Area, including: Presidio Knolls SchoolCupertino Union School District, Jose Ortega Elementary, Starr King Elementary, and Chinese American International School (see prior post here.)

According to the website, the 2011 conference had close to 1,000 attendees, including school board members, superintendents, principals, K–12 teachers, higher education faculty and administrators. Nearly a quarter of conference participants do not have a Chinese language program and attend the conference to learn how to establish one based on best-practice models. Others went to learn about new developments such as the use of technology in the classroom.

Let's Go Guang! educational products, including book, CD, DVD and flashcards.

Posted in Education, Events, Let's Go Guang!, Resources | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Bilingual Brain: Dispelling the Myths

In a recent NPR Morning Edition article and podcast titled “Being Bilingual May Boost Your Brainpower,” Gretchen Cuda-Kroen reported that “approximately one-fifth of Americans speak a non-English language at home, and globally, as many as two-thirds of children are brought up bilingual.”

The story profiles a Hungarian couple raising their children as bilingual. Speaking only the home language before their children learned English at school, the couple received mixed responses  from others.

But the emphasis of the report is how “some psychologists say being bilingual may actually be good for children’s cognitive development”–pointing to the wave of myths and misunderstandings about the effects of learning more than one language, such as that it will hold you back.

According to the article:

The idea that children exposed to two languages from birth become confused or that they fall behind monolingual children is a common misconception, says Janet Werker, a psychologist at the University of British Columbia who studies language acquisition in bilingual babies.

“Growing up bilingual is just as natural as growing up monolingual,” said Werker, whose own research indicates babies of bilingual mothers can distinguish between languages even hours after birth.

“There is absolutely no evidence that bilingual acquisition leads to confusion, and there is no evidence that bilingual acquisition leads to delay,” she said.

To read the full article or listen to the podcast, click here.

Posted in Education, Parents | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Chinese American International School Makes Headlines

Let's Go Guang! flashcards

San Francisco’s Chinese American International School was recently profiled in a Wall Street Journal article entitled “Growing Diversity Fuels Chinese School: Non-Asian Parents Seek Mandarin Skills for Their Children.” The private school, which teaches in both Mandarin and English from pre-kindergarten through eighth grade, has increased its overall student population by 35% since 2000. But, according to the article, it has also experienced a major demographic shift:

A recent survey by the school found that CAIS’s non-Asian population has grown 42% over the past decade and currently makes up 27% of its 472 students. The remainder are children with partial or full Asian backgrounds, though most come from non-Chinese-speaking families.

The increasing number of non-Asian families “has prompted CAIS to adopt the more collaborative American educational approach along with the traditional top-down Chinese style,” according to Jeff Bissell, the head of the school. In addition, Mandarin 101 classes are offered to parents: “The goal was not to teach Chinese but to familiarize parents with how the language works so they could understand what their children were learning.”

Instruction at the school is half in Chinese and half in English until middle school, when the Mandarin increases. Chinese culture is also taught through songs, musical instruments and calligraphy.

With a tuition of $22,000 per year, the school is still competitive to get into: “More than 100 families vied for the 25 to 30 pre-K spots available next year.”

In fact, “the San Francisco Unified Public School District said Chinese, including the Mandarin and Cantonese dialects, was the most requested language program by parents of kindergartners after Spanish for the next academic year.”

To read the full Wall Street Journal article, click here.

For a head start on your child’s Mandarin language education, consider purchasing our Let’s Go Guang! Chinese For Children Learning Kit.

Posted in Education, Let's Go Guang!, Parents | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment