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- <text id=92TT0822>
- <title>
- Apr. 20, 1992: (Is That Correct?)
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 20, 1992 Why Voters Don't Trust Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 81
- (Is That Correct?)
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a handful of American schools, first-graders are discovering
- math and science--in Japanese
- </p>
- <p>By David Aikman/Washington--With reporting by Miko Yim/Portland
- </p>
- <p> "Yon-bun no san" (three-fourths), says the eager
- second-grader as he holds up a card with the fraction spelled
- out in Japanese hiragana script and numerals. Then a classmate
- selects a segmented triangle that illustrates the fraction.
- "Atte imasuka?" (Is that correct?) asks the teacher from Tokyo.
- "Hai," says the class in unison as little hands go up to answer
- the next question.
- </p>
- <p> This is a perfectly normal morning math class for 31
- seven- and eight-year-olds in a room filled with typical
- Japanese elementary school wall charts. The only odd thing is,
- it's not in Tokyo. It's in Great Falls, Va., just outside
- Washington, and all of the children are American.
- </p>
- <p> The second-graders are part of a program adopted three
- years ago by Virginia's Fairfax County to introduce elementary
- school children to foreign languages in a new way. With a small
- amount of federal funding, the county in stituted
- "partial-immersion" language programs in eight schools in
- Japanese, Spanish and French. Similar experiments in partial
- immersion can be spotted around the country in such cities as
- Eugene and Portland, Ore., and Anchorage. The idea is that
- children's minds are stretched and their skills enhanced when
- they are introduced to any foreign language. By being taught
- math and science in Japanese, the students unconsciously acquire
- the language. "Learning another language opens new pathways of
- connections in the brain, basically connecting new things with
- things you know," explains Clifford Walker, director of the
- Anchorage program.
- </p>
- <p> Such findings should be of special interest to school
- districts that are struggling to allocate precious resources.
- Only 17% of U.S. elementary schools offer foreign-language
- programs, and nearly all of them teach their students the
- old-fashioned way. Yet results from partial-immersion programs
- suggest that students gain more than language skills and a taste
- for a foreign culture. The mental muscles they build from
- concentrating hard in their Japanese-taught classes make them
- stronger in other subjects as well. Some of the most
- enthusiastic proponents are the English-language teachers
- exposed to the Japanese-taught students. Says Great Falls
- third-grade teacher Roberta Sherman: "It's a class from heaven.
- They go beyond what I expect."
- </p>
- <p> The hard evidence is in the test scores: Japanese-taught
- children at Great Falls scored at the same level in math and
- science tests as other children from similar backgrounds. But
- in English-taught subjects, the immersion children scored 8
- percentile points higher on a standard achievement test. The
- advantages show up in subtler ways as well. "The kids are more
- flexible in their analysis and their critical thinking," says
- Great Falls principal Gina Ross, an ardent advocate of the
- program. "They are more open-minded."
- </p>
- <p> The teachers are quick to note other factors that could
- account for the students' successes. Second-language students
- may be especially motivated, more willing to take chances and
- accept challenges. In most partial-immersion schools, half the
- day is taught in English and half in Japanese. This means that
- students study math and science in Japanese and other subjects
- in English. The high verbal concentration required for Japanese
- clearly has a beneficial spillover effect in the English
- subjects.
- </p>
- <p> Still, it takes a brave student to dive into the deep
- water of a complicated subject. "For the first couple of weeks,
- I couldn't understand anything," recalls Great Falls
- second-grader Courtney Pilka. "But after I got used to it, I
- started liking it a lot. I learned the alphabet and the numbers.
- Now it's part of my life." For many students, this is true
- outside the classroom as well, as they are inspired to explore
- Japanese restaurants, art and music. "I think the cultural
- experience is every bit as important as the language," says Jill
- McKee, a college teacher whose son Robert is in second grade.
- "He's exposed to another way of doing things." Tokyo-born Sumiko
- Limbocker, the second-grade techer, adds with a laugh, "When the
- children meet me in the supermarket, they bow and say,
- `Konnichi-wa' (Hello)."
- </p>
- <p> The benefits of bilingual study may also apply to students
- who learn English as a second language. According to Alma Flor
- Ada, a multicultural language expert at the University of San
- Francisco, many students, particularly Asians, who study English
- in immersion programs back home or upon arrival in the U.S. have
- the same learning patterns and achievement characteristics. That
- might account for the steady stream of visitors to Great Falls
- elementary, especially from Japan. Now that country has paid the
- young students of its own language the ultimate compliment:
- Japan wants to establish similar partial-immersion programs in
- elementary schools--using English.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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