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This book presents key issues in the teaching of Chinese as a second or foreign language (TCSL or TCFL). It investigates how multimedia can help to assist TCSL/TCFL and explores practical effects of multimedia-assisted teaching at secondary schools in the Philippines. It addresses the psychology of TCSL/TCFL and discusses various recurring foreign graduate students concerns when learning academic Chinese in graduate institutes in Taiwan. It examines issues of educational assessment and testing, analyzing the validity of a self-made placement test for an immigrant Chinese program, as well as the psychological characteristics of adult learners and their implications for immigrant Chinese curriculum design. As foreign learners of Chinese grow exponentially, this cutting edge read conceptualizes the educational philosophy of TCSL/TCFL as a distinctive discipline.
List of contents
Introduction.- Effect of multimedia visual aids used for teaching Chinese on Philippine secondary school students' learning outcomes and attitudes.- The anxiety factors of studying academic Chinese in graduate programs: Experiences of non-native Chinese-speaking postgraduates in Taiwan.- An item analysis of a self-made placement test for an immigrant Chinese program.- Psychological characteristics of adult learners with implications for immigrant Chinese curriculum design.- Conclusions.
About the author
Qiao Yu Cai is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Language and Literacy Education, National Taichung University of Education, Taiwan. His research interests are focused on teacher education, multimedia and TCSOL, educational testing and assessment in TCSOL, the psychology of learning Chinese as a second language, as well as multicultural education for immigrants.
Summary
This book presents key issues in the teaching of Chinese as a second or foreign language (TCSL or TCFL). It investigates how multimedia can help to assist TCSL/TCFL and explores practical effects of multimedia-assisted teaching at secondary schools in the Philippines. It addresses the psychology of TCSL/TCFL and discusses various recurring foreign graduate students concerns when learning academic Chinese in graduate institutes in Taiwan. It examines issues of educational assessment and testing, analyzing the validity of a self-made placement test for an immigrant Chinese program, as well as the psychological characteristics of adult learners and their implications for immigrant Chinese curriculum design. As foreign learners of Chinese grow exponentially, this cutting edge read conceptualizes the educational philosophy of TCSL/TCFL as a distinctive discipline.