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High Schools to Offer AP Chinese Classes

Working with China's government, the College Board expects to launch the program by 2006.

Los Angeles

December 06, 2003|Jean Merl, Times Staff Writer

As a teacher of Chinese language courses at Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra, Peter Ye said he constantly gets this question from parents and students:

When will there be an Advanced Placement course and exam for high school students interested in earning college credit -- and a likely boost to their admission prospects -- in Chinese?


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On Friday, he had an answer. The College Board, which administers the Advanced Placement program, and the People's Republic of China announced their intention to create an AP course and examination in Chinese language and culture over the next two years.

"My students are going to be very excited," Ye said. "They have been for this for a long time, and their parents too."

The Chinese government will help pay for development of the course, although details of the arrangement are yet to be worked out. College Board officials expect to start offering the course in the fall of 2006, with the first exam in the spring of 2007. The course and the exam, still to be developed, will assess reading, writing and the speaking of Mandarin, the official dialect of the People's Republic of China.

At a Washington, D.C., news conference with two representatives of the Chinese government, College Board President Gaston Caperton said the addition would help the American education system prepare its increasingly culturally diverse students to live and work in a global economy.

"It is our hope that this partnership will become an educational bridge to China, a country whose political, cultural and economic impact on the Asia-Pacific region -- and the world -- is paramount," Caperton said.

College Board officials noted that a majority of students in China study English, while fewer than 50,000 American high school students take Chinese.

Several Los Angeles-area high schools offer Chinese language courses, most notably in the San Gabriel Valley, which has a large Chinese American population. Keppel High, for example, has 11 classes taught by two full-time instructors. It would probably add more if it had more teachers, said Scott Mangrum, assistant principal for instruction and curriculum.

Mangrum expects the addition of an AP program to further increase interest in the already-full Chinese classes at the school, where 70% of students are of Asian descent. Many are Chinese Americans.

"A big part of the culture at this school are the AP courses," Mangrum said, adding that Keppel students took nearly 800 AP exams last spring.

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