Category Archives: Languages

Global Education Summit aimed at spurring coordinated actions

A day-long Global Education Summit, being held February 24 at Monona Terrace in Madison, aims to bring together advocates from Wisconsin’s business and education communities, as well as other stakeholders, to seek concrete ways to collectively advance international education across the state.

State Superintendent Tony Evers and Gilles Bousquet, UW-Madison’s dean of International Studies and vice provost for globalization, are hosting the event. Bousquet, who chairs the State Superintendent’s International Education Council, and Evers will give opening remarks to frame the day’s discussion.

“Many of us who have participated in discussions with the business and education communities have come to realize that the various stakeholders agree on the importance of global education—including many of the same desired outcomes—but, for the most part, have not come together to help create environments for advancing these goals,” says Bousquet.

Previous efforts to strengthen international education in Wisconsin have produced recommendations, most notably from the Wisconsin International Trade Council (1998) and the State Superintendent’s Statewide International Education Council (2005). The Global Education Summit aims to serve as a catalyst for putting at least some of these earlier recommendations into action.

Workshop to help teachers make a stronger case for French language

They teach what Bloomberg Rankings has identified as the third-most-important business language in the world, after English and Mandarin. Yet, as budgets for public education continue to tighten, teachers of French are struggling to keep their programs off the chopping block in Wisconsin and across the United States.

An upcoming workshop at the University of Wisconsin–Madison aims to bring teachers of French in Wisconsin together to talk about these challenges and prepare them to be more effective advocates for French instruction.

While pointing out that Spanish remains the most popular world language taught in U.S. schools, the Bloomberg Rankings rates French a couple of notches higher in importance for business, according to a report published August 30, 2011. The measures used to calculate the business importance of a language included number of speakers, number of countries using it officially, “financial power” and education and literacy rates.

“French continues to be an important language in international business and communication, diplomacy, scientific discovery and achievement,” says Gilles Bousquet, dean of the UW–Madison Division of International Studies, vice provost for globalization, and Pickard-Bascom Professor of French.

Study Abroad Fair Recap

Hundreds of students attended the 2011 Study Abroad Fair last Wednesday, September 21 at its new location in Union South and learned not only why the University of Wisconsin-Madison is a national leader in study abroad, but why so many Badgers are making the experience a part of their UW career!

If you missed the event but are still interested in learning more about study abroad opportunities, you can stop the IAP Resource Center in the Red Gym Room 106, or visit International Academic Programs (IAP) Website.

UW Students Win at 2011 Chinese Speech Contest of Summer Programs

2011 Chinese Speech Contest of Summer Programs

Six members of the UW-Tianjin Summer Program, through UW–Madison’s International Academic Programs (IAP), have received awards for their participation in the “2011 Chinese Speech Contest of Summer Programs” at Peking Normal University on July 31, 2011. UW-Madison students Jae Sang Lee, John Prusynski, and Mark Troianovski all received first place for their speeches in their respective categories, and as an added honor, will have their scripts printed in the prestigious Commercial Press magazine, World of Chinese.

Richard Young and Hyun Jae Nam both won second place in their categories, while Alicia Montague-Keels received third place. With six winners across the board, UW-Madison produced more finalists than any other competing program, including those from Ivy League schools and other public universities.

“The competition was fierce, especially for first place in all six categories,” says Hongming Zhang, director of UW-Tianjin.   “It is surprisingly exciting that we could get all the first places! All of our contestants got their certificates. The place winners also got medals and awards.”

There were 125 contestants from 12 programs competing for the first, second, and third place awards in six different categories: i.e. non-heritage beginner, non-heritage intermediate (this level was divided into two groups: group A and group B, due to a large number of contestants), non-heritage advanced 1 (equivalent to the 3rd year Chinese), non-heritage advanced 2, heritage intermediate, and heritage advanced.

Participants hailed from all the major North American summer programs in Beijing and Tianjin, including Harvard University, Princeton University, Columbia University, Dartmouth College, University of Chicago, Northwestern University, University of Mississippi, The Inter-University Program (IUP), Council for Educational Travel (CET), Alliance Critical Languages Scholarship Program (Alliance-CLS), Tenri University from Japan, and UW-Madison.

Zhang continues, “The success of this event reflects the high teaching standard and overall strength of our program. This result could not have been achieved without the joint efforts of our students, teachers, and program assistants. Our local instructors and teaching assistants devoted huge amounts of time and resources to work with our students. We also selected outstanding tutors among graduate students of Nankai University and Tianjin Normal University to strengthen the after-class training portion of the program.  This would have also been impossible without the hard work of our supportive colleagues in the IAP office.”

Bousquet to Lead UW-Madison Delegation to China

MADISON– To follow up on Chancellor Biddy Martin’s two visits to China in 2010, a delegation from the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s Division of International Studies is traveling there this month to continue the university’s efforts to expand and deepen connections in this important region of the world.

“The economic, social and cultural changes in China … make it imperative that all of us learn more about China, spend time there and engage with the Chinese people,” Martin wrote last year, after her first visit. “It’s an exciting place to be and an important place to understand.”

The latest delegation is led by Gilles Bousquet, dean of International Studies and vice provost for globalization, who accompanied Martin to China last year. The group will visit Shanghai (May 19-24), Hangzhou (May 24-26), Hong Kong (May 26-29), and Beijing (May 29-June 2).

“We are making this trip as part of our long-term investment in relationships with China,” says Bousquet. “Such relationships require frequent and sustained engagement in order for a university to establish meaningful ties.”

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