Chinese Language

7+ Podcasts for a Screen-Free/Screen-Limited Summer


It’s summertime. It’s the digital age. It’s tempting for our kids to fill those long, sunny days of freedom binge-watching the Disney Channel or YouTube, or gaming till bedtime. When we were their ages, our parents may have urged us to turn off the television and video games and play outside instead. Nowadays, digital devices let kids take the TV and video games outside with them, far from their caregiver’s keen eyes and ears.

Podcasts are a great way to find balance between letting your kids engage technology and limiting their screen time (or eliminating screen time altogether). These audio recordings can be great during bedtime, while finishing up chores, and on long road trips, too. There’s great content being produced for kids of all ages, from storytelling for the littles to fun facts and even light social commentary for tweens and teens. As you might expect, there are even Mandarin podcasts aimed at children and language learners.

Here are a few of our favorites, in order of age-appropriateness:

  1. Story Time. 10-15 minute stories that are great for pre-school and small children. you can play them right inside the website or download the audio files to your computer or device to play another time. You can also access Peace Out, a series of bedtime relaxation recordings for the little ones, on the same website.
  2. Wow in the World. This is NPR’s kid-oriented podcast. Its exuberant hosts Guy and Mindy explore cool science and tech topics like “Exploding Ants!” and “The Science of Poppin’ Knuckles.” Fun theme music and sound effects helps to keep curious school-age minds tuned in – helpful since the episodes average about 30 minutes. The weekly show is just over a year old and offers a premium membership service in addition to the free podcasts.
  3. Stories.  This podcast has been sharing kid-friendly adaptations of classic fairy tales, folktales from cultures around the world, Bible stories, and even original works since 2016. There’s a brief ad before each story, but they also have a Patreon account that lets you download ad-free content and even get your children’s name mentioned during a future podcast.
  4. Six Minutes. Aimed at tweens, this podcast is a modern-day take on the lost art of serial radio dramas. Twice a week, listeners can follow the six-minute long adventures of a girl named Holiday, who is found “floating in the icy waters off the coast of Alaska with no memory.” So far, there are 41 sci-fi-ish episodes. Binge-listen, anyone? (If you’re into sci-fi for kids and tweens, also check out The Alien Adventures of Finn Caspian.)

  5. Stuff You Missed in History Class. Developed by the creators of HowStuffWorks.com, this engaging podcast digs into the annals of history from around the world, satisfying curious minds on a number of topics. The website conveniently arranges past podcasts into categories, including African, Black, and Chinese history. The episodes are fairly long and don’t come with many bells and whistles, so older tweens and teens will probably get the most out of them.  (411 Teen also covers serious, more contemporary topics, but as the name suggests, it’s crafted with teens in mind.)
  6. This American Life. NPR’s popular weekly show has become one of the nation’s top podcasts. It’s a great choice to listen to as a family as your kids mature. Some of the topics might go over their heads a bit, and the language can get a little dicey at times, but it also creates a perfect opportunity to engage in meaningful discussions.
  7. Kids Chinese Podcast. This podcast features over 140 Mandarin language lessons broken down by grade level from kindergarten to fifth grade. Pinyin and character script can be found throughout the site. Although “kids” is in the title, the home page states that the lessons can be helpful for kids, teens, and adults. So listen as a family and one day soon, you may be able to talk to (and hear) your language learners in Chinese too!

Check out more lists of amazing, kid-friendly podcast at Common Sense Media. Don’t see your family’s favorite podcast listed? Share it with us in the comment section.

Languages by Difficulty for English Speakers

The Foreign Service Institute (FSI) of the US Department of State has compiled approximate learning expectations for a number of languages based on the length of time it takes to achieve Speaking 3: General Professional Proficiency in Speaking (S3) and Reading 3: General Professional Proficiency in Reading (R3). The list is limited to languages taught at the Foreign Service Institute. Below we have a table of these languages and their difficulty for English speakers. For more information on the FSI scale, known as the ILR Scale, go to the Interagency Language Roundtable site, for an overview of the history of the ILR Language Proficiency Skill level descriptions and scale information.

* Languages preceded by asterisks are typically somewhat more difficult for native English speakers to learn than other languages in the same category.
Category I: Languages closely related to English
23-24 weeks (575-600 class hours)
Afrikaans
Catalan
Danish
Dutch
French
Italian
Norwegian
Portuguese
Romanian
Spanish
Swedish
Category I: Languages closely related to English
30-36 weeks (750-900 class hours)
German (30 weeks / 750 class hours)
Indonesian (36 weeks / 900 class hours)
Javanese (36 weeks / 900 class hours)
Malay (36 weeks / 900 class hours)
Swahili (36 weeks / 900 class hours)
Category II: Languages with significant linguistic and/or cultural differences from English
44 weeks (1100 class hours)
Albanian
Amharic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Bulgarian
Burmese
Cebuano
Croatian
Czech
*Dzongkha
*Estonian
*Finnish
*Georgian
Greek
Gujarati
Hebrew
Hindi
*Hungarian
Icelandic
Ilocano
Irish
Kannada
Kazakh
Kurdish
Kyrgyz
Khmer
Lao
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Marathi
Nepali
Pashto
Persian (Dari, Farsi, Tajik)
Polish
Punjabi
Russian
Serbian
Sinhalese
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Tagalog
Tamil
Telugu
Tetum
*Thai
Turkish
Turkmen
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uzbek
*Vietnamese
Xhosa
Zulu
Category III: Languages which are quite difficult for native English speakers
88 weeks (2200 class hours; about half that time preferably spent studying in-country)
Arabic
Cantonese (Chinese)
Mandarin (Chinese)
Taiwanese (Chinese)
Korean
Japanese
Mongolian
Wu

One step back, two steps forward — How family affinity groups start conversations about race in schools

black-childrenI am a mixed-race black parent and educator whose children attend a majority Chinese-American public school in San Francisco. Recently I began hosting a Black Family Breakfast at my girls’ school for black and mixed-race families as part of a collaborative effort with the principal to “explore race and culture.”

For the past several years I have been an active school volunteer and I also serve on multiple parent leadership groups. Last year, an incident occurred where a Chinese-American student called a black student a racial slur. The situation was resolved quickly. Nonetheless, in talking about the need to address race and culture more proactively in our school, teachers suggested parents become involved in the process, as they often undermine educator efforts in shifting school culture.

So, inspired by these conversations and those with other black families, I decided to initiate an informal get-together to share support and resources to ensure our school is an even more welcoming place.

Surprise, Surprise… Folks “Get Concerned” When black people Get Together

To my surprise, my “great idea” of bringing black families together was not met with open arms by all staff. A few days after sending out invitations for our second meeting I learned some teachers were “voicing concerns” about our group. (?!) This happened even at a school with an enlightened and supportive principal! At this moment I realized there was still a LOT of work to be done.

What was all the hubbub about? The largest concern voiced by staff was that our group (also known as an “affinity group”) would be too “exclusive” and could potentially be seen as unfair by parents of other racial and cultural groups at the school.

As a black woman who is constantly having to navigate white (and Asian) spaces, I understand the importance of being able to “tell it like it is” in a room full of folks who “get it.” I also understand how important it is to be able to speak about my experience without having to worry about defensive reactions or #whitetears.

Moving Forward, Despite Discomfort

With support from the principal (which was KEY), I moved forward anyway. He decided to use the incident as a “teachable moment” and reminded staff that exploring race meant accepting the discomfort that invariably comes up. I offered to answer any questions staff had about the purpose of the group, and we both agreed that if staff felt other affinity groups should be formed, we would encourage and support them in doing so.

In an effort to support the principal, I also shared with him an article illustrating how affinity groups can support those who are often marginalized in schools. Even though the article was focused on students, I saw many benefits that translated to families as well (emphasis on mine), including:

“[Affinity groups] allow students who share an identity — usually a marginalized identity — to gather, talk in a safe space about issues related to that identity, and transfer that discussion into action that makes for a more equitable experience at school.”

Even though I experienced some initial pushback, I’m glad we moved forward anyway. After just a few days, it has been reaffirming to see the positive outcomes of moving forward DESPITE resistance.

First, it has become very clear that YES… our teachers actually NEED to talk about race. Even if it’s just exploring how they feel about talking about it. (A good first step, right?) I am also learning that this work is ESPECIALLY important in schools with language programs such as ours which has a bilingual Chinese pathway.

As a former high school and middle school teacher in both Oakland and San Francisco, I have roughly 20 years experience working in high-poverty, urban schools. In all my years as a teacher I have never had an option to NOT talk about race.

In contrast, at my daughters’ school, where half of the classrooms are bilingual Chinese, there are many experienced teachers who might never have never been confronted with issues of anti-black racism in their classrooms. They might never have taught black students or worked with black families, and thus have little exposure to black culture in general.

Additionally, there are no black folks on staff (as you may have guessed) and most of the teachers are Asian or white.

So, I’m realizing even though my daughters attend an urban, high-poverty school, I have to readjust my assumptions about teachers’ expected comfort level or knowledge about addressing race/culture with students and families. This might be even more true for Asian-Americans teaching in mostly Asian-American schools, because as people of color themselves, they might get “checked” less often on their own implicit biases and privileges by folks of other disenfranchised groups. (e.g. “I can’t be racist… I’m Asian!)

I am also learning how parents can start conversations among staff by indirectly taking action on their own behalf. In starting black family breakfasts, we didn’t ask anything of teachers. (It’s 100 percent parent initiated and supported!) Nonetheless, the conversation about whether we should or shouldn’t have a black family affinity group (or other affinity groups for that matter) has inspired more conversation about race and the need to create cultural visibility for underrepresented groups at our school.

I am now seeing people coming out of the woodwork to form an informal support network of change-makers committed to elevating  important conversations about equity and culture at our school. This has, in turn, led to a clearer purpose and resolve to push for change around how we celebrate our cultural differences and communicate with students, staff and families about race.

  • A teacher sought me out one morning to tell me how she’s been “fuming” about some of the ignorance and resistance of her teacher peers. The experience of listening to other staff voicing questions and concerns, is spurring her to speak up more to give a voice to our most underrepresented kids (including LGBT, Spanish-speaking, low-income, etc.).
  • Our literacy specialist and the school social worker have (on their own initiative) decided to take on the idea of creating a K-5 book talk curriculum for all teachers in the school addressing race and culture in the classroom. (WOHOOO!)
  • Our principal has committed to working with school staff to increase the number of books with main characters and authors of color in our school and classroom libraries. #WeNeedDiverseBooks!

YAY!

Families Have Power to Drive Conversation in their School Communities

All of this has not directly been driven by families. Nonetheless, this dialogue would never be happening if black, Latino, Asian and white families hadn’t started the conversation last year.

As an active member of our school community, I believe there has always been agreement that we “should” talk about race. Nonetheless, over the past five years of my involvement, it has never been on the front burner. The fact that all this new activity is happening is a direct result of families starting the conversation. It’s one thing to have a principal make demands of staff (among all the other demands made of teachers each day.) It is quite another for parents and grandparents to make direct requests from teachers on behalf of their kids.

I am tired of feeling like the “angry black parent” every time I bring up the need to address race in our schools. Talking with other black families, and (Latinx, Asian, and white allies) I see I’m not alone. Together, we are making “requests” (aka: nice demands) of staff at our school to meet the needs of our children and families, such as:

  • ALL children deserve to see positive images of black culture in their curriculum and books. All children should see themselves and their peers represented.
  • In order for ALL our children to feel safe and valued at our school, teachers to TALK about race.
  • Underrepresented groups at our school need and deserve enhanced outreach and support.

Now that black parents and grandparents have an affinity group at our school, we no longer feel isolated and alone. The culture of silence is starting to shift. After five years of asking (and waiting for others to take initiative), we finally decided to start the conversation ourselves. Now our school community is moving out of the comfort zone — things are starting to change.

Reposted from Blavity.com

————

Ali Collins is an educator, parent organizer, and public school advocate living in the Bay Area. She writes about race, parenting and education on her blog SF Public School Mom. To read her musing on being a public school parent and educator, and to download resources to spur change at your child’s school, go to SFPSMom.com or connect with her via Twitter: https://twitter.com/AliMCollins, LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/pub/alison-m-collins/14/799/6b0 or Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sfpsmom

 

Free Trial of eGlobalreader

ereaderDear Parents,

eGlobalReader would like to invite you to participate in the trial of a new bilingual reading application that is designed to help young students read more books in multiple languages – all by themselves.
We are excited to release the preview version of eGlobalReader.  Take a look at our first set of eight bilingual books in Mandarin/English!  Please note that there are a couple of corrections that we are working on, but we are eager to get your feedback.  The application is free to download to your iPad or you can access it from the web browser on your tablet or computer.

Here’s how to get started:

  1. Set up your free account online at http://www.eglobalreader.com/?CID=TryIt
  2. Download the app to your iPad.  Go to iTunes and search for “eGlobalReader”.  The app is free. Or use eGlobalReader from your computer or tablet through the web.
  3. For a brief overview of the product, please see our 40 sec video on how your child can start reading independently today at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCxBrej6M0k.
Everyone who contacts us through this special link will be able to sample our first library free of charge until the end of the year.  Because this product is in early development, eGlobal Reader will be asking you to complete a survey to provide valuable feedback so that we can make this the best bi-lingual learning product possible for our children.   Please feel free to forward the information to others who might be interested in trying out this new offering.
Please contact us at info@eGlobalReader.com with any feedback or questions.

Happy reading!

The team at eGlobalReader

Are Two Languages Better than One?

Bilingual vs. Monolingual

Monolingual-VS-Bilingual
Find more great infographics on NerdGraph Infographics

12 Common Myths and Misconceptions about Bilingual Children

The information for this infographic comes from Barbara Zurer Pearson’s book Raising a Bilingual Child.

12 Myth Misconceptions by theberkeleymom

1 2