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kimo
Joined: 16 Feb 2003 Posts: 668
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 2:05 am Post subject: Those of us in China have smarter students. |
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According to the following article, Mandarin speakers must access more of their brain when using the language than do people do when speaking English. There is no mention of the quality of thought associated with that usage though.
MSNBC says
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June 30 — Mandarin speakers use more areas of their brains than people who speak English, scientists said on Monday, in a finding that provides new insight into how the brain processes language. |
The whole article can be found here:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/932997.asp?0dm=N13MH |
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bnix
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 645
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 2:22 am Post subject: Either You Are Joking....Or |
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I hope that your title line"Those of Us in China Have Smarter Students", was merely facetious.Just out of curiosity,I checked out the article you indicated..It says Mandarin speakers use more areas of the brain to process Mandarin than English speakers use to process English.This does not necessarily make Mandarin speakers"smarter". Good Lord! Makes you wonder about some of the people "teaching" in China. |
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kimo
Joined: 16 Feb 2003 Posts: 668
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 6:47 am Post subject: |
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And that so many of the teachers outside of China are so d-a-m-n serious makes one wonder how dreary their classes are. |
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leeroy
Joined: 30 Jan 2003 Posts: 777 Location: London UK
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 12:06 pm Post subject: ... |
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Wow, it didn't take this thread long to descend into nastiness, did it?
"The left temporal lobe of the brain is active when English speakers hear the language but Mandarin speakers use the left and right lobe, which is normally used to process melody in music and speech.
Intonation is important in Mandarin because it gives different meanings to the same word. The word �ma� for example can mean mother, scold, horse or hemp, depending on the tone.
�We think Mandarin speakers interpret intonation and melody in the right temporal lobe to give the correct meaning to the spoken word,� Scott said in a statement."
So us primitive westerners only process the "words", while our superior Chinese counterparts process the "words" and "music" simultaneously, due to their heavier reliance on intonation.
I'm sure my Chinese students will be delighted to hear this, as I suspect it only confirms their suspicions about "smaller western brains" anway!
But seriously though, does this mean that Chinese students are better able to distinguish subtle nuances in music? Are they more sensitive to slight changes in intonation when speaking in English? And if this is true, then why is their pronunciation in general so fucking awful? (compared to, say, my Japanese or Korean students).
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bnix
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 645
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Posted: Tue Jul 01, 2003 11:12 pm Post subject: Oh Really,Kimo? |
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Kimo posted"...and that so many teachers outside of China are so d-a-m-n
serious".
Oh,really?Are you trying to say there are not many seriopus teachers in China?Some of your colleagues may not appreciate that! On the other hand,are you also trying to say most of the teachers outside China are too serious? That is hilarious.Maybe you should try teaching in another country besides China ,if you have not yet done that. |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2003 2:48 am Post subject: |
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Kimo (therapy?)
Now I'm probably not as smart as you since you have been able to spin this to show higher intelligence for our friends in China. If I understand the findings correctly, the Chinese have to use more of their brain to do the same thing English speakers do with only part of their brain. I would argue that since efficiency is defined as the ease with which a task is done, then English speakers communicate more efficiently than Chinese speakers. So, in terms of intelligence, I think the person that can do things with less mental effort must be the smarter one. Do you agree or is this too serious?
Your half-brained amigo in Panama
P.S. Now I understand why I get headaches at chinese restaurants, it's my tiny brain trying to say chowmein or whatever. Oww, there goes the pain again! |
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kimo
Joined: 16 Feb 2003 Posts: 668
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Posted: Wed Jul 02, 2003 6:44 am Post subject: |
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Kimo started this thread off:
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According to the following article, Mandarin speakers must access more of their brain when using the language than do people do when speaking English. There is no mention of the quality of thought associated with that usage though. |
My, my, we're all so touchy at times. I apologise to anyone who took my original comments seriously. I would have thought you would be more insightful than that. And that some of you still didn't get it after my second post makes me.....well, let's just have a little fun some times. That was the whole point.
If you have taught in China or have glanced through some of the topics related to Chinese students here in the Discussion or China Forums you would likely have guessed that the absurd claim of the title had to be a joke, but one that might invoke a little discussion related to students of differing countries and their innate talents or difficulties in learning English. bnix did finally and very vaguely allude to this when he pondered my experience in other lands but he decided he would call on his superiority of intellect and experience to belittle me rather than teach me if he thought I wrong. (I promise not to again deduce anything about his classroom atmosphere.) Also if the title wasn't a dead giveaway, the statement where I say "no mention of the quality of thought..." would have tipped any astute reader that this guy (me) is funning us and doesn't really believe Chinese students are better. Next time, I'll write a very visible disclaimer so no one miscontrues.
Having taught in Japan and Brazil as well as China (Mr. bnix take note) and students from countless countries, I can't say my Chinese students are better or worse. They do face a few different challenges in learning English -- perhaps partly because of what the researchers in the article claim -- they're looking for cues with the other side of the brain that aren't there. |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Sat Jul 05, 2003 12:24 pm Post subject: |
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Kimo (sabe)
You said:
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I can't say my Chinese students are better or worse. They do face a few different challenges in learning English -- perhaps partly because of what the researchers in the article claim -- they're looking for cues with the other side of the brain that aren't there. |
I did not notice that the researchers said this. I saw that the article said that English speakers have problems learning mandarin, but not that mandarin speakers have problems learning english. Why would learning a languge that is purportedly easier than your own language pose a problem? |
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Michael T. Richter
Joined: 17 Jun 2003 Posts: 77 Location: Wuhan, Hubei, PRC
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Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2003 2:15 pm Post subject: |
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PanamaTeacher wrote: |
I saw that the article said that English speakers have problems learning mandarin, but not that mandarin speakers have problems learning english. Why would learning a languge that is purportedly easier than your own language pose a problem? |
Actually they said nothing of the sort. They said that native English speakers only use half of a certain part of the brain when hearing English while native Mandarin speakers use the whole of that part. I don't believe they said anything at all about relative difficulties of learning languages. |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2003 2:39 pm Post subject: |
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Read it for yourself:
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“It seems that the structure of the language you learn as a child affects how the structure of your brain develops to decode speech. Native English speakers, for example, find it extraordinarily difficult to learn Mandarin,” Scott said.
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Michael T. Richter
Joined: 17 Jun 2003 Posts: 77 Location: Wuhan, Hubei, PRC
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Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2003 12:03 pm Post subject: |
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PanamaTeacher wrote: |
Read it for yourself:
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“It seems that the structure of the language you learn as a child affects how the structure of your brain develops to decode speech. Native English speakers, for example, find it extraordinarily difficult to learn Mandarin,” Scott said.
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What you are seeing there are preliminary hypotheses being formed, not actual data being measured. The only hard information there concerns how much of the brain a native speaker uses to hear their own native language. Everything else is speculation (and not particularly good speculation given that the brain is noted for extreme levels of parallel processing).
For example, the statement given is context-free. It says that native English speakers find it extraordinarily difficult to learn Mandarin. This fails to take into account the thousands of students I've had who find learning English extraordinarily difficult. It also doesn't take into account that the techniques for teaching English to non-native speakers have been honed for well over a century while the techniques for educating anybody in China are bad at the best of times.
When they perhaps do a formal study that shows English being learned more quickly by most Mandarin speakers than Mandarin is learned by English speakers, perhaps we can then elevate that quote from speculation into something approaching a fact -- although you would have to take into account the wildly differing approaches to education used in both environments as well -- something that would be difficult to do rigorously.
So, in brief, the only fact to come from that article is that native speakers of English only use half of their temporal lobes to process oral English while native Mandarin speakers use both of their temporal lobes. The rest of it is speculation and opinion unsupported by anything resembling actual research or numbers -- at least as reported. |
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Roger
Joined: 19 Jan 2003 Posts: 9138
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Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2003 12:34 pm Post subject: |
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One aspect that may not have been mentioned in that report, a qualitative difference between how Westerners learn a language and how Chinese do the same.
If you consider how cumbersome the Chinese script is, and how much practice it needs for anyone to be steeped in it, then you can arrive at some guess as to how they acquire English: in one word, quantitative learning. As we all know, and never tire of complaining about, they learn by rote, and learning by rote is mind-numbing besides boring. It has, in fact, been decried many times over by the official media, but in twenty years of teaching English it has not changed significantly. Every student has to memorise X vocables per semester.
COmpare this to how Westerners learn any second or foreign language: as few new words per lesson as needed, but as intellectually challenging as possible. From an early beginning, students have to learn to analyse sentences and work on syntax and grammar. They become competent earlier and can interpret texts without recourse to a teacher. They learn to think in the target language(s) and thus do not need to spend much time force-feeding their memories on new and old words.
If you ask Chinese students what their greatest problems in learning English are, the problem of forgetting what they had learnt occupies a prominent place in their list of complaints!
The extra volume of brain they use in studying a foreign tongue probably is the extra storage for memory bytes. |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2003 2:00 pm Post subject: |
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Michael--
Stop. Let's not get off-track. I never said I agreed with the results. I only said the results were reported by the press:
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I saw that the article said that English speakers have problems learning mandarin |
You said I was wrong:
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Actually they said nothing of the sort. I don't believe they said anything at all about relative difficulties of learning languages. |
I showed you the quote, proving that you were wrong:
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Quote: Native English speakers, for example, find it extraordinarily difficult to learn Mandarin, Scott said. |
The whole article can be found here:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/932997.asp?0dm=N13MH
Now you're trying to cover up your your error in saying that I posted something that was not true by attacking the merits of the news report.
I don't want to debate the merits of the report because I frankly don't give a darn about that research. What I don't like are people that try to weasel their way out of a situation. You were wrong and that is all I see.
Bottom-line check the facts before you accuse me of being wrong. Don't play expert if you can't show the initiative to read something before you try to discuss it in a public forum where the record of the discussion is in front of the whole world. I don't know what you know about language, but you sure don't know much about life. |
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PanamaTeacher
Joined: 26 Jun 2003 Posts: 278 Location: Panama
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Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2003 2:17 pm Post subject: |
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Roger
I have no opinion about the debate contained in the article because
1. never been to china
2. never heard mandarin in my life (to my knowledge)
3. cannot comment on the chinese educational sytem
4. cannot comment on esl teaching in china
5. cannot comment on mandarin-learning by english speakers
6. none of the above topics has much relevance to my teaching
My original purpose in posting was that Kimo said that based on the article one can conclude that Chinese students are smarter. I thought he was wrong and said so. Kimo later said he was joking, so that killed the discussion.
I did enjoy reading your post as I enjoy reading everything you write because it is generally well-reasoned. Thanks for your time.
Tu amigo en Panama |
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Kapt. Krunch
Joined: 01 Apr 2003 Posts: 163
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Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2003 1:04 pm Post subject: |
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Roger is right on most counts. The cumbersome nature of the language actually forms the peoples logic in daily life....it's a stunning occurence and a disheartening revelation to those who are under the illusion that they are doing something in China(in class) that their recorded voice could not.  |
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