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| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
Some 170
pupils at fifteen Dutch secondary schools will be taking their final exams in
Chinese in the coming weeks, the Dutch institute for international education
Nuffic said on Wednesday.
Seventy schools are already teaching Chinese, some as
an optional subject and some as a set part of the curriculum. Chinese is the latest
in a series of modern foreign languages taught at schools which already
includes Spanish, Russian, Arabic and Turkish.
‘I can tell from my pupils’
reactions that they think it is pretty special to be learning a language that
almost no one else learns in school,’ Nuffic coordinator of the Chinese
language & culture school network and part-time Chinese teacher Jessica
Paardekooper told the Volkskrant.
The official inclusion of Chinese in the
exams is the result of a pilot started in 2010 in an effort to promote Chinese
to further relations between the Netherlands and China.
‘Schools are offering
Chinese to stand out. But it is also a subject that makes parents think: this
will give my child a good start,’ the paper quotes Paardekooper as saying.

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