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The CISU Celebrates the 13th UN International Chinese Language Dayhttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=9119The CISU Celebrates the 13th UN International Chinese Language DayProfessor Binlan Huang<p></p><div>UN International Chinese Language Day is observed annually on April 20 and seeks to celebrate multilingualism and cultural diversity. It also promotes the equal use of the UN's six official languages within its organization.</div><div><br>To celebrate the 13th UN International Chinese Language Day in 2022, the Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch University (CISU) held two lectures and several activities at Stellenbosch High School. About 50 students, teachers, and parents attended the lectures. In addition to this school, the CISU held cultural activities at other venues, ranging from the SU campus to some of our other local schools, such as Kylemore High School and Rietenbosch Primary School, the latter of which has its own CISU Classroom.<br></div><div><br></div><div> Activities included writing the 'Fu' (福) character, making lanterns, and practicing Chinese Tai Chi and martial arts. More than 100 students and teachers participated in these activities. Since the covid pandemic in 2020, this is the first time for the CISU to hold on-site lectures and conduct cultural activities. The lectures and activities were well received and enjoyed immensely!  </div><div><br></div><div>The first lecture was about “China's 24 Solar Terms" and was presented by our CISU lecturer, Yang Jia. He introduced this system and then explained its significance. He said that “Guyu", the sixth solar term, begins on April 20, and it was thus chosen to be the UN International Chinese Language Day.</div><div><br></div><div>The second lecture “The Deeper Cultural Connotations of Chinese Characters" was delivered by CISU Chinese lecturer, Mikaela Keen. Chinese characters, she said, were a rich and nuanced conveyer of Chinese traditional culture. “Ideographic characters", for example, are a combination of a specific image (shape), a sound (phonetic element), and meaning (story). The shape shows an instantly recognizable image. Therefore, Chinese characters are rich and layered in meaning. If we take the 福 ("Fú" ) and 家 ("Jiā") characters as examples, we can see how they illustrate meaning. These kinds of insights will not only help learners memorize characters, but will also allow them to appreciate the visual poetry therein. This, in turn, may cultivate the learners' love for Chinese characters and enhance their literacy and motivation.<br></div><p><br></p>
Festival Overture by National Orchestra Academia China http://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=9143Festival Overture by National Orchestra Academia China Huang Binlan<p><span style="font-size:13px;">​​To ring in the new year, musicians around the globe have prepared something quite special.​  Using a variety of instruments from around the world, they perform the Chinese “Festival Overture”. As you will hear, the music is lively, catchy, and full of the festive atmosphere so typical of Chinese celebrations. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nsuwx_lyJmU"><span style="text-decoration:underline;">Take a listen</span>!​</a></span><br></p>
Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School Held Photo Exhibition of "70 Years’ Achievement in China"http://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=6973Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School Held Photo Exhibition of "70 Years’ Achievement in China"CISU<p>​To celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China and to let students feel the development and changes in China more intuitively, the CISU’s Worcester Gymnasium School Confucius Classroom held a picture exhibition with the theme of "70 Years of Achievement in China".<br></p><p>On October 18th, a two-week photo exhibition kicked off at Worcester Gymnasium School. This photo exhibition featured pictures of China's modern science and technology, ecological agriculture, environmental governance, national education, urban development and other achievements, aiming to show a comprehensive and vivid China for the local teachers and students. Among them, emerging things such as shared bicycles, online shopping and mobile payment have become hot topics for teachers and students. While lamenting China's rapid development, students also expressed their hope to experience the convenience in China .</p><p>The successful holding of this photo exhibition has enabled South African students to have a better understanding of China in the past 70 years. In the future, the Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School will continue to hold various cultural events and become a window for South African students and local people to understand modern China.<br></p>
CISU 2023 school education delegation gets inspiration in Chinahttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=10310CISU 2023 school education delegation gets inspiration in ChinaCISU<p>​The 2023 Chinese Bridge school education delegation to China, jointly organised by the Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch University (CISU) and Xiamen University, embarked on a transformative ten-day expedition in September. Hailing from the Cape Winelands education district, the diverse delegation (pictured below) included the district director, Jeanette Harker, along with principals and subject heads from Rhenish Girls’ High, Stellenbosch High, Makupula Secondary, Worcester Gymnasium, Kylemore High as well as Rhenish, Eikestad and Rietenbosch primary schools.<br></p><p>The delegates were hosted by the China Center for Language Education and Cooperation (CLEC), which plays a key role in promoting Chinese language and culture teaching outside China. As such, the overall aim of the visit was to provide assistance to South African institutions that were willing to initiate or promote Chinese learning projects, and to establish language exchange partnerships between Chinese and South African schools.</p><p>Upon their arrival, the group was welcomed by Xiamen University's dean of Chinese International Education, Chen Zhiwei.<br></p><strong>Immersed in both education and culture</strong><p>The visit was a blend of education and culture. Delegates had the opportunity to explore various facets of China's education system. Visits to schools such as the First Middle School of Tong'an District and the Experimental Chinese School showcased pedagogical approaches, curriculum design and classroom practices. These interactions offered valuable insight into how China's approach to education could help meet the needs and challenges faced in South African education.</p><p>The delegation also delved into the rich Chinese culture with lectures on the art and history of tea, Chinese traditional medicine, and acupuncture. Visits to iconic landmarks such as the Summer Palace, Tiananmen Square and the Great Wall complemented the experience.</p><p><strong>Valuable takeaways</strong></p><p>Judging by delegates' feedback, the experience was transformative at all levels. According to Tertia Jefthas, Kylemore High principal, China's rich history and vibrant cultural celebrations hold valuable lessons for South Africans, emphasising the significance of instilling a sense of belonging among learners. Worcester Gymnasium deputy principal Riaan Loubscher, in turn, returned to South Africa inspired to support Mandarin education both at his school and in the broader community. </p><p>To Rika Kroon, acting principal of Rhenish Girls' High, the trip expanded her understanding of Chinese culture and highlighted the disparities between China's reality and how it is often portrayed in South Africa.</p><p>District director Harker found that the visit to the First Middle School of Tong'an District, which has 10 000 learners and 200 educators, offered important insights into teaching practices in larger classes and the beneficial use of e-learning tools. Another important takeaway from the trip, Harker says, was the importance of a balanced approach to education, with China maintaining a physical education routine of at least two hours per day, which is in line with South Africa's educational goals. In addition, she was struck by the clear expectations for different languages and dialects to coexist, which aligns with South Africa's efforts to accommodate diversity. </p><p>The delegation returned with a renewed dedication to promoting global understanding and cooperation through education. </p><p>* <em>For more on CISU and its initiatives, go to </em><a href="/english/confucius-institute"><em>http://www.sun.ac.za/english/confucius-institute</em></a><em>.</em></p><p> </p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>​​<br></p>
The Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School Held the "China in My Eyes" Cultural Eventhttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=6974The Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School Held the "China in My Eyes" Cultural EventCISU<p>On October 21, the Confucius Classroom at Worcester Gymnasium School, under the Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch University, held the “China in My Eyes” cultural sharing event, which attracts many teachers, students and local people.<br></p><p>The event was started by the beautiful Chinese umbrella dance, and the audience gave warm applause to the wonderful performances of the girls. In the next part, two students who participated in the summer camp in June this year shared their two-week experience in China. They took Chinese classes at the beautiful Xiamen University and visited in a romantic piano island – Gulangyu. The guests were amazed at the rich schedule of the summer camp and expressed their hope to participate next year.</p><p>At the event, Confucius Classroom teacher Wang Yaqi introduced China's traditional culture: four inventions, geodetic instruments, Chinese characters and calligraphy, etc., and introduced the new four major inventions of modern China (shared bicycles, high-speed rail, scan code payment and online shopping). The audience were amazed at the modernization and convenience of contemporary Chinese life and lamented the rapid development of China's 70-year history. Then Confucius Classroom teacher Xie Mengning brought a speech on China's modern tourist city Xiamen, Beijing and Shanghai. The three cities are different in style: Xiamen is fresh and playful, Beijing is traditional and modern, Shanghai is romantic and modern. Different geographical and cultural environments have created unique city. The audience hope they could have the opportunity to travel to China and experience different Chinese cultures.</p><p>The “China in My Eyes” cultural sharing event provided a wonderful experience for South African students and the public about Chinese traditional culture and contemporary Chinese status, and also established platform between the Chinese and African people to communicate with each other. The China-Africa Friendship Association will continue to deepen and revitalize under our efforts.​<br></p><p><br></p>
CISU hosts Xiamen delegationhttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=6977CISU hosts Xiamen delegationCISU<p>​Stellenbosch University hosted a delegation from Xiamen University (XU) in China on Friday, 14 June. The delegation, led by XU Vice-President Prof Yang Bin met with Prof Wim de Villiers, Rector & Vice-Chancellor and staff members from SU International. Prof Bin was accompanied by Mr Mao Tongwen, Director of the Southern Base of Confucius Institute Headquarters and Ms Lai Siwei, Program Coordinator of the Office of International Cooperation and Exchange at Xiamen University.<br></p><p>Xiamen University is one of 14 SU partner institutions in China.​<br></p><p><img src="/english/PublishingImages/Lists/dualnews/My%20Items%20View/XiaSU.jpg" alt="XiaSU.jpg" style="margin:5px;" /><br></p><p>XU Vice-President Prof Yang Bin with Prof Wim de Villiers, Rector & Vice-Chancellor of SU​.<br></p><p><br></p><p>(Main photo - From left: Ms Lai Siwei, Program Coordinator of the Office of International Cooperation; Dr Ying Wang, Co- director of the CISU; Mr Mao Tongwen, Director of the Southern Base of Confucius Institute Headquarters; Prof Yang Bin, Vice-President of XU; Prof Wim de Villiers, Rector & Vice-Chancellor of SU; Ms Lidia du Plessis, Coordinator: Staff mobility programmes and partnership projects and Ms Sarah van der Westhuizen, Programme Manager: Semester Mobility and Special Programmes at SU International. ​)<br></p><p><br></p>
Students and learners from Stellenbosch and surrounds shine in 2023 SA Chinese Bridge contesthttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=10039Students and learners from Stellenbosch and surrounds shine in 2023 SA Chinese Bridge contestMikaela Keen <p>​Over the past few months, students from Stellenbosch University (SU) and learners from the Cape Winelands district excelled in the South African round of the annual Chinese Bridge competition organised by the Confucius Institute at SU (CISU). This Chinese speaking and performance competition has dedicated divisions for university students, secondary school and primary school learners. It serves as a platform for foreigners to showcase their Chinese language proficiency and cultural understanding.<br></p><p>The 22<sup>nd</sup> edition of the competition for university students was hosted in Durban towards the end of May. The first to be held in face-to-face mode post-pandemic, the event saw 14 participants from six Confucius Institutes across South Africa gather to compete under the theme “One world, one family". SU students Samantha Cox and Greta Frieslaar kept the Maties flag flying high by securing second place. This achievement also earned them the opportunity to participate in the 2023 Chinese Bridge summer camp in China.</p><p>Samantha's speech, “Home", shared her personal journey of learning Chinese during the pandemic. Her performance combined Chinese dance with a recitation of a poem from the Song dynasty. Greta, in turn, spoke about the value of studying Chinese in her speech, “Encountering Chinese, encountering the world", and performed a dance deeply rooted in Chinese culture.</p><p>In mid-June, secondary school learners from South Africa got their chance to showcase their Chinese skills at the 16<sup>th</sup> edition of their national competition. Eleven participants from five Confucius Institutes and high schools nationwide came together at the event hosted in Cape Town. Isabelle Goussard from Stellenbosch High School and Dané Taylor from Kylemore High School made the Cape Winelands area proud by emerging as overall winners. Isabelle's performance involved a speech on Chinese painting, and playing the kuaiban, a traditional Chinese percussion instrument. Dané shared with the audience her childhood fascination with Chinese Kung Fu movies, re-enacted classic scenes from the well-known Chinese book <em>Dream of Red Chamber</em>, and performed Chinese opera.</p><p>The more recently introduced division for primary school learners, scheduled for the same day as the secondary school competition, attracted 17 contestants from across the country. The top spot in this third edition of the contest went to Caryn Cornelius and Kiron Roberts, both from the CISU Confucius Classroom at Cloetesville-based Rietenbosch Primary School. </p><p>Through the Chinese Bridge competition and other initiatives, CISU continues to promote the Chinese language and culture among Stellenbosch students and learners, thereby fostering a deeper interest in Chinese language studies and strengthening cultural exchange and friendship between South Africa and China.<br><br></p><p>​<br></p>
Happy New Year Greetings from Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch Universityhttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=8879Happy New Year Greetings from Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch UniversityConfucius Institute at Stellenbosch University<p>​​​Dear SU colleagues and students,<br></p><p>Happy New Year! The Confucius Institute at Stellenbosch University would like to extend our sincere and happy festival greetings to you and your loved ones. We wish you all a healthy, happy and prosperous year in 2022.</p><p>We are preparing and uploading some super cultural programs about China twice a month, including short videos on various topics, concerts, films, songs, etc. for you to enjoy, through which you'll learn more about China and the Chinese people. </p><p>You're welcome to login into the CISU Website <a href="/english/confucius-institute">http://www.sun.ac.za/english/confucius-institute</a> and click the column <strong>Discovering China </strong>to watch and enjoy the programs. Thank you!<br></p><p> Best regards</p><p> Professor Binlan HUANG</p><p>Chinese Co-Director at CISU</p><p>Robert Kotze<br></p><p>Senior Director at SUI</p><p>SA Co-Director at CISU<br></p><p>​<img src="/english/PublishingImages/Lists/dualnews/My%20Items%20View/00000000001CI.jpg" alt="CI.jpg" style="margin:5px;width:349px;" /><br></p>
Chinese Spring Festival 2022http://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=9144Chinese Spring Festival 2022Professor Binlan Huang<p>​In 2022, CISU celebrated the Chinese Spring Festival on the first 3 days of February. The last day of January is considered “Spring Festivals Eve”. ​ This festival is an event that is celebrated by more than 1.6 million Chinese and Southeast Asians, as well as other Asians living around the world.  Due to the fact that it is based on the lunar calendar, the date may thus differ every year.  Discover more about this widely celebrated event <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsRQCYudFZQ">here</a>!<br></p><p>​<br></p>
Robert Kotze honoured for role in Confucius Institute at SUhttp://www.sun.ac.za/english/Lists/news/DispForm.aspx?ID=8655Robert Kotze honoured for role in Confucius Institute at SUEngela Duvenage <p>​​​​During a recent virtual event hosted from Beijing, China, Robert Kotze, senior director of Stellenbosch University (SU) International, was awarded a long-service medal in recognition of his involvement in supporting the work of the <a href="http://www0.sun.ac.za/cisu/">Confucius Institute at SU</a> (CISU) for more than a decade. CISU not only conducts extracurricular Chinese training at SU itself, but at schools and institutions in the broader Boland region as well.<br></p><p>Kotze, who serves as the local CISU director, was one of 75 directors worldwide to receive this recognition. His fellow recipients included peers from other African universities in Egypt, Madagascar, Kenya and Rwanda, among others. </p><p>The event was hosted by the Chinese International Education Foundation (CIEF), an international NGO that recently took over the coordination of programmes that promote the Chinese language and culture throughout the world. The initiative sees Chinese universities provide teaching, personnel resources and operational funding to more than a thousand Confucius institutes or classrooms worldwide. </p><p>In his keynote address, CIEF president Prof Yang Wei thanked medal recipients for the way in which they had been supporting Chinese teaching and learning at their respective institutions. Short videos were also shown to highlight the endeavours of various Confucius institutes. </p><p>CISU was established in 2007. Kotze thanked SU's Chinese partner institution, Xiamen University, for their ongoing support since inception, as well as for the honour of having served alongside five enthusiastic and committed Chinese co-directors at SU during this time. Prof Binlan Huang is the current Chinese co-director at CISU. </p><p>First established at SU's Centre for Chinese Studies, CISU moved to SU International in 2009. It provides non-credit-bearing language training at different proficiency levels to SU students as well as members of the broader Stellenbosch community, as well as opportunities to learn more about the Chinese culture. “The main mission is to accommodate people who are interested and willing to learn the Chinese language and understand the culture," Kotze explains.</p><p>CISU also coordinates a range of enrichment programmes at 14 schools in and around Stellenbosch and elsewhere in the Boland, such as Kylemore Secondary and Worcester Gymnasium. “I believe CISU's contribution is meaningful and opens up new worlds to the learners," Kotze says. “It has also allowed the University to forge relationships with these local schools."</p><p>In addition, its involvement with the Confucius Institute has enabled SU to strengthen its academic network in China. Over the years, the University has facilitated many summer and winter camps for learners and students, as well as the compulsory semester exchange to China for Chinese Language honours students as part of their graduate programme. “The Confucius Institute's work is grounded in broader academic collaborations to ensure that links between universities remain rooted in their respective scientific endeavours."</p><p>His work with the Confucius Institute has also been beneficial from a personal growth perspective, Kotze says. “It has given me many opportunities to visit China and learn more about various aspects of Chinese culture and history. Apart from training and capacity-building opportunities, the programmes always include rich cultural activities. Going to Beijing is always a special experience, and my visits to Zhangjiajie and the Terracotta Soldiers in Xi'an are also lifelong memories."</p><ul><li>For more information about the Confucius Institute at SU, visit www.sun.ac.za/cisu.<br></li></ul><p>​<br></p>