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Representatives of the Mandarin-teaching volunteers from China attend a welcoming ceremony in Bangkok, capital of Thailand, May 24, 2009. The Thai capital saw a welcoming ceremony Sunday for this year's first batch of Mandarin-teaching volunteers from China. The total number of Chinese teachers to Thailand in 2009 will amount to 1,028. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BANGKOK, May 24 (Xinhua) -- The Thai capital saw a
welcoming ceremony Sunday for this year's first batch of Mandarin-teaching
volunteers from China, and the total number of the Chinese teachers to Thailand
in 2009, after another two batches arrived days later, will amount to 1,028.
"Upon the request and invitation of Thai Ministry of
Education, the number of volunteer teachers sent by the Office of Chinese
Language Council International (Hanban) to Thailand this year will surpass 1,000
for the first time," Chinese ambassador to Thailand Guan Mu said on the
ceremony.
Winai Rodjay, Deputy Secretary-General for the Basic
Education Commission Office of Thai Education Ministry, extended his welcome to
the volunteers as well as his thanks to Hanban, the Chinese body that is in
charge of the Program of Program for International Chinese Language Teachers
launched in 2003.
According to the organization, this is the 8th batch
also the largest batch of Chinese volunteer teachers ever sent to Thailand since
2003. The volunteers' overall qualities and teaching abilitywere greatly
improved through a strict selection process after their application. They also
received special training from Hanban on service awareness, foreign etiquette
and how to improve survivability and adaptability.
As Guan put it in his speech, a "wave of Mandarin
learning" is burgeoning in Thailand, with 1,105 schools and colleges across the
kingdom having introduced Mandarin courses and a total of 400,000 Thai people
studying the language in diversified ways.
Winai attributed the "significant enhancement" of
Chinese-language-education capacity in Thai state-run schools, especially during
the last five to six years, to the support of Chinese volunteer teacher program.
Chinese language education will play a key role in the social, economic,
cultural exchange and friendship between Thailand and China, he said.
Hanban Deputy Director Wang Yongli, who also attended
the event, encouraged these young volunteers to overcome all the difficulties
they might encounter in work and life overseas and to devote themselves to their
teaching careers.
Hanban, a non-governmental and non-profit
organization, is affiliated to the Ministry of Education of China and committed
to making the Chinese language and culture teaching resources and services
available to the world.