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Intensive Summer Programs (25+ hours per week)


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Posted

Hi,

I am looking for a 6 to 80 week intensive Chinese program for this summer starting at the beginning of July. By intensive, I mean roughly 30 hours a week. Looking on the CUCAS website, it seems like most programs are 20 hours a week. I would prefer something out west or to the north. Let me know if you have any thoughts or suggestions.

Thanks!

Posted

I don't know of any programs like that, but just two thoughts: if it's classroom time that matters most to you, you could consider doing the 8AM-12PM / M-F classes (that's what most programs will have you do for the 20 hrs), and then schedule two more hours after lunch with either a one-on-one program (search on the forums, lots of threads on that) or find a student/retired teacher/etc to tutor you. I'd recommend the latter just because one-on-one is REALLY tiring and tutoring will be much cheaper. Alternatively, you could do one-on-one once or twice per week and have the tutor the other times. By the way, in terms of paperwork, tutoring and one-on-one are much more flexible and could be set up once you get here. Lots of schools and people will give you a free lesson (30-60 minutes) to help you decide.

The other thing to consider in advance is that most teachers are going to assign you homework and/or require some lesson preparation. Depending on who your teachers are, as well as what kind of classmates you have (studious or lazy), this could be a bad thing or a good thing. I've had classes with lazy classmates that only required an hour of homework per night, and I've also had classes that required at least 3-4 hours of homework every day. In the former case, I hired on a tutor for an extra 3-4 hours per week to help me move at a faster speed than my class and give me the extra practice (I can't self-study and learn, I'm just not that type). In the case where I had a lot of homework, I was too wiped after 8 or more hours of Chinese per day (4 in class and at least 3-4 on homework) to do anything more that required my full attention. Just remember: it would be a waste of everyone's time to add on "junk" hours -- quality time is more important than quantity. Everyone has a limit to the amount of stuff they can reasonably learn in one day.

  • New Members
Posted

I think it is easy to solve the question. You can choose a language training center to study. Becuase you register for long term, it is mo probem to meet your needs in times. I studied Chinese last year in Beijing. I know that for most language training center, if you study more than 200 hours, the price of private class is same as group class.

If you want to study in a group class, you have to change your schedue. It is difficult for most students to study so long time a day. And you can not accept all of new words and grammars.

If you have any questions, you can let me know.

Posted

"If you have any questions, you can let me know. "

1) Do you think we're idiots?

  • Like 1
Posted

@bobbyd, what is your interest in 30 hours a week of class?

As others have indicated, 20 hours a week of class, plus homework, is about all most people can handle. Have you had a different experience? Or are you just hoping to progress as rapidly as possible?

Posted

For six to eight weeks (I'm assuming 80 was a typo) it's maybe sustainable - I can see someone who has not much time and a lot of motivation doing that. But if you're doing 30 hours of learning I'd say you're in trouble - a big chunk of that time is going to need to be practice, revision and consolidation.

Remember, the Bumper Book of Made-Up Statistics* says that for every 120 minutes of study we do, we do 83 minutes of forgetting.

CUCAS will I think only cover universities, rather than private schools which are more likely to cater for you. It's also worth bearing in mind that summer courses often feature a lot of college exchange students who aren't necessarily there for the learnin'.

*I will write this book if enough people promise to buy it.

Posted

We have had several students take on a full 6hr/day class schedule. A few of them were able to sustain it long term (6 months) but the majority end up dropping down to 4hrs/day after 1-2 months. There is only so much your brain can handle before it becomes detrimental to your learning. It will depend on the person of course, but for most 4hrs/day class plus home-work, reviews, tests etc is plenty. If you are studying for a test ie: HSK and your preparation time is limited then 6hrs/day might be an option from the get go.

I think starting out with 4hrs class for at least 1 to 2 months, assessing your progress etc and then think about increasing your hrs is a better option. This is what I advise people when asked.

  • Like 2
Posted

I did a four hour a day class in China for 3 months and it was split in 2 hour sessions. The teaching was 1on1 and my Chinese improved rapidly. Plus the school encouraged us not to use our native tongue. The work load was hard but do-able @ 20hrs a week with 25 set to max. It was basically would get up eat breakfast, catch a ride to school. Get to school study a little then start class for 2 hours, break and have lunch. Take a Chinese nap ~no longer than 40 minutes long, my teacher loved those. Play some 象棋(which I suck at) or 五子棋(which I'm good at). Back to 2nd session. End class, catch a ride home. Eat dinner, then sleep. Wash, rinse and repeat! There is free time in there but enough to keep you sane if you have a strong conscience and the weather is tolerable. (Because some of us are not from Texas :P) Sight see on the weekends and Enjoy!

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