Thursday, October 23, 2008
Learn mandarin - Chinese practise in Beijing -
> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
Chinese practise in Beijing
Home New Posts
Login: Pass: Log in or register for standard view and full access.
Page 1 of 2 1 2 >
johnmck -
In a couple of months time I am planning to go to Beijing on a business trip. I'm currently
negotiating with my boss to get them to pay for me to go out five days early so that I can
practise my Chinese (if I stay the Saturday night the reduction in the airfare should pay for the
extra nights in the hotel). Currently I know about 1000 words and rarely get a chance to speak
Chinese (my spoken Chinese is poor).
I want to start practising my Chinese immediately upon arrival and get as much Chinese practise in
over the 4-5 days before I visit my customer (my customer can speak English so I do not have to go
from beginner to business Chinese in 5 days ). I do not want to spend the five days just walking
around Beijing looking at all the sites and only using Chinese to order food. What is the best way
to practise my Chinese in Beijing?
Pleco Software Learn Chinese with our Dictionaries for Palm and Pocket PC.
Learn Chinese in China Learn to speak Chinese 1MonthChinese.com -Mandarin School in China.
Chinese Textbooks Wide range, cheap, varied languages. Also Chinese cartoons, toys, gifts.
Study Chinese in Beijing Affordable Mandarin language courses at BLCU with ChinaUnipath.com.
HNHSoft Dictionary Learn Chinese on Smartphone and PDA with real person's voice.
XueXueXue IQChinese Get beyond the plateau.Take your Mandarin to a new level.
Chinese in Lijiang Short term Chinese study in a beautiful town with a focus on daily life.
MandarinTube Chinese Access to current everyday Chinese language and culture, 24/7.
Learn Chinese Homestay Chinese course, cultural activities & volunteer events in China.
Learn Chinese Online 1-on-1 instant tutoring, diverse courses, native teachers. FREE trial now!
Nihao Chinese Progam Free one-on-one Chinese lesson. Win 5-years of free lessons now!
About Ads (and how to hide them) -- Your message here
Shadowdh -
Walking around Beijing looking at all the sites and ordering food... sorry couldnt resist... I
found that by just walking through the parks people were ok speaking with me and I could get alot
of practice in asking questions (you know the basic ones... whats that, how do you say this... and
point at something)... ordering food was another good way to practice as you can point at the
pictures and again ask how do you say... also go to the markets, I found that after the initial
hard sell tactic some of the stall keepers were happy enough to chat to you and help out...
calibre2001 -
Make new friends...mandarin speaking only friends !
roddy -
If you just want to walk around speaking to random people, try parks like Shadowdh suggests -
especially early in the morning when you get all the old folks out doing their morning exercises /
singing / etc. Give 'em a smile and before you know it you'll be getting more questions than you
know what to do with. University campuses also, although there's a much higher chance of running
into people that want to speak English. Sit around with a Chinese textbook, look friendly and ask
random passers by if they can just show you how to pronounce this character here. Try also taking
taxis round and round the ring roads.
Don't be surprised if you attract a small crowd.
Roddy
onebir -
If you only have 5 days, it's probably worth hiring a 1-1 tutor - & probably worth getting one via
a school, so that you get a bit of variety &/can change easily if you need to.
Chatting with people is great as a longer term strategy, but over a few days an experienced tutor
is probably worth it. Most people won't try to correct your pronounciation or grammar, guess the
word that's on the tip of your tongue, or help you eke out sentences that are on the edge of your
abilities - a good tutor will do this & can help you make rapid progress.
Taipei language institute (which has 2 branches in Beijing) is specifically set up for this & has
good materials, but it's expensive. There are other schools that are cheaper, but their teachers
are probably less experienced teaching 1-1. (There could be exceptions, so it might be worth
asking if you decide to go down the tutor route.)
wrbt -
Make sure you have your luggage and wander near big tourist areas looking somewhat lost... in no
time you'll have two young people approach and you can practice Chinese at their traditional style
tea ceremony or art gallery.
Actually try going to sit at a cafe with locals (if you can stand the smoke) they'll be curious
and if you make the first move I'm thinking you'll have some conversation practice in no time.
wrbt -
Also - We had some great talky talks with hotel staff, specifically the ones standing out front
bored after main dinner hour has passed.
johnmck -
Thank you all for your answers. It looks like getting practise should be a lot easier than I had
thought. I guess I will not have the same problem as when I moved to France, everyone was very
helpful and kept answering me in English
kudra -
I'm not affiliated with it, but you might find out if the 1-month Chinese school would customize a
5 day intensive course for you. Program directors, if you're listening, that might be a good niche
for people on business trips like that.
roddy -
Pretty much any Chinese school will customize a course for you if you offer them cash.
Another idea - temples. They always have a few folk sitting around to make sure people don't take
photos where they aren't meant to, or set fire to stuff with their incense, and they're generally
bored and happy to chat.
All times are GMT +8. The time now is 06:15 PM.
Learn Chinese, Chinese Online Class, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment