Posted on May 31, 2024
SPC Elijah J. Henry, MBA
7
7
0
I expect Mandarin Chinese to be an increasingly strategically valuable language, and I understand it is uniquely challenging to get right when you start learning it later in life.
My son is in early elementary school; what programs or apps or curricula could he use to learn Mandarin without Chinese influence or surveillance? I'm suspicious of the cartoons I see to teach Mandarin as I'm concerned they CCP influence. What's the best and safest way for my son to learn Mandarin?
Avatar feed
Responses: 6
COL Randall C.
6
6
0
Edited 27 d ago
Faa36b60
85d7db5d
Best? Can't comment if it is or not, but if you eligible for MWR access, then you can learn Mandarin Chinese online for free. Access it through https://dodmwrlibraries.org/
(6)
Comment
(0)
SP5 Peter Keane
SP5 Peter Keane
27 d
I knew that surcharge at the Commissary was being put to good use.
(2)
Reply
(0)
COL Randall C.
COL Randall C.
27 d
SP5 Peter Keane - ☺
I assume you mean the post exchanges, but every little bit helps!
(1)
Reply
(0)
CDR Jim M.
CDR Jim M.
25 d
Years ago as a junior high school student I was fortunate to take Mandarin for two years for a native speaker. We spent a LOT of time in San Francisco on weekends in Chinatown where Mandarin was spoken but we got better treatment speaking Cantonese and learned small amounts of Shanghainese. Many years later I found my old skills benefitted me in intel assignments. The key is, learn when you are young and the brain is most adaptable to new languages. If he is learning it in CONUS it's unlikely a sympathizer would be teaching it. 祝你兒子好運!(good luck to your son!)
(1)
Reply
(0)
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
24 d
CDR Jim M. - "I Wish Your Son Good Luck"
Having A Native Speaker Of The Language Being Taught Is Imperative...
Although Many Gringos Speak Spanish, MOST Have That "Gringo Accent", Including The Teachers, If They're Not Native Speaking Teachers
Oddly Enough It Was My Sister-In-Law, Andrea, Whom Taught Me To Pronounce The Words Properly.... It's Simply By Learning The CORRECT Sounds Of The Vowels ~ ~
~~ BOOM, It's A Home Run !! ~~ Just THAT Easy, And Only Takes A Few Minutes.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
MAJ Ken Landgren
2
2
0
I will ask my crazy wife. She taught herself Mandarin Chinese online. She named a Husky Bao Feng Shei which means Blizzard. We call him Bao. lol
(2)
Comment
(0)
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
26 d
LOL... And How Well Does She Handle Her New Name?
With A Lot Of Humor, I Hope ~~ It IS Funny
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
2
2
0
You're Absolutely Correct:
We Learn Languages Both Better And Fasted In Our Youth,
And Less So As We Age, ~~But Here's "Why"..... At Birth We Have A Large Volume
Of A Chemical In Our Brain Used Exclusively For Learning Languages; And It Dissipates As We Become Older Until Very Little Remains...
(2)
Comment
(0)
SSG Roger Ayscue
SSG Roger Ayscue
26 d
I explained it to my daughter once, as she was regaling me with the finer points about Spiderman's gloves, that the human brain is like an old computer hard drive. It can only hold so many bytes. When it gets full, it begins to overwrite older stuff. So she needed to be careful telling me such details or it might fill my brain up and overwrite something I needed to remember, like how to breathe. She did not get it.
(1)
Reply
(0)
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
26 d
SSG Roger Ayscue -
~"OOPS"~.
Not Long Ago I Was Wondering "Why Do Some People Seem To Remember More Things Than Others"?.. And This Is What I Discovered ~ Read ~ Deduced ~ Etc. ~ In Our Brains Grey Matter, There Are Various Sections, With Some Larger Than Others And They're Similar To Files ~ The Larger The Files, The More Information They Can Retain...,
~~ I Thought It To Be Quite Interesting & It Does Help To Explain "Why I Have Trouble Remembering Who I Am & Why I'm Typing This." (:-)> ~~ It's Old Age, Coupled With Ignorance, And a LOT of Stupidity.. But Most Of What I Just Said IS True....But Which Part?.. Go Ahead ~ Guess!
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close