CDNIS students speak mostly Cantonese amongst themselves?

Thanks a lot HC.

My son is currently in KCS K2 class and will do both KCS K3 class and KCIS Reception Class in the coming September.

I certainly like KCIS in view of its strong Mandarin education and affordable tuition fees as compared with most international schools. Primary section of KCIS has become an oversubscribed school and waiting list is now quite long.




I have 1 child currently attending P6.
I find the workload to be relatively light. She does between 30-60 mins per evening for normal school work. We supplement that with private Mandarin tutoring.

Almost all teachers are native English speakers and the standard of English is quite high. As she came from KCS (where there is very little English) her English was quite poor. She was able to come up to speed quite quickly.

Its a lovely school with caring teachers. I'm sure your child will enjoy it there.
HC
 
Littleho,

would you not consider leaving them in KCS for a few years before switching them over?
Thats what I did with our 3. Nothing beats immersion when it comes to learning a language. KCS, with its strict form and full on immersion was really good for us.
 
You might disagree, but this does not make them controversial.

I'm 100% confident that I'm not the only one to disagree. When 2 groups disagree over a period if time, it turns into a controversy. But, you've got the solution in hand; take it into a PM so others cannot disagree :-)
 
As far as I can see I have offered much more precise information in this thread than you have offered.

More than happy to continue to provide information on this or other threads.
 
Hi HC,

My son's case is quite complicated. He cannot go KCS P1 after K3 because he is too young (born in Jan 2007). While his teacher said he is capable, the school admission policy of KCS primary section with regards to cut-off date does not allow students who are born after Dec to enter P1. That means he will have no where to go after K3. We do not want him to study the same stuff in K3 for one more year.

Another reason is that KCIS has become oversubscribed and many KCIS existing students stay with the school. The attrition rate has dropped significantly. It becomes hard to get in KCIS in later years. In the recent interview for Reception Class, the school only picked 3X candidates (many of them from other international kindergartens) amongst 1XX applicants. They only chose 12 of them. Originally, there were four spaces availble. The school create eight more spaces due to strong demand. I know the school picked only 50 candidates for P1 interview and it only admitted 10 of them. Spaces in later years (P2, P3,...) are even less as most KCIS students stay with the school.


Littleho,

would you not consider leaving them in KCS for a few years before switching them over?
Thats what I did with our 3. Nothing beats immersion when it comes to learning a language. KCS, with its strict form and full on immersion was really good for us.
 
As far as I can see I have offered much more precise information in this thread than you have offered. More than happy to continue to provide information on this or other threads.

Thats fantastic HappyV -- I would encourage you to share your thoughts and opinions in public so everyone can see them instead of hiding them in PMs.
 
HowardCoombes, why are you so consistently belligerent, strongly opinionated and argumentative? You are one of the few members of this forum that actively seeks to create an argument. I'm assuming you are male. The majority of posters on this site are female and much gentler in their approach. Perhaps you could dial it down a notch, or join a high school debating team to get it out of your system.
 
I have strong opinions on a few select topics. If you dont like my opinions, my writing or my style, you can find the ignore button under my profile. Yes, I'm male.
HC
 
Dear HC,

You mentioned that one of your kids is in ISF. Did you switch him/her from KCIS? Is he/she a full-fee paying or scholarship student? I heard cases of switching from ISF to KCIS, because.....

Thanks
 
All 3 of my kids attended KCS for the immersion Mandarin. As they get older and finishing primary schools, I'm moving them into primarily english schools.

My eldest was accepted into ISF so she started there after KCS. We are paying full fees at ISF which is quite hard, but thats a different topic.
ISF does have fairly high requirements on fluency for both English and Mandarin; unfortunately, due to numerous issues, my #2 did not qualify for ISF. Luckily we were able to find her a spot at KCIS and she is flourishing there.

My youngest is still at KCS and has a few more years to go. We are not sure which school we will pick when he is finished at KCS. As I mentioned earlier in this thread, we did previously look at CDNIS very carefully but I found their Mandarin program to be lacking. If what HappyV says it true and they are looking at ramping things up for 2013, perhaps we will consider CDNIS as it does give a good inroad into Canadian universities.

HC
 
The loss of faith on local system plus the growing economic power of China increased demand on international schools with good Mandarin teaching. We know competition for admission to CIS, SIS and KCIS has increased significantly. I submitted application for my younger son (2yrs old) for KCIS a year ago and was told that there were already over 200 applicants. It was easier to get into KCIS in the past, but it is getting very competitive now. Hence, I suggest you to enquire the current situation (such as attribiton rate and number of applicants for your target grades) in KCIS.

All 3 of my kids attended KCS for the immersion Mandarin. As they get older and finishing primary schools, I'm moving them into primarily english schools.

My eldest was accepted into ISF so she started there after KCS. We are paying full fees at ISF which is quite hard, but thats a different topic.
ISF does have fairly high requirements on fluency for both English and Mandarin; unfortunately, due to numerous issues, my #2 did not qualify for ISF. Luckily we were able to find her a spot at KCIS and she is flourishing there.

My youngest is still at KCS and has a few more years to go. We are not sure which school we will pick when he is finished at KCS. As I mentioned earlier in this thread, we did previously look at CDNIS very carefully but I found their Mandarin program to be lacking. If what HappyV says it true and they are looking at ramping things up for 2013, perhaps we will consider CDNIS as it does give a good inroad into Canadian universities.

HC
 
As well as Brown, Columbia, Cornell, University College London, University of Hong Kong, Chinese University, Beijing U.............

Whatever your personal opinion might be, a school's exam results are usually taken to be a fair indication of how 'good' the program is. For example, I would like to know if the immersion program at KCIS can offer a 6.9/7 average across the 56% who took Mandarin as Language B in last year's IB results.
 
Dear Howardcoombs and HappyV,

Thanks for your experience with CDNIS/KCIS. These information help me as well as other parents to make their choices for schooling.
 
For example, I would like to know if the immersion program at KCIS can offer a 6.9/7 average across the 56% who took Mandarin as Language B in last year's IB results.

KCIS does not offer an immersion programme; if you are curious about their results feel free to call them and ask.
I've made no claims about KCIS and I still fail to see how this relates to the claims you have been making.

You are cherry picking results, comparing them to nothing and then declaring that the results you've shown are as good as any. Like I said before, we are not going to agree on this, so please move on.
 
Hi HC,

Correct me if I am wrong, I think Chinese culture, music class and physical education class are conducted in Mandarin in KCIS. I heard that KCIS Chinese standard is only one year behind local school.


KCIS does not offer an immersion programme; if you are curious about their results feel free to call them and ask.
I've made no claims about KCIS and I still fail to see how this relates to the claims you have been making.

You are cherry picking results, comparing them to nothing and then declaring that the results you've shown are as good as any. Like I said before, we are not going to agree on this, so please move on.
 
Littleho, I'm not certain of exactly what they do for the early primary years. Its best to check with the school.

My #2 is currently in P6; she does about 1h of Mandarin every day but its strictly a language class (not related to PE/Music etc).
 
Dear HappyV

"I should also point out that in regards to Primary Mandarin programs, 'a couple of hours a week' was probably something like 30 minutes a day. CDNIS makes no claim to be a bilingual school - but they do produce students who are bi and tri lingual."

- You have to realize that CDNIS is an international school, full of children of expats and upper-middle class families. Many students don't stay thought until university, many leave for a high school education overseas or because of parental reasons, many are inserted through out the middle years. They produce bi and tri lingual students, only because the students coming in are already bi or tri lingual.

"You just shown that you are ignorant when it comes to how language functionality and fluency is assessed in pretty much every curricula around the world, including the IB. For your information, IB Language B students are assessed on pretty much all the criteria that you mentioned, in both oral, aural and written tasks. A student's IB score is reflective of all the criteria you mentioned."

- All the students in my mandarin class pre-write their oral task and rehearse it over and over again just so they can get a good grade. And for the written assessment, it's based on an easy chinese textbook that even my kid brother can read, in fact most of my peers who have a solid mandarin background find the mandarin program too easy and that their mandarin has worsened over time. Sure it looks good on a sheet of paper called their report cards, but it says nothing about applying that language in real life. Most of my mandarin class, when outside of the classroom, can barely speak a word of mandarin, if any at all. That's what HC meant when he said "I look at how comfortable they are in speaking, reading, listening, humor, slang, metaphors, getting up and speaking in public, inflections and pronunciations etc etc." There's no need to be harsh and call people ignorant now.

But seeing how your posts are filled with ego and a fanatical fondness of CDNIS, you must be affiliated with the school in some way, be it parent or staff, so here's to you:

A "good" program says nothing about a student's well being. For a student who isn't molded into one of the top scoring, CDNIS clones, life will be hard for you. What really angers me is that my fellow top scoring students don't really care about learning, delving deep, and asking questions; they care about doing to pass and achieving good results. They don't care about current issues or expanding their perspectives, they would never read unless instructed to do so and never write unless they have to. This school has an abnormally low student voice and spirit. The people who go for the student committee do it for their resumes; and are usually elected based on popularity. All activities, ideas, pranks have to be APPROVED by the vice principle, grad blurbs (final words from graduates in the yearbook) are edited to look good. Student's aren't allowed to order lunch from outside of school because of "environmental concerns", yet when raising money for the school pizza boxes pile sky high. Really it's just part of the Chartwells monopoly because the school's worked out a deal with them. This school calls itself a "charity", yet students have to pay for their own sports trips, MUN trips, their own equipment bags, uniforms, computers, software and the list goes on and on. No wait, you have to have your software removed before you leave the school; we don't even get to keep the software on our computers, but we have to pay for it. Where does all our money go? It's an awful lot our parents have to pay for textbooks and pencils. Oh, I nearly forgot about the new "arts center", where parents can now sit comfortably in cushioned seats to watch their little CDNIS clones perform on a real stage; so it feels more exclusive. Because our students can't perform on the stage of our two already very large gyms, because our art students need a new art room that isn't even bigger than their old one, because it looks good. They can spend millions on a building we don't even need, yet we have to pay for literally everything in our school life. Really, it's a repulsive modern trend that sells the idea that in order to be successful in life, you have to pay thousands for a prestigious, state of the art primary school, high school, and university. It's called branding. All students are forced to purchase MacBooks in middle school, if even you get a Macbook from outside of school you have to pay for it to be reimaged by the technicians in our school for even the most basic function such as the school email to work on your computer. Everything has to be synchronized and controlled. And this is all just a small part of the problems in CDNIS.

"I also have expertise in the research that studies best teaching practice for language acquisition. I reassert my previous statement that 'more is not always better', and that the assessment of the success of a language program should not be based solely on the number of hours of teaching instruction, but also on how student inquiry and learning is supported throughout the curriculum."

- Language acquisition? None to be acquired at CDNIS. My whole mandarin class speaks very little mandarin, if any at all. Or my whole grade, for that matter. Except maybe for bs, because you've been speaking it. You know nothing about education, or language acquisition, for that matter.

"I have offered much more precise information"

- this is exactly your problem, you'll find in life "precise information" will only get you so far, that between people, experiences, and things such as connection between people, laughter, love, will be much more important than sheer results on a sheet of paper.

"Whatever your personal opinion might be, a school's exam results are usually taken to be a fair indication of how 'good' the program is. For example, I would like to know if the immersion program at KCIS can offer a 6.9/7 average across the 56% who took Mandarin as Language B in last year's IB results."

- If your definition of how "good" a program is simply numbers on a sheet of paper then I truly feel bad for you.

I guess what really angers me is that you speak as if a "good" program, a bunch of scores represent everything in a school, including the well being of its students. You are wrong. Your behavior on this forum is pure ego and cowardice, I almost laughed when you told people to PM you about information about CDNIS. That would defeat the point of this forum.

Regards, thelonewalker
CDNIS Graduating Class of 2011
Offers from: U of T, York, Carleton, and so on.

But then again, this is all just from 8 years of experience in CDNIS.
I don't have your "expertise".
But I would never send my kid to CDNIS.
 
Regards, thelonewalker
CDNIS Graduating Class of 2011
Offers from: U of T, York, Carleton, and so on.

But then again, this is all just from 8 years of experience in CDNIS.
I don't have your "expertise".
But I would never send my kid to CDNIS.

Thank you for validating some of the things I was trying to articulate/express WRT Mandarin education at CDNIS but I think you've gone slightly overboard with your criticism. After all, CDNIS did 2 things right as evidenced by your post:
1) Gave you a good enough education to get you into some very decent universities
2) Gave you the foundation and developed the skills to allow you to put together a nicely coherent and well formed argument.

I wish you best of luck with your future studies. While at University, you will meet a huge variety of students, many of them from less privileged schools and backgrounds. You will have a much wider variety to compare your education against and I'm fairly certain your view of your own education will change in the process.

HC
 
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