[lg policy] Taiwan: Vietnamese teacher cultivates talent for New Southbound Policy

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at gmail.com
Fri Sep 2 14:57:45 UTC 2016


Vietnamese teacher cultivates talent for New Southbound Policy

   - Publication Date: September 2, 2016
   - Source: Taiwan Today <http://taiwantoday.tw>

------------------------------
[image: Vietnamese teacher cultivates talent for New Southbound Policy]Tran
Thi Hoang Phuong (standing) teaches a Vietnamese-language class at the
Foreign Language Center of National Chengchi University in Taipei City in
this undated photo. (LTN)

Tran Thi Hoang Phuong, chief instructor in the Vietnamese division of the
Southeastern Asian Languages and Cultures Program at National Chengchi
University in Taipei City, is busy preparing for the start of the new
academic year later this month, when she and her colleagues will welcome 59
new undergraduate and graduate students from NCCU and other universities to
the school’s Foreign Language Center for two- to three-year courses in
Vietnamese language, culture, economics and history.

Also known by her Chinese name Chen Huang-fong, Tran is one of the foremost
teachers of her mother tongue in Taiwan and the first Vietnamese faculty
member at NCCU. For more than a decade, she has been working to promote
cultural exchanges and understanding between locals and Vietnamese
residents of the country by offering language classes at schools as well as
through television and radio programs.

Tran is now helping cultivate talent for the government’s New Southbound
Policy, both through her work at NCCU and through an association she
founded last year to help train new immigrants from Vietnam with academic
qualifications to become language teachers. The organization also
introduces them to academic institutions around the country. “Highly
educated immigrants can form a significant talent pool for the initiative,”
she said.

The government’s New Southbound Policy seeks to enhance exchanges with
countries in South and Southeast Asia as well as Australia and New Zealand
across such diverse fields as business, culture, education and tourism.

Tran graduated from the department of law at Vietnam National University,
Ho Chi Minh City before moving with her husband to his homeland of Taiwan
in 2001. After arriving in the country, she volunteered in a hospital
maternity ward as an interpreter, and later offered courses in Mandarin to
new immigrants and Vietnamese to locals at a community college.

She began teaching Vietnamese-language classes at NCCU in 2006 and became a
full-time faculty member of the school’s Foreign Language Center in 2013.
In September last year, Tran won a Golden Bell Award, Taiwan’s top honor
for television and radio productions, for her role as the co-host of a
radio program for new residents from Southeast Asia.

New immigrants once encountered significant challenges in Taiwan due to
such factors as social discrimination and language and cultural
differences, but the situation has improved considerably in recent years as
Taiwan has become an increasingly pluralistic society, Tran said. “As the
mothers of children born here, we’re a source of diversity and vitality for
the country.”

The latest Ministry of Education statistics showed that during the 2015
academic year more than 123,000 students at elementary and junior high
schools in Taiwan, or 6 percent of the total, had a parent from Southeast
Asia. Of this figure, more than 84,000 had a parent who hailed from
Vietnam.

In order to further promote the New Southbound Policy, Tran suggested that
the government encourage foreign students from Southeast Asia to stay and
work in the country after finishing their academic studies. “Taiwan should
make the most of its available human resources,” she said. (KTJ-E)

http://www.taiwantoday.tw/ct.asp?xItem=247644&ctNode=2194&mp=9


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