School preserves Vietnamese language, culture in Polish capital A teacher, Ngoc Tam, is pictured teaching reading in Vietnamese to Vietnamese-Polish students at ![]() Lac Long Quan students sing in Vietnamese under the guidance of Nguyen Thi Anh Van, vice principal of the school.Tuoi Tre A Vietnamese school in Students who go to The school was founded in 2007 in order to teach the language to Vietnamese children and provide Vietnamese adults working and living abroad with the opportunity to practice speaking their own language. Students aged 5 to 14 are divided into A0 (equivalent to preschool) and A through E classes which use materials written by the school council. “Lac Long Quan enrollees include both Vietnamese children and Polish kids of Vietnamese origin,” Nguyen Thi Ngoc Tam, a teacher living in Lac Long Quan teachers are very patient and love working with Vietnamese kids, according to the youngest among the school’s 15 teachers. “We know that the more caring we are, the faster they learn our mother tongue,” said Le Lan Anh, a law firm employee who teaches at the school. Parents said the school has created a learning environment perfect for teaching kids, with a combination of studies, extra-curriculum activities, and lots of fun. Nguyen Hai Lan, a Vietnamese living in Vy has studied Vietnamese at Lac Long Quan for three years now and, as Lan said, “is happy at the school.” “I want my child to learn Vietnamese so that she can understand our family relationships, be willing to speak Vietnamese with her parents and grandparents, and communicate with other Vietnamese in Additionally, the school holds festivals and other important events on special occasions like Vietnamese Tet, the country's largest festival which often falls in late January or early February, to remind the students of their origin and cultivate in them a feeling of attachment to their homeland. Modest tuition Lac Long Quan has recently opened a new branch in Raszyn, 9km south-west of It is expected to introduce a third facility soon and a 15th birthday celebration is already planned for next year. But the school is facing difficulty as it only demands a small tuition fee to ensure its operations. “We only charge a modest fee in order to lease the campuses and pay our teachers,” Le Xuan Lam, school principal, said. Vietnamese parents, associations, and the Vietnamese Embassy in “But what we are concerned most with now is how to improve our teachers’ capabilities and to update the learning and teaching materials to help the school continue functioning well as a place to preserve our mother tongue and culture,” a vice principal said. TUOI TRE |
↧
Article 2
↧