Chinese Music a Key to Foreign Universities
With the approaching summer holiday, music-training centers are preparing for peak season as students pick up instruments in order to help round out their applications to foreign universities.
Zhou Zhan, head of the Beijing-based Guzheng Training Center told the Global Times that among his 50 students, about 10 percent are between 18 and 22 studying an instrument in preparation to apply to universities abroad.
"Many are totally new to playing musical instruments," he said. "But learning a guzheng (a large, plucked Chinese zither) is relatively easy. Two or three months are enough to play a few simple songs."
Zhang Jiahe, a freshman at Columbia University, has studied guzheng for three years. Although not sure whether her skills directly helped with her admission, Zhang said that the university values students' understanding of art.
As one of few students who could play Chinese musical instruments at her university, Zhang was asked along with three others to take part in a six-week-long culture exchange activity at the Kunitachi College of Music in Japan last month.
Sheng Yang, owner of a musical instrument store in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, said that many parents made clear their intentions when they send their children for lessons - "My daughter is going to university overseas. I'm bringing her to learn a traditional Chinese musical instrument."
"Parents think that playing piano or violin for a Westerner is like an amateur playing before an expert, but playing a traditional Chinese instrument will introduce foreigners to Chinese culture," said Sheng.
However, some experts have a different view on simply picking up a traditional instrument to bring Chinese culture to a foreign country.
Chen Hangming, vice secretary-general at Zhejiang Traditional Instruments Institute, said that one can only learn an instrument superficially by attending such crash courses.
"Once you play in a group, your lack of training is exposed, perhaps leaving the impression that Chinese music is nothing special," he said. "It's good to promote Chinese culture, but one should have a strong foundation first."
News&Opinion
more- China's State Councilor calls for advancing high...
- China hatches first emperor penguin
- Dinosaur footprint fossil found in Shandong Prov...
- Peking Opera Rigoletto 'Jester' performs magic
- The romantic Day for lovers in China
- High Temperature Superconductor Technology R&D C...
- New Chinese Confucius Center Opens in Melbourne
- Officials Head to Chinese Classrooms
Policy&Laws
Sino-Japan partnership to help global recovery
China and Japan, the world's second and third largest economies, agr...
A new disciplinary policy aiming to curb plagiar...
According to a report by Beijing Daily on January 11, a new discipli...
How to improve Chinese Education?
A total of 48 schools in central and eastern China who aim to upgrad...