As the
second generation of the Practical
Chinese Reader series, New Practical
Chinese Reader (NPCR) is a series of comprehensive Chinese teaching
materials for adult students in countries other than China. The two generations
together have exerted an influence in the international Chinese teaching
circles for over 30 years. Its third edition centers on a few international
students, telling interesting stories about their life and friendship with
their Chinese friends and teachers in China. The revision regarding the third
edition adheres to the aim of making it “easier to learn” for students and “more
convenient to use” for teachers and maintains the pedagogy of “the integration
of structure, function and culture”, striving to develop students’
comprehensive use of the Chinese language, especially the ability of
cross-cultural communication, through the learning of language structures,
functions and relevant cultural knowledge as well as the training in listening,
speaking, reading and writing skills.
New
Practical Chinese Reader (3rd Edition) Textbook 2 is composed of ten main lessons, including rich teaching content and
tasks and activities on phonetics, vocabulary, grammar, Chinese characters and
culture.
Liu Xun is a professor at Beijing Language and Culture University (BLCU)
and a chief editor and reviewer of Chinese textbooks in Beijing Language and
Cultural University Press. Mr. Liu has successively served as a member of the
National HSK Advisory Committee, a member of the TCSL Expert Advisory Committee
of Hanban, a board member of World Chinese Teaching Association, a consultant
of Chinese teaching for the New York State Department of Education, a visiting
professor in Renmin University of China and Beijing Foreign Studies University,
and a member and leader of the academic committee of BLCU. He once worked as a
teacher in Ohio State University, University of Maryland, Middlebury College,
and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, and gave lectures or academic reports
in Australia, UK, Canada, Norway, Russia, Egypt, Thailand, and Singapore among
other countries and districts. Mr. Liu has won the Canadian TCSL Maple Award in
2014. His publications include monographs such as Introduction to Chinese as a Foreign Language Pedagogy, Introduction to Teaching Chinese as a
Foreign Language, Brief Introduction
to Teaching Chinese as a Second Language, An Overall View of Teaching Chinese as a Foreign Language, and
widely popular CSL textbooks such as New
Practical Chinese Reader, Practical
Chinese Reader, and Chinese Textbook
for Children. Mr. Liu has been awarded a special government allowance by
the State Council of China.
1) Keeping the original style Based on the characteristics of Chinese
language teaching and the aim to break the notion that “Chinese is difficult”,
this series sticks to the pedagogical idea that “combines structures, functions
and culture” and with the teaching of language structures as the basis,
stresses the teaching of grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation and characters. The
language points are arranged in a scientific, systematic, step-by-step fashion
and are repeated constantly for learners to master them.
2) Fully updating the content The texts are more up-to-date, practical and
fascinating. Texts in Textbook 1 have in large part been rewritten, functions
being strengthened, topics more focused, and situations highlighted; the
selection of new words includes more common words and the supplementary words
are grouped under different themes.
3) Stimulating autonomous learning Each lesson has a Warm-up section added at
the beginning and a Self-evaluation section at the end. Classroom interactions
and communicative, tasked-based activities have been added, and self-discovery
and autonomous learning been encouraged so that students can summarize certain
grammar rules by themselves.
4) Strengthening practice and application The exercises are more clearly
focused and centered on grammar points, each lesson providing exercises such as
pronunciation drills, conversation practice, listening and repeating, reading
comprehension, task and activity, writing practice, etc. to train comprehensive
language skills and better handle the relations between mechanical,
communicative, and task-based exercises.