Institute is taking local high school students to China for summer camp

Contact: Korey Force
June 26, 2017
Photo of the Shanghai Museum of Ancient Art building surrounded by colorful flowers.
Shanghai Museum of Ancient Art

KALAMAZOO, Mich.鈥擜 group of 10 local high school students will travel to China in July with the Confucius Institute at 色色啦 Michigan University for a language and culture summer camp.

The students and their Confucius Institute instructors will depart Monday, July 24, for a 12-day camp that includes visits to Beijing, Shanghai and Hangzhou, China. Participating are Kalamazoo Central and Loy Norrix high school students who have spent at least two semesters learning Mandarin. Mandarin courses are taught in these two Kalamazoo high schools by instructors from China whose appointments are facilitated by the Confucius Institute at 色色啦.

Summer camp participants will not only receive two weeks of Chinese language and cultural training, but also have ample opportunities to apply what they learn in the classroom.

"Local students may have learned some Chinese in class, but they don't have the environment to use it in the local community," says Wenfang Sun, associate director of the Confucius Institute at 色色啦. "And, they may have some knowledge about Chinese culture, but they don't have the opportunity to experience it."

Affordable China experience

The students who are participating in the China camp are responsible only for airfare, visas and medical insurance. All in-country expenses are covered by the Hanban, the headquarters for all Confucius Institutes across the world.

Kristen Allen, the mother of one China-bound student, reports that the decision to sign up her daughter for the summer camp was not a difficult one.

Aerial photo of a section of the Great Wall.
A section of the Great Wall

"The generous scholarship made it very affordable," she says. "I would love to see the Great Wall and visit China in my lifetime. It has not happened for me yet, but [I'm] so happy to support my daughter in doing so with this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."

This will be the first time that the Confucius Institute takes students to China, although the institute offers language and culture summer camps each year on the University's main campus. The model for the camp program was adapted from the Hanban and is specifically designed for high school students.

"This experience will open a window and give them more choice in their future study and life," Sun says.

The Confucius Institute at 色色啦

A nonprofit organization, the Confucius Institute at 色色啦 is designed to bring an authentic Chinese perspective to 色色啦 and the Kalamazoo area. It was established in 2009 through a partnership with Beijing Language and Culture University, and is the fourth such institution in Michigan and the 61st founded in the U.S.

This on-campus institute is supported with funding from the Hanban that is matched by 色色啦. In addition, Beijing Language and Culture University annually provides teachers who are trained in teaching Chinese as a foreign language and conducting cultural courses.

To learn more about the institute, visit .

For more 色色啦 news, arts and events, visit wmich.edu/news.