The Overseas Community Affairs Council (OCAC) today announced plans to expand the Taiwan Center for Mandarin Learning (TCML) program next year by establishing centers in Australia, Canada, Japan and New Zealand.
The council today began its biennial International Summit on Mandarin Education in Taiwan, which runs until tomorrow.
The council has already helped to set up 68 TCML branches in the US and 20 centers in Europe across 12 countries, council Minister Hsu Chia-ching (徐佳青) said in the opening presentation this morning.
Photo courtesy of the Overseas Community Affairs Council via CNA
The TCML program offers Mandarin-language instruction to adults over the age of 18, and its centers can be found across the US and in major European cities, including London, Paris and Rome, its Web site says.
Two hundred and eighty domestic and international educators were invited to the two-day summit, which would continue with keynote speeches this afternoon and tomorrow morning, with a focus on integrating artificial intelligence and digital tools and incorporating Taiwanese culture into Mandarin teaching, the council said in a statement.
After the establishment of the US-Taiwan Education Initiative in 2020, the council launched the TCML program in 2021.
The San Francisco TCML has cooperated with libraries, local communities and even tech companies, Hsu said.
The center has partnered with Google to launch specialized programs to teach Mandarin to Google employees, and is in talks with Apple to set up a similar program, she said.
These partnerships would improve the image of the TCML and provide more outreach opportunities, she added.
The council has also collaborated with overseas Taiwanese school teachers and this year more than 20 international youth groups visited Taiwan, she said.
The OCAC runs events such as the Global Mandarin Speaking Competition and the Singing Competition for Overseas Compatriot School Students and Overseas Compatriot Students Studying in Taiwan, Hsu said.
These events encourage students to read and sing in Mandarin, Hoklo (commonly known as Taiwanese) and Hakka to gain a deeper understanding of Taiwan’s multilingual and multicultural society, she said.
The TCML also hosts cultural activities including cooking classes, calligraphy lessons and celebrations of holidays such as the dragon boat festival, and this year recommended students for the OCAC's English Teaching Volunteer Service Program for Overseas Youth 2025, its Web site says.
Eight Chinese naval vessels and 24 military aircraft were detected crossing the median line of the Taiwan Strait between 6am yesterday and 6am today, the Ministry of National Defense said this morning. The aircraft entered Taiwan’s northern, central, southwestern and eastern air defense identification zones, the ministry said. The armed forces responded with mission aircraft, naval vessels and shore-based missile systems to closely monitor the situation, it added. Eight naval vessels, one official ship and 36 aircraft sorties were spotted in total, the ministry said.
INCREASED CAPACITY: The flights on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays would leave Singapore in the morning and Taipei in the afternoon Singapore Airlines is adding four supplementary flights to Taipei per week until May to meet increased tourist and business travel demand, the carrier said on Friday. The addition would raise the number of weekly flights it operates to Taipei to 18, Singapore Airlines Taiwan general manager Timothy Ouyang (歐陽漢源) said. The airline has recorded a steady rise in tourist and business travel to and from Taipei, and aims to provide more flexible travel arrangements for passengers, said Ouyang, who assumed the post in July last year. From now until Saturday next week, four additional flights would depart from Singapore on Monday, Wednesday, Friday
The Ministry of National Defense yesterday reported the return of large-scale Chinese air force activities after their unexplained absence for more than two weeks, which had prompted speculation regarding Beijing’s motives. China usually sends fighter jets, drones and other military aircraft around the nation on a daily basis. Interruptions to such routine are generally caused by bad weather. The Ministry of National Defense said it had detected 26 Chinese military aircraft in the Taiwan Strait over the previous 24 hours. It last reported that many aircraft on Feb. 25, when it spotted 30 aircraft, saying Beijing was carrying out another “joint combat
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) today said that if South Korea does not reply appropriately to its request to correct Taiwan’s name on its e-Arrival card system before March 31, it would take corresponding measures to alter how South Korea is labeled on the online Taiwan Arrival Card system. South Korea’s e-Arrival card system lists Taiwan as “China (Taiwan)” in the “point of departure” and “next destination” fields. The ministry said that it changed the nationality for South Koreans on Taiwan’s Alien Resident Certificates from “Korea” to “South Korea” on March 1, in a gesture of goodwill and based on the