Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Hi Ken > ... > I'm preparing a course now to help > bring people up to speed on Chinese > medical language ... Do you have a specific method in mind or a favorite set of books by which one can learn medical chinese? In a proper way that is, grasping the real meaning of the chinese terms that we often do not, as you so often say. Though at one time I would like to learn the chinese language, I have a feeling that it would take many, many years to grasp. But maybe you can ease my 'black' view of learning medical chinese. Best wishes Alwin Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Alwin, As to books, here are the texts I use for the course I am teaching: Required reading: Who Can Ride the Dragon? Zhang Yu Huan and Ken Rose Paradigm Publications, Brookline, MA 1999 A Brief History of Qi Zhang Yu Huan and Ken Rose Paradigm Publications, Brookline, MA 2001 Medicine in China: A History of Ideas Paul Unschuld University of California Press 1985 Chinese Medical Chinese Nigel Wiseman and Feng Ye Paradigm Publications, Brookline, MA 2002 Chinese Medical Chinese: Characters Nigel Wiseman and Zhang Yu Huan Paradigm Publications, Taos, NM 2003 I've developed a method of teaching language over the past dozen years or so while teaching English in China as well as teaching Chinese medical language here in the States and elsewhere around the world to students of traditional Chinese medicine. Students should be familiarized with a set of general considerations about the language and then introduced to the process of acquiring knowledge of the individual characters, their derivations, correct method of writing, meanings, pronounciation, as well as their implications and applications in the clinic. I think it's very important that language learning and clinical training be intertwined. It is a substantial undertaking, not a trivial one. But it does not take years to get started. If one is properly oriented to it, learning Chinese characters can...and should become a lifelong pursuit. The course I'm now offering is 120 hours. It is scheduled to be delivered as a series of 10 12-hour weekend workshops, the first twenty hours or so devoted to the basic considerations and the balance addressed to acquisition of vocabulary, as described above. With a teacher who knows the terrain and can navigate through such issues as how to deconstruct a character properly in order to use a dictionary, a student should be able to come out of these ten weeks with a fundamental grasp of the issues involved in learning Chinese medical Chinese and a command of the 100 most basic terms. The skills gained through this course will also serve the successful student in acquiring further vocabulary leading ultimately to literacy, i.e., the ability to read, understand and apply Chinese medical texts. Fluent literacy is not the stated objective of this introductory course, but the first step is probably the most important one. And the course I'll be delivering in the near future will be given in a busy clinic (20-30 patient visits per day) where students also have the option of serving an apprenticeship so that they can experience the benefits that a clearer grasp of the fundamental terms and concepts can help them attain. No one should be backed off from learning Chinese medical Chinese because they deem it too difficult. If you made a list of the truly difficult things you have to do in life, this would not be among them. But if you made a list of those activities that produce the highest benefit in terms of understanding Chinese medicine, acquisition of familiarity with the nomenclature should go in the first two or three places. Ken Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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