Featured Academic News of the Week

February 3, 2023
Mr. Qining Cai, Chinese Teacher

As we begin the year of the Rabbit for 2023, Chinese teachers took part in the evening at HSArts Chinese New Year Celebration to promote learning Chinese and Chinese traditional culture. The teachers started preparations a few weeks in advanced. Some Chinese classes sang celebration songs in Chinese, some classes introduced the origin and tradition of Chinese New Year and some wished everyone a happy and healthy New Year. There were constant applause and laughter. Through this activity, students were able to practice what they are learning in the classroom and have fun at the same time.   

2023年是中國農曆癸卯兔年,1月27日一年一度期待已久的HSArts中國新年晚會,給家長和全校師生帶來了新年的喜悅。中文老師們也藉此晚會,來促進學生們的中文學習以及對中國傳統文化進一步的理解。 老師們提前幾個星期就開始準備、排練,有的中文課演唱中文歌曲,有的中文課介紹中國新年的來歷,有的向大家拜年,祝福新年平安快樂。晚會氣氛熱烈、掌聲笑聲不斷。通過這次活動,學生的中文能力普遍得到了鍛煉。

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Student Life News of the Week

January 27, 2023

Chinese New Year Celebration – It’s Tonight, Have you RSVP’d?

Mini FAQ:
Do I need to bring cash?
Answering questions with questions.. Do you like delicious treats or beverages of the milk tea variety? Do your little ones love having fun and playing games and enjoying life?
If yes, then yes! You can spend invest your money in many places in support of our student councils and our school!

What’s the schedule?
First, check out the graphic above or the text below:
5:45 Doors open!
6:00 Dinner!
6:30 Performance!
7:00 Games! Activities! Drinks and Desserts!
Event ends at 8:30.

Cooking Club – Clam Chowder

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Exciting Plans for CNY Celebration

Student Life News
January 20, 2023

Our student councils are excitedly preparing for the upcoming CNY celebration, next Friday. The high school student council is planning to sell several drink and dessert items, so make sure to bring some extra cash to enjoy the delectable treats. For our middle school student council, they hope to entertain with several games and activities. We encourage you to check them out and support our student councils in their extracurricular efforts!

You are invited! But please RSVP

If you didn’t catch that, you can RSVP here.

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Young Artists News of the Week

January 20, 2023
Ms. Hanna Zhang, Young Artists Director and Dance Teacher

Happy Chinese New Year to all of our Young Artists Families!

This season, we’re scheduling several dates for open classes and auditions for our Young Artists program and Summer intensives. Mr. Wei, Ms. Dana, and myself, Ms. Hanna, will host these classes for anyone interested, both current students and those not yet enrolled in our program. For those especially talented, there may be scholarship opportunities available.

If you are interested, or you’d like to bring a friend along, please email Ms. Ginnie at enrollment@hsarts.org. See you there!

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Featured Arts News of the Week

January 20, 2023
Mr. Brian Nieh, Arts not-Teacher

Before we start, I’d like to give an editor’s/arts coordinator note regarding our upcoming CNY Celebration and performance:

At the start of each semester, our choreographers are very eager to start their new programs. However, at the same time, we have two major celebrations in the Mid-Autumn Festival and Chinese New Year. Both of these typically include a performance, so this is where things get tricky: what programs do we do?

For the CNY celebration next week, we can certainly run back some of the Winter Wonders programs, many of which our students are performing for other community CNY celebrations (including at Commodore Sloat ES UCSF, and the Sunset Farmers’ Market). But as the artists we (students and teachers) are, despite the time frame, we’re hard at work choreographing and preparing a few new pieces for you all to enjoy. 

Now pivoting back to the original planned topic: Chinese Dance as a Celebratory Tool

Chinese dance has been around for centuries in different forms and used for different purposes. More often than not, Chinese dance is used for celebrations. It can take the form of court dances for imperial officials to celebrate holidays or birthdays or a great piece of legislation. More widespread, it surfaces in all different ethnic groups, doing ethnic dances to celebrate a harvest or whenever they just want to have some fun. Several of our dances from Winter Wonders fall into this category, including Snow-Capped Celebrations (celebrating their reverence to the heavens) and Flower Hats (celebrating their beautiful hats).

So next Friday, we hope to celebrate with a few Chinese Dance pieces during the CNY Celebration performance, including a special piece to send off the year of the tiger. 

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What does Chinese New Year mean to you?

Front Page News
January 20, 2023
Mr. Brian Nieh, an ‘ABC’ (American born Chinese) with very Asian parents

It may just be another holiday where you get a day off from school to some. However, for many Chinese (and Asian) families, this is the biggest holiday of the year; bigger than Christmas and Thanksgiving and Labor Day combined.

This holiday is based on the lunar calendar’s 1/1, as opposed to the Gregorian calendar more widely adopted. The lunar calendar follows the cycle of the moon, which is why CNY shows up on different dates depending on the year. Curious what your “lunar birthday” is? There are a handful of websites that will calculate it for you, including this siteApparently my birthday is May 4, 4686. So either I’m reallllly old if it’s B.C. or a time-traveler? Let’s…get back to the holiday…

For two weeks, families travel for however far they live to join together and feast, similar to Thanksgiving. They celebrate family, being together, family ancestry and respect for elders. Also, there’s loads of food. It’s typical to prepare 10 fancy dishes, which include fish (魚 yú sounds likes 餘 ‘surplus’, and there’s a saying 年年有餘 nían nían yôu yú, ‘wishing to have a surplus at the end of the year’, ask your Chinese teachers for more details), dumplings (they are shaped like ancient silver ingot bars, so eating them will bring you fortune), and chicken (雞 jī, which sounds similar to 吉 meaning ‘good luck’ or ‘prosperity’). Best part: if you don’t finish it, you take a break and then continue eating after.

During the two week celebration, there are several customs, such as hanging lanterns (which ward off bad luck), adopting a kumquat tree (in cantonese, kumquat is gam gat sue, where gam 金 is the word for ‘gold’ and gat sounds like ‘good luck’)

lighting fireworksHanging door couplets and other red things at your door is said to ward off the dreaded ‘nían’ monster, which terrorized small villages during new years, until a monk passing through taught the villagers to scare off the monster using fireworks and the color red, like an anti-bull, before the monk finished it off using his magical powers. 

But really, most people know Chinese New Year for the wonderful tradition of red envelopes 紅包 hóng bāo. The older generations were tasked with giving red envelopes filled with money (or coal if you’ve been bad), as long as the younger generations show filial piety and respect to their elders, and of course saying the magic words:

恭喜發財,紅包拿來

gōng xî fā cái, hóng bāo ná lái

Wishing you good luck and good fortune, now hand over the red envelope.

(alternatively, if you’re cantonese, you can say gong hei fat choy)

While unfortunately we may not celebrate for the full two weeks, we have 3 separate days of celebration to enjoy, including our full-time dumpling celebration dinner, no school on Monday, and our HSArts Community CNY Celebration next Friday. Hope to see you all there! 新年快樂 xīn nían kuài lè!

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