Chinese language in Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Australian Chinese
A sign in English and Chinese at Fortitude Valley railway station in Brisbane
RegionAustralia
Native speakers
1,022,481 (all varieties) (2021)[1]
Sino-Tibetan
Chinese
Pinyin
Chinese Braille
Language codes
ISO 639-3

The Chinese language is the second-most spoken language in Australia.

Australia has more Chinese people per capita than any other country outside Asia. In the 2021 census, 1,390,693 Australians identified themselves as being of Chinese ancestry, representing 5.5% of the national population. In the same census, 980,555 Australians indicated that they mainly spoke either Mandarin or Cantonese at home, representing 4.0% of the national population, making it the second-most spoken language in Australia after English. The Chinese language is an important part of the Chinese Australian identity.[2] Some older generations and recent arrivals to Australia from China are monolingual in Chinese.[3]

Chinese is a widely taught second language in Australian schools,[4] and is one of the languages mentioned in the Australian Curriculum.[5] However, the vast majority of students studying the language are Chinese. Chinese is widely considered a relatively difficult language for native English speakers to learn.[6] Other foreign languages such as French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese and Spanish are much more commonly learnt and understood by non-Chinese students than Chinese is.[7]

The main variety of Chinese taught in Australian schools is Mandarin. In 2017, Mandarin was the fourth-most taught foreign language other than English. It was the most taught foreign language at schools in New South Wales and Tasmania, while it was the third-most taught at schools in Queensland and the Northern Territory.[8] In 2021, Mandarin became the most taught foreign language in Victorian schools, with 19.6% of Victorian language students studying the language.[9] However, the vast majority of Australian schools that offer Mandarin as a subject are located within major metropolitan areas, where foreign languages are less commonly studied as elective subjects, and those who do study a foreign language as an elective often study French, German, Indonesian, Japanese or Spanish, or (in many schools) an Indigenous language.

The relatively poor diplomatic relations between Australia and China (especially the ongoing trade war between the two countries), as well as the COVID-19 pandemic,[10] have negatively impacted the study of the language in Australia, given that the majority of Australians often hold very unfavourable views of the Chinese government.[11][12][13][14][15][16] A small but somewhat influential minority of Australians who openly hold racist and xenophobic views have also negatively affected the Chinese language and culture in Australia.[17] Historically, the Chinese language was never taught in Australia due to racist views held by many Australians, as well as the White Australia Policy.

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