China

Mandarin Language Intensive (4-Week)

A 4-Week Summer Abroad Program

Chinese Language Lesson

28 Days

Drastically improve your Mandarin language skills and cultural understanding through daily small group classes, carefully selected homestays, and immersing yourself in day-to-day life in China. For students of all language levels who are excited to hone their Mandarin and build skills for future studies, work, and travel in the region.

More people speak Mandarin Chinese than any other language in the world.

For anyone interested in exploring and understanding China’s rich history and culture, it’s ever-increasing influence in the world, and what life is like for the 1.4 billion people who live here, learning Mandarin is a key step. Our approach to language study is holistic: including group travel, homestays, and Independent Study Projects (ISPs) in addition to formal classroom instruction.

woman teaching

Highlights & Outcomes

Strengthen Mandarin Proficiency

Intensive practice through daily through classes, homestays, and conversations with local mentors

Gain Regional Expertise

Build cultural, academic, and practical skills for future study, work, and travel in China

Better Understand China

Explore modern life, history, and the nation’s ethnic and ecological diversity

Genuine Cultural Immersion

Live with welcoming homestay families in rural and urban settings

people on the Great Wall of China walking with blue mountains in the back
line drawing of China

Your Journey Starts Here

Our Mandarin Intensive program splits time between Kunming—the bustling capital of Yunnan Province—and a small village in rural Yunnan. This region is celebrated for its dramatic mountain landscapes, vibrant ethnic diversity (including Naxi, Tibetan, Yi, Dai, and Miao/Hmong communities), and deep cultural heritage.

In both urban and rural homestays, students receive 2–4 hours of daily Mandarin instruction, with optional one-on-one tutoring for extra motivated learners. Living with local families accelerates language acquisition, giving students countless opportunities to practice new vocabulary in real-life conversations.

In Kunming, students pursue Independent Study Projects (ISPs) with local mentors in areas such as Chinese cooking, calligraphy, traditional medicine, martial arts, music, and environmental initiatives. They also visit cultural landmarks like the Golden Temple, Bird and Flower Market, and Green Lake Park. Rural homestays offer hands-on experiences—from pick-up soccer with village youth to foraging medicinal plants, visiting Buddhist monasteries, and engaging with local NGOs.

Participants return home with a deeper understanding of China’s cultural and ecological diversity, greater confidence in navigating Mandarin-speaking environments, and the skills to engage meaningfully in a rapidly changing nation.

Itinerary Example

China: Mandarin Language Intensive

Itinerary Example
The following is a sample itinerary based on past courses; actual itineraries are dynamic and may vary.
  • WEEK 1

    woman teaching
    people practicing kung fu
    Kids smiling with a view of the Great Wall of China

    After our arrival in China, we depart the city for a small village below a remote and un-renovated section of the Great Wall. Within hiking distance of the wall, we stay in a small family-owned guesthouse here and begin getting to know one another, learning about ensuring our health and safety during the course, and get a sense of where and how we’ll spend the next several weeks together. After taking advantage of the quiet and natural beauty of the village, we board a bus to travel back to the city of Beijing and spend a couple of days exploring some of the many historical and cultural treasures it has to offer. We hear about life in the city from an American living there who began his study of Chinese with Dragons many years ago, navigate historic hutong neighborhoods, and stop by an artist’s studio in one of Beijing’s thriving art districts. One of our goals on this program is to steer clear of the usual tourist destinations, but Tiananmen Square, the largest public square in the world and site of a long list of major events in contemporary Chinese history is a place we will visit and try to understand from several different perspectives. Next, we board a flight for Kunming, Yunnan, “south of the clouds” in China’s southwest. Arriving in Kunming we meet the language teachers who remain us for the rest of our time in China.

  • WEEKS 2 & 3

    group hiking in Tiger Leaping Gorge
    monk and girl playing badminton
    people making food in large basket

    For now, Kunming is just a stopover on our way to our rural homestay village in western Yunnan – an area called Lashihai, about an hour by road from the town of Lijiang. Here, we settle into the routine that we keep for most of the remainder of our time together. Language teachers will assess students and divide the group into small classes according to level. Each weekday morning until lunchtime we attend class, focusing on listening and conversation skills that we can use immediately during the afternoons and evenings. In the afternoons, we spend time helping with household and farm chores with our host families and exploring the area as a group. Lashihai is an ethnically Naxi area. In addition to Chinese, many Naxi people also speak Naxi language and have maintained strong traditions. Host families live in traditional wooden homes built around cobblestone courtyards and this is one few places in China where many older people still wear traditional dress. Experiential learning activities and trips during our afternoons and weekends may include teaching English to local children, visiting a large Tibetan Buddhist monastery just a bike ride away and learning about the lives of the monks and religious practice in Lashihai, short treks to nearby ethnically Yi villages, a trip to Lijiang to learn about it’s status as a UNESCO World Heritage site and how tourism has transformed the town, and visiting a local NGO working to promote the use of biogas in the area. During Week 3, before heading to Kunming, we spend a few days trekking together as a group in one of the many areas of natural beauty in western Yunnan – a province abundant in natural beauty and ethnic diversity. Past groups have trekked through Tiger Leaping Gorge, through ethnically Yi and Tibetan areas in the west and northwest of the province, visited the elaborately terraced rice farms of the southeast and the jungles of Xishuangbanna, bordering Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar.

  • WEEKS 3 & 4

    people learning Chinese characters
    person meditating under prayer flags
    tea ceremony

    It’s usually difficult to say goodbye to our homestay families in the village, but this week it’s time for us to move on and experience a very different lifestyle: urban life in the city of Kunming. We arrive by train in Kunming and meet our new home-stay families here. Kunming is sometimes called the “City of Eternal Spring” because of its mild weather, clean air (especially relative to other cities in China today) and abundant native plants and flowers. In Kunming, we continue with our weekday morning language classes. Classes are held in our Kunming Program House, a short walk from the city’s famous Green Lake Park, and a comfortable space where we meet each morning, attend class, and sometimes hold group meetings or host guest speakers on a wide variety of topics of interest to the group in the afternoons. In the afternoons, students also work on Independent Study Projects (ISPs) taking advantage of our strong network of contacts and mentors in the city. Early in the program, instructors discuss interests and ideas with each student. ISPs can take on all different forms, from studying an aspect of traditional culture (e.g. calligraphy, a martial art, dance, a musical instrument, tea culture) to academic research on Chinese history or social issues, to partnering with a local NGO focused on issues like labor migration or environmental issues, to a creative photography or writing project. Evenings and weekends are spent with host families – the best opportunity of all to build language skills and experience day-to-day life with a Chinese family. Finally, we spend our last few days together outside the city of Kunming in what we call Transference, reflecting on everything we’ve learned and experienced together and preparing for our return home!

Language Study

Mandarin immersion through small group lessons (typically 2-4 hours daily), homestays, ISP mentors as well as daily interaction with locals.

Homestay

Extended homestays (5+ days) in Kunming, cultural center and capital of Yunnan Province, and in a village homestay in Lashihai with Naxi ethnic minority community.

Independent Study Project

ISPs facilitated in Kunming: Traditional Chinese Medicine, calligraphy, ink painting, martial arts, tea culture, musical instruments, dance, cooking

Religious & Spiritual Traditions

Introduction to Buddhism, Daoism, Islam, Confucian thought, Marxism, Capitalism.

Social & Environmental Justice

Minority issues and status, socio-economic issues, health, land use and environment, tourism, cultural survival.

Learning Service

Learning service in cooperation with a rural community. Less than 5 hours of service credit earned.

Trekking

Options for numerous day hikes in rural and urban areas. Possible short trek

Rugged Travel

Slightly rugged, train and bus travel, village-stay, bike touring.

Optional College Credit

To deepen your experience abroad, you may choose to enroll in one optional college-level course during the program. For those who choose to enroll, they will be invoiced for an additional college credit fee on top of the program cost.

Students who take a college credit course will receive an official transcript from our university School of Record upon successful completion of the program. Taking advantage of the college credit option may make 529 plan funds eligible toward the entire program cost.

Learn About College Credits

Through our School of Record, you have the option to enroll in one of the following courses for college credit:

  • COLS 191: Self & Culture in Experiential Cohorts
  • CTE 191: Introduction to Leadership Development
See Course Offerings

Meet a Few of Our Instructors

Experienced educators. Community builders. Life mentors. With deep regional expertise and local language fluency, our instructors are skilled at providing context for the student experience and building cultural bridges. We collectively draw upon personal networks to create opportunities for connection and guide students along their journey.

Meet Our Instructors

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