Officials: 80 Percent Of Recent NYC High School Graduates Cannot Read

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<p>He would be wrong if the tour in question specified it was to be conducted in Chinese and ONLY in Chinese beforehand or the info was all in Chinese and he didn’t bother to check the information specified in the tour documentation or worse yet, chose to ignore it. </p>

<p>In such situations, it makes me wonder about that persons lack of basic common sense from figuring out the situation given the available information.</p>

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<p>As I said, I would agree more with you if we’re talking more private venues like business meetings, family gatherings, parties, or classrooms as this could impede academic instruction. </p>

<p>Then again, this happens in nearly every home I’ve visited where the given family speaks another language whether it’s Chinese, Spanish, Polish, French, German, Italian, Korean, Japanese, Arabic, etc. </p>

<p>I do call it out if it involves my family and I hosting my friends. When they do it to me as a guest…I figure they’re probably more comfortable in the language and so long as they’re not hostile…take it in good graces.</p>