Last summer, Barbara Odom of Chanhassen looked at her daughter and considered two possibilities for the girl's first days in a Mandarin Chinese kindergarten class.
One, Gabbi would love language immersion and "soak up Mandarin like a sponge." Or two, she would be confused and come to tears because her teacher spoke only Chinese.
Today, Gabbi, 6, loves her teacher, sings Mandarin songs "all the time," mixes Mandarin words and phrases with English, and eavesdrops on strangers at Target.
"There are times when you as a parent question your choices," Odom said. "But it's amazing -- Gabbi is not intimidated by the language."
Last fall, dozens of other parents in the Minnetonka and Hopkins school districts wrestled with the same fears as they enrolled almost 150 kindergartners and first-graders in Mandarin Chinese immersion classrooms.
Like St. Paul's Yinghua Academy, which opened the first Mandarin immersion program in the Midwest in 2006, both districts' programs teach every subject in Mandarin Chinese.
The Minnetonka and Hopkins programs still have kindergarten spaces available next school year for resident and open-enrolled students. Both plan to add a grade each year, and when students reach middle school they will transition into partial immersion and in high school will take Chinese language classes.
During elementary school, the students learn a Romanized version of the language called pinyin in addition to Mandarin characters. Formal English instruction is not introduced until second grade.