I recently read an article
recently about the lack of connection Australia has with Asia and in
particular China Minding
our languages. The article states that our language learning
progress is and has failed for a number of years now. At primary,
secondary and tertiary level we have failed to learn Asian languages.
The main reason is too few teachers and too few students willing to
learn languages.
To address this problem
the idea is to stop spending money on language learning in schools
and universities and send students to live and learn in Asia. This
plan would be government funded. The proposal is to send 10,000
students a year. This may address the deficit we currently have in
Asian literacy.
This is indeed a
radical idea. However, for me it seems like something that might
work. It is better than the stagnation and lack of interest in Asian
languages and culture we currently have from many in Australia.
A
similar news article, We
must invest to latch on to the Asian century, also
states very clearly that we must engage with Asia by investing in
training and teaching Australians in Asian languages. The article
has many facts and figures about the decline of Asian languages in
Australian education. Apparently we are at the lowest point in Asian
literacy since 1970.
An alternative and
ambitious plan from the Victorian state government to reverse the
decline in language learning sounds similar to what I have seen
before. Grants
for Teaching Languages outlines the offer $ 1 million in grants
to schools to halt the decline of language learning in primary
schools. I am keen to follow the progress of this plan. It would be
good if other state governments also implemented similar grants.
I've read it!
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