Language policy in Ghana and Malawi: differing approaches to multilingualism in education

Colin Reilly, Elvis ResCue, J. Chavula
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Despite substantial international evidence that children learn best in a language which they understand, language-in-education policies in much of Africa do not effectively accommodate the range of languages found in the classroom, instead prescribing dominant national languages and/or colonial languages such as English. Further, these language policies continue to reflect a monoglossic conceptualisation of languages and do not adequately account for the multilingual repertoires of individuals and communities. They do not reflect an understanding of the ways in which multilingual language practices could be harnessed for education. This article provides a comparative overview of the policy context in Malawi and Ghana, at the levels of legislation, practice, and attitudes. Through interviews, questionnaires, classroom observations, and classroom recordings in primary schools, we highlight the multilingual realities of educational spaces in each country. We highlight that, despite different sociolinguistic and legislative contexts, there are similarities between these contexts which emerge as important factors when considering multilingualism within education.
加纳和马拉维的语言政策:教育中使用多种语言的不同方法
尽管国际上有大量证据表明,儿童用他们理解的语言学习效果最好,但非洲许多国家的教育语言政策并没有有效地适应课堂上使用的各种语言,而是规定了占主导地位的民族语言和(或)殖民语言,如英语。此外,这些语言政策继续反映语言的单一语言概念化,没有充分考虑到个人和社区的多语言储备。它们没有反映出人们对如何利用多语种的语言实践来促进教育的理解。本文提供了马拉维和加纳在立法、实践和态度层面的政策背景的比较概述。通过访谈、问卷调查、课堂观察和小学课堂录音,我们突出了每个国家教育空间的多语言现实。我们强调,尽管社会语言学和立法背景不同,但这些背景之间存在相似之处,这些相似之处在考虑教育中的多语使用时成为重要因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.80
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