This is a very important issue -
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-----Original Message-----
From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 06 Apr 2011 07:36:46 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Mind your language - shake-up at universities

 
  News24 
 
 
 Mind your language - shake-up at universities 
   
   
 Sapa, News24, Johannesburg, 5 April 2011
   
 Pretoria - Every university student in South Africa could be required to learn 
one African language as a condition for graduating, Minister of Higher 
Education and Training Blade Nzimande said on Tuesday. 
   
 An advisory panel had been tasked with looking into the issue, Nzimande said 
in Pretoria at the launch of the teacher education and development plan for the 
next 15 years. 
   
 "One of the things we are looking into is... to what extent should we consider 
that every university student in South Africa must at least learn one African 
language as a condition for graduating," he said. 
   
 This was "very, very critical". 
   
 Speaking in isiZulu, Nzimande said: "Akukwazi ukuba yithi kuphela ekuthiwa 
sifunde isingisi nesibhunu bakwethu, kodwa ezethu iyilimi nabanye bangazifundi 
[We can't be expected to learn English and Afrikaans, yet they don't learn our 
languages]". 
   
 He said the issue of the development and teaching of African languages in 
universities was something he was taking up as a special ministerial project. 
   
 The advisory panel would look at how to strengthen university teaching and 
expansion of African languages, which was in a serious decline. 
   
 The launch of the strategic planning framework for teachers aims to improve 
the quality of teachers and teaching in the country in line with calls over the 
years by teacher unions. 
   
 The plan identifies the availability of qualified and capable African language 
foundation phase teachers as particularly problematic. 
   
 Nzimande said this had "severe implications" for the development of early 
numeracy and literacy, which was the foundation for all future learning. 
   
 "African language learners in the poor, rural context are mostly severely 
impacted," he said. 
   
 A European Union-supported programme to strengthen foundation teacher 
education was already being implemented by the higher and basic education 
departments. 
   
 It would increase the number of universities involved in foundation phase 
teacher education from 18 in 2008 to 20 by 2014, said Nzimande. 
   
 - SAPA 
   
 
From: 
http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Mind-your-language-shake-up-at-universities-20110405
  
   

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