Keeping African languages out of African schools
Humiliation of Ugandan students who speak their mother tongue in school, and Malawi’s recent decision to move to an English-only instruction policy, reflect the continued low status of African languages in African education. In much of Africa, the first languages of students are formally excluded from African schools by national policies, and/or accorded low or even negative value in school culture. In the extreme, this situation can be seen in terms of denial of human rights (per work by Tove Skutnabb-Kangas), but in any event seems to run contrary to ample research on the benefits of learning in the mother tongue and of bilingual education.
“Why are schools punishing children for speaking African languages?”
A recent article by writer and lawyer Bwesigye bwa Mwesigire called attention to ongoing practices in some Ugandan schools of humiliating students who speak African languages. A particular example is requiring students caught speaking a language other than English to wear a sack, until they catch one of their peers transgressing the English-only rule, who will then have to wear the sack.
This is not a new linguistic human rights issue, nor a practice limited to one country. It extends back to colonial rule, though enforcement of “no vernacular” has evidently moved from corporal punishment by teachers to humiliation and enforcement by students. I previously mentioned this in a 2008 blog posting entitled “Burning textbooks, beating schoolchildren.”
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