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Words
without frontiers
January 2003
Contrary to popular belief, young children
don’t make the best language students: they have a talent for mimicry, so their
pronunciation will be top notch, but their cognitive and reasoning skills are
not sufficiently developed for them to understand the mechanics of language –
the cogs and screws of grammar and syntax.
To many experts, the best way of teaching kids
another language is through ‘immersion’. Advocates of this method say it works
because it tries to simulate the circumstances in which children acquire their
first language, by shifting the impetus towards language as a tool for everyday
work and play. The idea is that if children are encouraged to ‘play’ in the
second language, they are more likely to absorb it without having to study it.
Belgian parents are particularly in tune to the
importance of language learning. In a multilingual country, fluency in more
than one language is a powerful tool. In bilingual Brussels, more and more kids
are attending the schools of the other language community.
Tibem, an alliance of Walloon and Flemish parents,
is currently causing a stir by demanding that the state take its language
instruction policies a radical step further. They want second language
education to go beyond the confines of the textbook and become an integral part
of the learning experience.
“We’re angry that, in a country with two
(large) language communities, we have no bilingual education,” says Tibem’s
Laurence Mettewie, who is also a researcher into language acquisition. “We
don’t want all schools to adopt the immersion system, but we would like people
to have the choice.”
Pointing to the success of an experimental
programme run by the French-speaking Community, Tibem wants bilingual immersion
schools opened across the country. In addition to conventional language
classes, children at immersion schools receive some or all of their schooling
in their second language, and may even be encouraged to socialise in it. So a
French-speaking child might learn, say, science and maths in Dutch.
”Immersion from kindergarten is generally quite successful with regard to the
linguistic proficiency of children,” says Anne-Marie Schaerlaekens, a professor
of language development at Leuven University.
It isn’t a new concept it has been
successfully tried out in several countries, most notably bilingual Canada.
Walloon schools that have switched to the system have seen a spectacular boost
in popularity, and many now have long waiting lists. Flanders has no
French-Dutch immersion schools as yet, although it does run a small
experimental programme in Turkish and Spanish and there are plans afoot for
Arabic.
But there are parents who worry that the technique will harm their child’s
command of his or her mother tongue, or that studying in another language will
hinder progress in other subjects. Mettewie counters this. “Fears of linguistic
dilution are not justified,” she says. “Results show that the child’s mother
tongue is reinforced through bilingual education.”
Research suggests that the brains of children
in a bilingual system are ‘wired’ in a more flexible way, enhancing language
aptitude and making it easier for them to acquire additional languages later.
This increased mental agility would appear, over time, also to improve
cognitive skills; children at immersion schools often outscore their mainstream
peers in maths and other subjects.
Nevertheless, some specialists in Belgium,
Canada and elsewhere have identified a tendency among pupils at immersion
schools to veer towards language specialisation, using their mother tongue to
socialise and play and performing more formal mental
activities in their second language.
Mettewie says that this risk can be minimised
through partial, as opposed to total, immersion, where pupils study and
socialise in the two languages. She believes that the benefits of immersion
education outstrip its drawbacks.
She points the finger instead at the politics
surrounding language. “We have all the basic ingredients to make this wonderful
pie,” she says, “But we lack the will.”
“Scientifically, a lot of children would profit
from it,” Schaerlaekens echoes. “But it’s largely a political issue.” Education
is a political minefield in Belgium and the fault line runs down the language
divide. While some Walloons remain proudly monolingual, for
some in Flanders the idea of immersion schools awakens memories of the days
when they were educated in French and obliged to speak it in public life.
Since the 1960s, responsibility for education
has devolved to the Community level and today there is no federal education
ministry. Instruction in schools must be monolingual.
But there is growing debate on both sides of the fence on the impact of this
gradual political and cultural drifting apart of the two communities
“Many parents know that learning the other
community’s language is important for their
children to get on in life,” Mettewie says. “It’s also important for national
solidarity.”
In 1998, the Walloon parliament relaxed its education laws through a decree
allowing the setting up of experimental immersion schools, but it has shied
away from calls to implement it on a wider level.
“Despite the advantages and encouraging results
of this approach, there are obstacles to it becoming more widespread in the
French-speaking community,” says Nourdine Taybi, a spokesman for the francophone
education ministry.
These include a lack of qualified staff, with
the risk of inequitable access, and fear of the long-term effects on learning.
Immersion schools have also reached the floor of the Flemish parliament, with
Education Minister Marleen Vanderpoorten recommending that the issue be looked
into.
Immersion schools might appear ideal for
Belgium, but the outlook is not all rosy. “People think it’s a bit crazy that
we don¹t have a bilingual school system,” notes Schaerlaekens. “On the other hand,
it’s simplistic to believe that it would solve everything.”
Schaerlaekens says that most children at
immersion schools come from highly educated families that are often bilingual.
She says the system remains untested at a general level and could alienate
children with learning difficulties. She fears that, if not handled carefully,
it could lead to elitism and accentuate class divisions.
This article appeared in the 9 January issue of
the Bulletin and the 18/19 January edition
of La Libre Belgique.
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