The Significant Role of Mother Tongue in Education
The Significant Role of Mother Tongue in Education
The Significant Role of Mother Tongue in Education
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Từ vựng
Bài đọc (reading passage )
One consequence of population mobility is an increasing diversity within schools. To illustrate, in the city
of Toronto in Canada, 58% of kindergarten pupils come from homes where English is not the usual
language of communication. Schools in Europe and North America have experienced this diversity for
years, and educational policies and practices vary widely between countries and even within countries.
Some political parties and groups search for ways to solve the problem of diverse communities and their
integration in schools and society. However, they see few positive consequences for the host society and
worry that this diversity threatens the identity of the host society. Consequently, they promote
unfortunate educational policies that will make the “problem” disappear. If students retain their culture
and language, they are viewed as less capable of identifying with the mainstream culture and learning the
mainstream language of the society.
The challenge for educator and policy-makers is to shape the evolution of national identity in such a way
that rights of all citizens (including school children) are respected, and the cultural linguistic, and
economic resources of the nation are maximised. To waste the resources of the nation by discouraging
children from developing their mother tongues is quite simply unintelligent from the point of view of
national self-interest. A first step in providing an appropriate education for culturally and linguistically
diverse children is to examine what the existing research says about the role of children’s mother tongues
in their educational development.
In fact, the research is very clear. When children continue to develop their abilities in two or more
languages throughout their primary school, they gain a deeper understanding of language and how to use
it effectively. They have more practice in processing language, especially when they develop literacy in
both. More than 150 research studies conducted during the past 25 years strongly support what Goethe,
the famous eighteenth-century German philosopher, once said: the person who knows only one language
does not truly know that language. Research suggests that bilingual children may also develop more
flexibility in their thinking as a result of processing information through two different languages.
The level of development of children’s mother tongue is a strong predictor of their second language
development. Children who come to school with a solid foundation in their mother tongue develop
stronger literacy abilities in the school language. When parents and other caregivers (e.g. grandparents)
are able to spend time with their children and tell stories or discuss issues with them in a way that
develops their mother tongue, children come to school well-prepared to learn the school language and
succeed educationally. Children’s knowledge and skills transfer across languages from the mother tongue
to the school language. Transfer across languages can be two-way: both languages nurture each other
when the educational environment permits children access to both languages.
Some educators and parents are suspicious of mother tongue-based teaching programs because they
worry that they take time away from the majority language. For example, in a bilingual program when 50%
of the time is spent teaching through children’s home language and 50% through the majority language,
surely children won’t progress as far in the latter? One of the most strongly established findings of
educational research, however, is that well-implemented bilingual programs can promote literacy and
subject-matter knowledge in a minority language without any negative effects on children’s development
in the majority language. Within Europe, the Foyer program in Belgium, which develops children’s speaking
and literacy abilities in three languages (their mother tongue, Dutch and French), most clearly illustrates
the benefits of bilingual and trilingual education (see Cummins, 2000 ).
It is easy to understand how this happens. When children are learning through a minority language, they
are learning concepts and intellectual skills too. Pupils who know how to tell the time in their mother
tongue understand the concept of telling time. In order to tell time in the majority language, they do not
need to re-learn the concept. Similarly, at more advanced stages, there, is transfer across languages in
other skills such as knowing how to distinguish the main idea from the supporting details of a written
passage or story, and distinguishing fact from opinion. Studies of secondary school pupils are providing
interesting findings in this area, and it would be worth extending this research.
Many people marvel at how quickly bilingual children seem to “pick up” conversational skills in the majority
language at school (although it takes much longer for them to catch up with native speakers in academic
language skills). However, educators are often much less aware of how quickly children can lose their
ability to use their mother tongue, even in the home context. The extent and rapidity of language loss will
vary according to the concentration of families from a particular linguistic group in the neighborhood.
Where the mother tongue is used extensively in the community, then language loss among young children
will be less. However, where language communities are not concentrated in particular neighborhoods,
children can lose their ability to communicate in their mother tongue within 2-3 years of starting school.
They may retain receptive skills in the language but they will use the majority language, in speaking with
their peers and siblings and in responding to their parents. By the time children become adolescents, the
linguistic division between parents and children has become an emotional chasm. Pupils frequently
become alienated from the cultures of both home and school with predictable results.
Câu hỏi (questions )
Question 1 - 4
Choose the correct letter A, B, C or D.
B A culturally rich education programme benefits some children more than others.
3 The writer believes that when young children have a firm grasp of their mother tongue
A they can teach older family members what they learnt at school.
D they develop stronger relationships with their family than with their peers.
4 Why are some people suspicious about mother tongue-based teaching programmes?
A They worry that children will be slow to learn to read in either language.
B They think that children will confuse words in the two languages.
C They believe that the programmes will make children less interested in their lessons.
D They fear that the programmes will use up valuable time in the school day.
Question 5 - 9
Complete the summary using the list of word, A-J, below
Bilingual Children
It was often recorded that bilingual children acquire the 5 to converse in the majority
language remarkable quickly. The fact that the mother tongue can disappear at a similar
6 is less well understood. This phenomenon depends, to a certain extent, on the
proposition of people with the same linguistic background that have settled in a particular
7 If this is limited, children are likely to lose the active use of their mother tongue. And
thus no longer employ it even with 8 , although they may still understand it. It follows that
teenager children in these circumstances experience a sense of 9 in relation to all
aspects of their lives.
A teachers
B schools
C dislocation
D rate
E time
F family
G communication
H type
I ability
J area
Question 10 - 14
Do the following statements agree with the information given in the Reading Passage?
YES if the statement agrees with the information
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
10 Less than half of the children who attend kindergarten in Toronto have English as their mother tongue.
11 Research proves that learning the host country language at school can have an adverse effect on a
child’s mother tongue.
13 Bilingual children are taught to tell the time earlier than monolingual children.
14 Bilingual children can apply reading comprehension strategies acquired in one language when reading
in the other.
Answer key (đáp án và giải thích )
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