Главная страница «Первого сентября»Главная страница журнала «Английский язык»Содержание №16/2007
Seven-Year-Olds to Take Language
NEWS IN BRIEF

SEVEN-YEAR-OLDS TO TAKE LANGUAGE

Modern foreign language lessons are to be compulsory for the first time in England’s primary schools.

Education Secretary Alan Johnson backs the recommendation of a review by Lord Dearing that all children should learn a language from the age of seven. This should happen by 2010, as part of the next curriculum overhaul. There is no immediate move to reverse the decision to make languages optional beyond 14 – despite a sharp fall in the number of pupils taking GCSEs.
In 2004, pupils were allowed to drop languages in Key Stage 4, the two GCSE years. Ministers said they were bowing to the subject’s unpopularity.
Since then the numbers taking a GCSE qualification have fallen from about three quarters of the age group to half, with the biggest decline being in state comprehensives. In response, ministers commissioned a review from Lord Dearing. His report says languages should be compulsory from seven to 14.
There should be a three-year “blueprint” of fresh measures aimed at bringing about a renaissance in secondary language learning. These include a web-based “Open School for Languages”, more “engaging” courses and further training for teachers. An annual budget of £50m should underpin the teaching, the report said.
“I want languages to be at the heart of learning,” Mr. Johnson said. “The earlier you start learning a language the better. Making language study compulsory from 7 to 14 will give pupils seven years to build up their knowledge, confidence and experience.” By that time, he hopes they will have built up “a critical mass of knowledge” and a love of languages. The report does not say GCSE-level study should again be compulsory. But it does expect a significant reversal in the decline, backed by Ofsted inspections and government targets. And it says that if a recovery cannot be achieved, there should indeed be “a return to a modified mandatory curriculum” – albeit with a “slimmer” programme of study than used to be the case.
A Department for Education and Skills spokesman said: “Obviously if things did not improve, then we would have to look at the issue of compulsion again.”
Lord Dearing told BBC News that 70% of primary schools were already “on the way” to teaching languages. “It is the best time to start learning a language because you do pick it up so much more easily. The rest of Europe is starting at seven, it’s about time we did.”
The Welsh Assembly Government said the results from its evaluation of pilot language lessons in primary schools had been very encouraging. It was going to track the pupils’ progress through GCSEs and beyond to see if they should be compulsory.
The British Chambers of Commerce said it was disappointed the report had not supported the reinstatement of compulsory language learning at Key Stage 4.
“We believe that the government’s decision to make languages optional at this level was a mistake and not a reflection of the importance of language skills to the UK economy,” it said.
Shadow Schools Minister Nick Gibb said Lord Dearing’s report did nothing to tackle the underlying causes of the problem. “We welcome the recommendation that languages should be taught in primary school from the age of seven, but the government should have ensured that this was in place before its decision to downgrade languages at GCSE,” he said.

Story from BBC NEWS