Bridges and Barriers

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A01=Eddie Williams
african
African Development Bank
Author_Eddie Williams
bilingual education research
Box Plots
Category=CFB
Category=JN
Category=KCM
classroom language dynamics
Conventional Statistical Significance Level
Data Sets
Education System
educational equity studies
english
English Reading Lessons
English Reading Proficiency
English Reading Test
English Test Results
English Test Scores
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experimental World Literacy Programme
Facility Values
GLM Output
Home School Language Switch
individual
Individual Reading Sessions
L1 Reading Ability
language
language of instruction impact in Africa
language policy analysis
languages
literacy acquisition methods
Low Scoring Group
Lowest General Performance
Malawian Students
Mutual Comprehensibility
Primary Reading Programme
reading
Reading Test Scores
results
sessions
sociolinguistics in Africa
test
zambian
Zambian Children
Zambian Languages
Zambian Students

Product details

  • ISBN 9781900650977
  • Weight: 780g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2006
  • Publisher: St Jerome Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Recent decades have seen sub-Saharan Africa decline in both economic and human terms. The rich North has responded with a barrage of well-publicized initiatives, from pop concerts to international commitments on debt relief, aid, trade and good governance. Among the complex of factors necessary to sustain economic and human development, education receives little media coverage, although it is crucial. However, education must be effective.

This book argues that in 'Anglophone' Africa, education is not effective because of the use of English, rather than children's first languages, both as the medium of instruction, and also as the language in which children are first taught to read. Research is presented from Malawi and Zambia, countries with contrasting language policies, using evidence from tests in English and African languages, small-group discussions and classroom observation. The findings show that English-medium policies in Africa do not give students any advantage in English over first-language policies, while the use of English discriminates against girls and rural children.

The book concludes that much education in Africa is a barrier rather than a bridge to learning because of the prevailing language ideology, which has resulted in massive over-estimation of the value of English. While appropriate language policies alone will not solve education and development difficulties in Africa, they do have a positive contribution to make. The evidence presented here suggests they are failing to make that contribution.

Eddie Williams has worked on language and literacy projects in many African countries, and published widely on language policy, development and reading in multilingual contexts. Until retiring, he was professor of Applied Linguistics at Bangor University, Wales, prior to which he worked at the Centre for Applied Language Studies at the University of Reading.

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