Children
are starting to learn foreign languages at an increasingly early age in Europe,
with most pupils beginning when they are 6-9 years old, according to a report
published by the European Commission. A majority of countries or regions have
lowered the starting age for compulsory language learning in the past 15 years
and some even offer it in pre-school - the German speaking community in
Belgium, for instance, provides foreign language learning for children as young
as 3. The Key Data on Teaching Languages at School in Europe 2012 report
confirms that English is by far the most taught foreign language in nearly all
European countries, with French, Spanish, German and Russian following far
behind.
"Linguistic
and cultural diversity is one of the European Union's major assets," says
Androulla Vassiliou, Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and
Youth. "Language learning facilitates communication between peoples and
countries, as well as encouraging cross-border mobility and the integration of
migrants. I am happy to see that even our youngest citizens are being exposed
to the joys of discovering foreign languages. I also encourage people to look
beyond the most widely-used languages so they can appreciate Europe's
incredible linguistic diversity."
The
report highlights that an increasing number of pupils now learn two languages
for at least one year during compulsory education. On average, in 2009/10,
60.8% of lower secondary education students were learning two or more foreign
languages - an increase of 14.1% compared to 2004/05. During the same period,
the proportion of primary education pupils not learning a foreign language fell
from 32.5% to 21.8%.
English
is the most taught foreign language in nearly all of the 32 countries covered
in the survey (27 Member States, Croatia, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and
Turkey) – a trend that has significantly increased since 2004/05. In lower
secondary and general upper secondary education, the percentage of students
learning English exceeds 90%.Only a very small percentage of pupils (0-5 %,
according to the country) learn languages other than English, French, Spanish,
German and Russian.
The
report also confirms a rather surprising finding - few countries require their
trainee language teachers to spend an immersion period abroad. Indeed, only
53.8 % of foreign language teachers who took part in the recently published
European Survey on Language Competences (IP/12/679) stated they have spent more
than a month studying in a country where the language they teach is spoken. But
this average masks a wide variation of approaches: 79.7% of Spanish teachers
have spent more than one month studying their chosen language in a country
where it is spoken, while this applies to only 11% of Estonian teachers . These
findings raise the question of whether exposing future teachers to
on-the-ground experience of using the language should be considered as a
quality criterion in teacher training.
The
importance of language learning was a focus of the 'Multilingualism in Europe'
conference, which the Commission organised in Limassol, Cyprus, on 26-28
September. Commissioner Vassiliou delivered the keynote speech.
From http://europa.eu
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