NiallBeag wrote:
Saoirse wrote:
When there is perceived to be a problem with the teaching of maths in this country, they throw millions and millions into extra training for all teachers. When there is perceived to be a problem with the teaching of Irish, they instantly question whether in fact it is really worth teaching to students. I have heard it for years.
I attended a Scottish Parliament consultation on language teaching in primary a few years ago. The Scottish government is planning a "1+2" model -- 1 first language and 2 others. Kids are expected to start their first second language no later than P3, and the second no later than P5. There was lots of talk about training courses, teaching resources and social networks for teachers. It was pretty disappointing that it really wasn't accepted that two-week training courses are just bugger-all use for prepping language teachers.
The whole primary teaching profession is accustomed to working with a very superficial knowledge of a broad variety of areas of study, because that usually works, but they just can't see that this is woefully insufficient for language -- you can't be just one page ahead of the students. Really, you have to be pretty much fluent to teach even absolute beginners.
I agree. I've maintained for some time that the Irish government is missing a great opportunity with its allocation of resources for teaching Irish. There are probably sufficient good teachers to make pre-school and the first several grades of
all primary schools Irish only, and that's where they should concentrate the resources. At that age, kids absorb languages like sponges, and even a child entering pre-school with little Irish would be fluent in a year or two, especially since it's the perfect age to teach through stories, games, songs, videos, and other fun activities. After 10-15 years, every child in Ireland would be fluent, apart form the youngest not yet in pre-school, and the spread of knowledge of the language would build with each generation.
After the immersion period, things should largely be based on demand, without compulsion. Where there is demand and the additional resources, there could be continuing Gaelscoileanna and also Gaelchóláistí. Initially, though, I think it would be better to concentrate any remaining resources on setting things up so that, after the immersion period, each child would have one, or ideally two, hours of instruction per day through the medium of Irish, to keep up their skills (at least somewhat), perhaps compulsorily for a few further grades, and entirely voluntary from then on.
With nearly all students having a good basic grasp of Irish and a good portion of them having enjoyed learning it, there would be a decent amount of demand to continue with some exposure, and in those cases where there is just no such desire, I think the system should just give up. Students who fall into that category are not really learning now, and there's no way to make them learn Irish. Ironically, though, after the immersion period, any student unwilling to continue with Irish would still maintain a decent grasp of the language, whether he/she liked it or not, and there would probably be a stealthy building up of Irish knowledge even in the most anti-Gaeilge quarters of society over the years.
The virtue of this approach is that it would eliminate a lot of the grumbling about mandatory Irish lessons which is so much of the problem today. You'd have to teach reading and writing of English in the early years, to keep the parents happy (which I assume is already done in the Gaelscoileanna to some extent), but parents would be more open to letting their kids "play" in Irish for the first few years than they are with their kids "wasting their time" with Irish in the later, "more important" school years. And. as I said, with each passing generation, learning Irish as a kid (if they didn't speak it already, after a few generations of this) would seem just a normal part of life, and could lead to the point where more and more people are comfortable with Irish (and even using it) and see knowing Irish as something of importance to their culture.