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Seoul Tries To Shock Parents Out Of Linguistic Surgery
Independent (UK) ^ | 1-3-2004 | Kathy Marks

Posted on 01/02/2004 4:33:19 PM PST by blam

Seoul tries to shock parents out of linguistic surgery

By Kathy Marks in Sydney
03 January 2004

In South Korea's society of lofty aspirations, mastery of the English language is so highly prized that ambitious parents are forcing their children to have painful tongue surgery in order to give them perfect pronunciation.

The operation, which involves snipping the thin tissue under the tongue to make it longer and supposedly nimbler, has become so common that the government has produced a film in an effort to shock parents into shunning the practice. The film, made by the National Human Rights Com-mission, shows a woman taking her son to a clinic so that he can perform flawlessly in his kindergarten's English-language Christmas play. The boy screams as she and the nurses hold him down, with his mother insisting: "It's all for his future." The procedure, which involves chopping half an inch off the frenulum, is often carried out on children under the age of five.

Park Jin-pyo, the director of the film, used footage from a real operation and said that most people were unable to watch the surgery scenes. He said: "I wanted them to see how our society tramples our children's human rights in the name of their future."

Parents in South Korea, a highly competitive society obsessed with education, already go to great lengths to provide their children with a head start in learning English. They play their children nursery rhymes in the womb, hire expensive tutors for toddlers and send pre-school children to the US for sought-after American accents.

Speaking fluent English, the language of choice in global business, is regarded as a prerequisite for getting ahead. English-language teaching is a multibillion-dollar industry, and children as young as seven are sent on evening "crammer" courses.

The surgery craze took off because of a perception that Asian people find it difficult to pronounce "l" and "r" sounds. However, doctors ridicule the idea that the Korean tongue is too short or inflexible to cope with the English language, saying that practice - not an operation - is required.

Park Bom-chung, a doctor at Kangnam Sacred Heart Hospital in Seoul, said: "Doing the surgery on a normal kid just for English pronunciation doesn't make anatomical sense at all."

The operation, a simple procedure performed after the children are given a local anaesthetic, is carried out in the West when the frenulum is abnormal and causes a speech impediment. There are no statistics on the number of children subjected to the surgery in South Korea, but Korean media report that the procedure is widespread in the wealthier districts of Seoul.

Learning English is a national fixation in South Korea, where a hot-line has been set up for people to report errors of English spelling or grammar on signs. Admission to an elite university is seen as pivotal to a child's opportunities in life, including marriage prospects.

Psychologists say that small children face intolerable pressures, with infants sitting in front of English teaching videos for up to five hours a day. One story carried by a weekly magazine, Dong-A, was headlined: "English makes children's lives hell!"

Cha Kyoung-ae, an English professor at a Seoul university, said: "English is now becoming a means of survival. Entering a college, getting jobs and getting promoted - many things hinge heavily on your mastery of English. The surgery may be an extreme case, but it reflects a social phenomenon."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: linguistic; parents; seoul; shock; southkorea; surgery
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To: cajungirl
I think it was done for kids with articulation problems. And it is interesting the Human Rights whatevers are going ballistic over this. Why aren't they screaming about circumcision,,surely as bad as this. I know I am opening a pandora's box here but hey, it is Friday, I got nothing to do tonite.
21 posted on 01/02/2004 5:56:56 PM PST by cajungirl (I adore the Brits!! Tony Blair is my hero!!)
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To: DallasMike
That is funny. Odd how tv or movie phrases become part of a family's communication. My sisters and I saw Stepford Wives at a young age,,we stilll do the "what you need is a nice cop of coffee" in Stepford wife style and crack each other up.
22 posted on 01/02/2004 5:58:24 PM PST by cajungirl (I adore the Brits!! Tony Blair is my hero!!)
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To: cajungirl
"Nice fresh perked cup of coffee"
23 posted on 01/02/2004 6:00:42 PM PST by cajungirl (I adore the Brits!! Tony Blair is my hero!!)
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To: blam
One third of my children here in the USA needed this procedure. The oldest daughter could not touch the roof of her mouth with the tip of her tongue. She could not lick her lips. The strap between the mid-line of the bottom of the tongue and the gums behind the lower middle teeth was very short and literally tied the tongue tip to the base of the teeth. This caused slurring of Ts, Ns, etc. The first doc botched it and it grew back together in a few weeks. Had to do it all over again. Not very pleasant at the time, but she now assures me that she would do it all over again. She can almost touch her nose with the tip of the tongue now. Fortunately she can not quite pull the famous Stitch maneuver.

I think this is the same procedure that the article is about, but I am not positive. If so, IIHO, this is much less painful, and definitely less painful in the long term, than braces for imperfect teeth. On the other hand, is it worth it just for the Korean child to excel at the nonnative English language? I am unqualified to respond to that.
24 posted on 01/02/2004 6:06:39 PM PST by Geritol (Lord willing, there will be a later...)
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To: radiohead
"I know a bunch of people of Korean heritage, some born here, some who came over as kids. They all speak English perfectly. If it was a genetic issue particular to Koreans, they too would have problems speaking English. "

Yes, I had two Korean (engineers) employees (male & female) and they both spoke perfect English. The female was raised in Texas and had a slight Texas drawl. The male was an immigrant from Korea.

25 posted on 01/02/2004 6:07:15 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
It is simple to prove how nonsensical this is. Track a Korean baby who was sent to Britian or the US for adoption. All babies learn the language in which they are raised. Simple linguistics. Parents want to give their babies a step up--they should learn perfect English. One parent could speak Korean all day and the other English. The kids may mishmash the languages for a couple of years, but it will smooth out and they will be bilingual.
26 posted on 01/02/2004 6:10:19 PM PST by Ruth A.
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To: blam
where a hot-line has been set up for people to report errors of English spelling or grammar on signs

The folks at engrish.com aren't going to like that.

27 posted on 01/02/2004 6:12:36 PM PST by KarlInOhio (Plate Teutonics: The theory that Germans are moving the continents.)
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To: Theresawithanh
How very cunning of you to come up with that!

Yes, it clearly was not fallacious.

28 posted on 01/02/2004 6:28:09 PM PST by Jeff Gordon (arabed - verb: lower in esteem; hurt the pride of [syn: mortify, chagrin, humble, abase, humiliate])
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To: Ruth A.
It is simple to prove how nonsensical this is. Track a Korean baby who was sent to Britian or the US for adoption. All babies learn the language in which they are raised.

Correct.

One of the funnier examples was a stand-up comedian I once saw (I regret I forget his name). He was full-blooded Korean, and looked every bit of it, but he had been raised from infancy in Tennessee, and had a perfectly natural "American hillbilly" accent that he couldn't hide if he tried, and not a shred of Asian accent. It made such an incongruous effect that he wrote his comedy act around it. And his act was hilarious.

29 posted on 01/02/2004 7:21:52 PM PST by Ichneumon
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