Posted on 12/23/2002 6:41:07 AM PST by MadIvan
We all know le problème: we are a nation of monoglots, linguistically challenged and so culturally inferior and economically constrained. Only one in four of us can claim to speak in foreign tongues, whereas our chic European chums babble away in a veritable Babel. European governments have lobbied, and the British Government has responded: from 2010 every primary school shall teach foreign. Its a further good intention paving the road to ruin of our education system. We should shrug off our linguistic hang-ups, and instead of reinforcing language teaching, abolish it tout de suite.
Ordering everyone to learn another language is as pointless as ordering everyone to dig holes and fill them up. The reward for our ancestors persuading the rest of the world to speak English is that there is no need for us to learn what the rest of the world speaks.
All the time we spend learning another language, we should spend instead learning something useful like economics, business studies, politics, law or computer science. If everyone in the country were forced to study economics as remorselessly as they are forced to learn French, then Britain would be in a far better state (true reform of the NHS would have happened decades ago).
Learning another language may make you feel clever, but it is no longer necessary for speaking with the foreigners youre most likely to want to speak to: the educated and those working in tourism. Ever regretted you didnt spend years learning German because of problems communicating with German labourers? I thought not.
I spent three hours a week for six years learning French, but it has proved a total waste of time. I have only needed it on a handful of occasions, and even then it was tourist French learnable in a couple of weeks. I have family friends in France, and have had many enjoyable conversations with our Gallic neighbours, but always in English. I have extended family in Norway and Denmark, but hardly speak either language because I never get the chance: all my Scandinavian relatives speak perfect English.
In contrast to all our continental cousins, Britain is part of the Anglosphere, by far the most powerful linguistic bloc in the world: the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, Ireland and New Zealand as well as countries such as South Africa and India where English is the language of business and politics. Three of the G7 countries are anglophone.
Even outside the Anglosphere you can thrive with impunity as an English monoglot: you can work with no problems in the European Commission, the European Central Bank and countless multinational companies around the world. There is no obvious alternative language French is only useful in a couple of developed countries and North Africa, and Spanish helps you on holiday in Cuba.
Dont get me wrong: I understand the smug satisfaction of mastering another tongue, but it is damaging to force it on the entire population. European children spend 15 per cent of their time learning foreign languages by the age of ten imagine the advantages we would have if our kids did something more interesting in that time than learning how to ask for un café.
The Government is swimming against the tide of history: as more people learn English, the more pointless it is for Britons to learn another language. There are fewer and fewer people in the world worth speaking to who dont speak English. Already the number of people studying languages at A level in Britain is plummeting.
The Governments recent announcement that it is no longer compulsory to learn a foreign language up to GCSE is a welcome dose of reality. But it should go the whole hog, and stop forcing everyone to learn useless knowledge that they will never need, and hardly ever use.
Tigim leat go hiomlan.
I don't agree with the premise that modern language study is a waste of time. Requiring all students in high school to take a foriegn language is a waste of time, but on an individual basis, acquiring speaking knowledge of another language is a very rewarding experience. I think Mark Twain said," Acquiring another language is like getting another soul". He learned German late in life like I did.
He also said something to the effect that one had to wait for the second act of a Wagnerian opera to get to the verb.
I also believe that language shapes an individual's perception of the world. The exactitude of the German language parallels and probably accounts for their renowned precision.
The most widely spoken language in the world is and will always be broken English, however. For non-English speakers, learning some English is a must.
And also, our refusal to speak any other language drives the French and Germans absolutely barmy. ;)
If true, one of the sweetest things I've ever read regarding language on this forum. Oh man, you made my day.
Right next to the guitars, senor. :-)
Oops...I meant banyo!!
I guess that would make the banjos wet ones, eh? [g]
Hey - I only took high school Spanish!
My wife learned that one, and used it to great effect, when we were assigned to Mannheim.
She was "detained" by the Military Police once at the streetcar stop. It seems that one of those smelly, scruffy, anti-American protesters was in her face about Reagan's deployment of tactical nukes to Germany. She proceeded to smack him with her purse and, when he was down on the ground, commenced to beating him with his own sign. When the 1x4 shaft of the sign broke, she kicked him a few times for good measure until he broke and ran.
The MPs were highly amused about the incident and, since there was no "complaint" filed, they released her to my custody ...
... yeah, like I could restrain her ... right ...
Your effort would have been much more productive if you had studied Latin instead.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.