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Arabic on Copenhagen schools syllabus

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City Council aims to recognise Arabic-speaking population by adding a new optional school subject

School pupils in Copenhagen will be able to take Arabic as a second language from the age of 12, following a new decision from the Education Ministry.

Copenhagen’s city council had applied to the ministry to offer Arabic, alongside the existing language subjects of English, French and German.

The ministry has turned down the request as it wants to keep the standard languages, reports Jyllands-Posten newspaper, and instead Arabic will be an optional subject offered in 7th grade.

Danish People’s Party (DF) education spokeswoman, Marlene Harpsøe said the decision was a catastrophe.

‘It’s not public schools’ job to teach Arabic. It’s something you can do in your spare time. Arabic isn’t a language that you need in the same way as German for example, as Germany is a large trading partner,’ Harpsøe said.

Schools already have the option of offering languages such as Arabic as optional subject choices in 8th and 9th grade, but according to the ministry, no schools have chosen to do so.

The Danish Union of Teachers previously recommended that Arabic be introduced in schools and union spokeswoman Dorte Lange was pleased with the news about the Copenhagen project.

‘We live in a globalised world and every day deal with Arabic countries among others. Schools should also look past Europe and offer language subjects such as Arabic, Hindi, Chinese and Turkish,’ Lange said.

Social Democrat education spokesman for Copenhagen, Jan Andreasen, believes DF had misunderstood the inclusion of Arabic on the syllabus.

‘It won’t replace the teaching of Danish. We just want to utilise the fact we have a large Arabic population in Copenhagen who could be better at Arabic and use the language in their business career,’ said Andreasen.

‘Many of these young people have problems because they don’t speak Danish or Arabic so well’.

Comments
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seasonticket  - Yay!   |2009-11-27 11:07:32
In my country, some schools are teaching Mandarin and it is so exciting.

In my day, we were only taught "standard" French, German (or Spanish if you went to a posh school)... Widening children's horizons when they are young will open up so much in terms of trade and understanding.
I would have loved to have been taught Japanese or Swahili at school and have had to pay for evening class and books myself. (and of course, as an adult, language learning is always tricky)

We also have a system (in some of the inner city schools, especially), of having "home" languages formally taught after school which I think is more than a gesture of "your culture is important and we want to integrate with it" but putting those words into action.
damestjernelys  - To be honest,   |2009-11-27 14:00:25
I'd like to see a wider variety of foreign language available for students to select from in all schools here in Denmark, starting earlier than what they already typically do. The more languages a person can learn, the better.. we may use English as the 'lingua franca' in so many things, but to sit and chat with everyday people online, or to travel on holiday, browse websites, travel abroad.. it's helpful to actually KNOW the native language.

This is a good step forward. Let's increase the selection to students from here :)
Alma  - cool   |2010-01-08 16:17:11
its cool that danes let the kids learn more languages
 

 

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