FYI. The following article from the Freetown paper Standard Times was
seen on AllAfrica.com at
http://allafrica.com/stories/200606300365.html ...  DZO


Sierra Leone: Our Local Languages Help Our Kids to Understand

Standard Times (Freetown)
[no URL]
June 29, 2006
Posted to the web June 30, 2006

A.Y. Kallay

In Sierra Leone we are still struggling to improve education
standards. The reason behind that is because of the failure of the
Ministry of Education (MEST) to properly endorse using local languages
as a medium of instruction in schools.

The 'Report of the Public Hearing on the Right to Basic Education' by
the Sierra Leone Human Rights Commission (SIHRC), examined the host of
challenges facing educational transformation in the country. Among the
many problems - from poverty to classroom violence - it noted a
glaring problem: 60 percent of school children in both urban and rural
schools are finding it very difficult to comprehend the language of
their instructors.

"An inadequate command of language, whether by the teacher, the
learner or both, constitutes a serious barrier to effective schooling
and education," said the report, which synthesized the views gathered
from public hearings held in 2005.

English is the home language of only less than 10 percent of the
population, but is an "inspirational" language. Many parents want
their children to be taught in English from as early an age as possible.

However, "research has proven many times children who learn in their
mother tongues in the early stages of schooling have a better chance
of passing their public examinations. They are not disadvantaged
because they start learning other languages and concepts a little
latter," explained one educationist of this Country.

"Vernacular instruction lays a foundation of understanding, from which
transition into second and third languages becomes much easier. Those
who start by learning foreign languages often find understanding and
conception of issues difficult and their performance is always the
worst," he recalled. Sierra Leone has 16 official languages.

Every September, with the release of the national BECE/WASSCE results,
Sierra Leone goes through a painful bout of soul-searching. Despite
the government's commitment to education, over the past four years the
pass rate has fallen. Nobody knows how this year's is going to be.

The SLHRC report pointed to the continuing problem of poverty, and
race and class-based inequalities in access to learning resources.

"There are currently stark imbalances in the quality of education
experienced by learners," it noted. "The disadvantaged lack the means
and social power to speak out and claim their rights. Poverty
reinforces exclusion. Social cohesion is not being promoted.

Townships, the poor and rural households are being marginalized within
the dominant discourse on education." Teaching Job became in for
particular criticism at the public hearings. Teachers are trained and
-qualified, but the manners their salary scales are, is situation,
which renders them incapable of implementing the needs of a
complicated new curriculum 6334.

"There is a big crisis in relation to the teachers.

They face problems of morale and poor motivation, which affects the
delivery of basic education because it fuels truancy and generally
irresponsibility," one PTA member said.

"The other, biggest challenge is the high number of trained and
qualified teachers who are to deliver, are reserving their energy for
private schools, where they go for part-time Jobs for a heavier
parcel" The government should consider increasing salaries and offer
bursaries for continuous teacher training programmes as new schools
are in the increase. In 2005, the western area alone got over 12 new
government assisted schools and we are expecting more this year.






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