On September 14th
India commemorated ‘Hindi Divas’. It was on this day in 1949 when Hindi (Devnagari
script) was adopted as the Official Language by the Constituent Assembly of
India. Being among the handful preschools
in the country to impart structured Hindi early childhood education programme weaved
into the main English programme curriculum from playschool (1.5 years) onward,
we celebrate this day every year at our preschool. We firmly believe in the importance of multilingual
education. As long as there is consistent exposure, children can learn up to 21
languages when in preschool. As compared to children who just speak just one
language bilingual children can communicate better, read more, decode words
effectively, are very creative and are good at problem solving. A 1974 UNESCO
report on interactions between Linguistics and mathematical Education underlined
the interdependence of language skills and mathematical skills.
English has of course been
gaining ground so far over the other vernacular mediums including Hindi for the
obvious saleability and ‘prestige’ factor associated with it. An English
graduate with second class is far likelier to be given a job rather than a first-class
graduate in a regional language with second language as English.
India follows a three-language
education policy - regional language, English and Hindi. However, arguably, the
curricular objectives of teaching regional language, Hindi and English have to
be clearly defined. Skill oriented teaching of Hindi and prose in regional literatures
are hardly pursued. Moreover the approach to language education is rigid. There
is no distinction between teaching language as a subject and using language as
a medium.
Languages are interdependent and
critical in both formal and non-formal education. Given that literacy is
primarily a language related competence, is it a surprise that a nation
speaking 700 languages has yet to achieve 100% literacy levels? In a multilingual
nation like India it is imperative to work out ways to seam languages - those
spoken at home and at school. We need to
expose children to languages simultaneously early on; particularly at the rural
levels. The sudden introduction of formal English or second language post-primary
after being exposed to monolingual education throughout primary education
perpetuates inequalities. The need of the hour is to work out a strategic bilingual
pre-primary and primary education programme for a structured and integrated transfer
from home to school language.
It is time we stopped
politicising language study and bracket communities or strata as per the
language spoken. No language has more credence over the other. Hindi is the
third most spoken language in the world after Mandarin Chinese and English. Even
the US has designated Hindi as a ‘super-critical needs language’, among the
topmost category of languages in the new century. China has introduced study of
Hindi in many of its universities. Hindi is also expected to figure among the
six global languages in the coming centuries. Undoubtedly, we need our citizens
to be proficient in English keeping in mind its universal appeal. However, the
essence of the study of Hindi, English and regional language is complementary.
It isn’t competitive. How can one touch the mind and the other the heart?
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