1 / 14

EXPERIENCES OF SCHOOLING OF SAORA CHILDREN STUDYING IN MLE AND ODIA-MEDIUM SCHOOLS

EXPERIENCES OF SCHOOLING OF SAORA CHILDREN STUDYING IN MLE AND ODIA-MEDIUM SCHOOLS. BY SAKSHI MANOCHA, NMRC, JNU. INTRODUCTION. MULTILINGUAL RUBRIC OF INDIA 3372 MOTHER TONGUES (1576 listed, 1796 as ‘other’ languages) 22+1 OFFICIAL LANGUAGES

montana
Télécharger la présentation

EXPERIENCES OF SCHOOLING OF SAORA CHILDREN STUDYING IN MLE AND ODIA-MEDIUM SCHOOLS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EXPERIENCES OF SCHOOLING OF SAORA CHILDREN STUDYING IN MLE AND ODIA-MEDIUM SCHOOLS BY SAKSHI MANOCHA, NMRC, JNU

  2. INTRODUCTION MULTILINGUAL RUBRIC OF INDIA • 3372 MOTHER TONGUES (1576 listed, 1796 as ‘other’ languages) • 22+1 OFFICIAL LANGUAGES • 80% of the Indian languages (most of them being tribal) are excluded from the mainstream society.

  3. Consequences of exclusion of Home language • Poor education performance • High rates of ‘Push-out’ • Capability deprivation and poverty • Loss of Diversity ( see Mohanty ,2008; ToveSkutnabbKangas 2000).

  4. MLE PROGRAMME • MLE PROGRAMME: It is a mother tongue based Multilingual Education programme based on Jim Cummins BICS and CALP. • L1 BASED MLE PROGRAMME WAS INITIATED ON PILOT BASIS IN TWO STATES OF INDIA: ANDHRA PRADESH IN 2003 AND IN ODISHA IN 2006

  5. HOME LANGUAGE OPEN THE DOORS FOR CHILD’S CULTURE TO BECOME AN ESSENTIAL PART OF CLASSROOM PRACTICES Example: USING LOCAL MEASURING SYSTEM TO TEACH CHILDREN ABOUT UNIVERSAL MEASURING SYSTEM. My favourite subject is maths because I like the way sir teaches addition, subtraction, multiplication and division with the help of our games and our songs.”- Student, MLE school.

  6. Children elated to have their language, games and songs in school “I like language class, because, in this subject we read our stories and sing our songs. I enjoy them a lot.”-Student, MLE school

  7. FEARLESS VOICES OF CHILDREN IN MLE SCHOOL Initially, I was afraid of coming to school but because our teacher is so warm and friendly and he teaches us in Saora, I felt much better and now I enjoy coming to school. I like to read, write and playing with my friends in school.” – Student, MLE school. • Children actively participate in classroom discourses. • Do not take knowledge as filtered by teachers and voice their opinions

  8. Saora children Feeling alienated in odia-medium school “Our teacher doesn’t teach us in Saora and as we don’t know Oriya, I find it difficult to understand what all he teaches in class.”- Student, Odia Medium school.

  9. Culture of silence in Odia-Medium schools • Children wanted to avoid teacher’s question and attention. • Children remained tight lipped in class room. • Took knowledge as filtered down by the teacher.

  10. Articulation about one’s self and culture • Children in MLE schools could narrate their experiences, articulate their thoughts, spoke about their culture with pride. • Children in Odia Medium schools were hesitant to narrate their schooling experiences, were scared to talk about their culture and could not express their thoughts and feelings in Oriya. “No, I don’t know any poem or song not even in Saora. Our teacher doesn’t teach us any poem or song, so I don’t know.”-Student.

  11. STUDENT-TEACHER RELATIONSHIP • Engaging teaching-learning experiences of children in MLE schools and a bond that they shared with the teacher created a strong sense of identification with the school whereby students saw school not as threatening but rather their ‘own space’. • The estranged teaching-learning environment and poor teacher-student relationship made school an alien place for Saora children studying in Odia- medium schools.

  12. CONCLUSION • Although this study was carried out in primary classes of MLE and odia-medium schools, the findings of this study can be extended to ECCE. • Use of Home language in Early childhood education can allow children to emotionally connect with teachers and identify and feel like a valued part of the school. Thus leading to healthy Social and emotional development.

  13. Use of Home Languages allows teachers to establish a link between school and every day knowledge of the child thus enhancing their cognitive and meta-cognitive skills. (See, NMRC Longitudinal study for more details). • Implications for Language development.

  14. THANK YOU

More Related