The suggestion that Esperanto should replace ESL/FSL classes in schools is proposterous,
How so? I'm not necessarily a partisan of Esperanto per se, but of an easy to learn language. Esperanto is one candidate for such. English isn't.
and it comes from wanting to propagate a planned language movement of which you are a part.
Whether I am or not irrelevent to the topic at hand. That would be equivalent to saying that because a person is a member of US English Inc. he has nothing valuable to say about US language policy.
I am not trying to knock Esperanto, it was a fine idea, but I'm not prepared to throw my own country's languages out the window for it.
You obviously havn't been reading! When did I ever suggest you not learn your language? I'm confused by this statement.
Both French and English are perfectly learnable languages, and also perfectly suitable subjects for every Canadian school.
Thus the miserable faulure in our school system?
To call their teaching a waste of time and money just because not as many people are fluent in the other language as you would hope is exactly like saying that the teaching of mathematics is pointless if everyone can't be a brilliant mathemetician as a result.
Not at all alike. Lower-level maths is useful even if one doesn't attain a high degree of perfection in it. If I know no algebra, but can add and subtract, I can therefore calculate the cost of a product at the market. If I need higher-level maths, yet for whatever reason can't learn it, then I can always explain to another person, using clear language, what I want him to do an he could do the calculation for me.
If all I know is basic English, however, and get cought up in a legal case in English Canada, how will I communicate with my lawyer? Or if a car hits me and the paramedics arrive asking questions about what happend, pain, allergies, etc., how will we communicate? Algebra is not an issue when it comes to defending one's legal rights, or in an emergency situation. Language is a part of every aspect of our lives. I'm sure a Quebecois travelling through BC won't care about Shakespeare if he's hit by a car. At that stage technical usage is necessary. But in addition, being able to read original literature in a language is a bonus too. With English, he might have neither, whereas with an easier language, he might have both.
So you can try to squirm away from logic with words like 'preposterous', or I'm a member of some movement and so my words don't count. Those are copouts. Please present logical arguments.
Learning a language does open you up to other cultures, if only exposing you to something that you would otherwise never have known.
Again, tis applies only to those who learn the language successfully. I've met people who'de been stuudying Englihs for over a decade and still can't use it! So how does that allow for any cultural exchange beyond 'I hate English; I wanna give up!'?
Before learning French, I never knew of all the excellent films, music, literature etc... available to me. And now, not only can I communicate with people in my own country but I can also go to France, Belgium, Switzerland, North Africa, Lebanon, West Africa, many countries in the Carribean and in the Pacific Islands.
I fully agree with you here. For those students, like you and me, who CAN learn more difficult language, the option ought to be available. I can travel through China without an interpreter. Mingbai le ma? Wo ganjue ne bu mingbai.Ruguo, ni bu mingbai, wode Hanyu meiyou yong le, bu shi ma? Xiang yi Xiang ba!
But as you can see, if you know no Chinese, regardless of China's being such a large country, regardless of Chinese being spoken by so many people in the world, Chinese is useless to you. It is ony useful to yo IF and only IF you can learn it. If a student shows the interest and motivation for it, great. He can learn all the languages he wants. But as for the rest of the students, turn them to a language they can learn.
As for no one speaking Esperanto, no one knows for sure how many can speak it. But this might give you some idea of its range of use in science, government, radio, religion, commerce, and education:
The International Academy of Sciences (AIS) San Marino:
http://www.ais-sanmarino.org/
No one knows for sure how many people speak Esperanto, but it is used by China Radio International (China's BBC if you will):
http://esperanto.cri.cn/
Radio Italy:
http://www.international.rai.it/radio/multilingue/ram/esperanto.ram
Le Monde Diplomatique:
http://eo.mondediplo.com/
The official Cuban information agency:
http://www.cubanoticoj.ain.cu/
the official Chinese news agency:
http://www.chinareport.com.cn/index.htm
Radio Polonia:
http://www.polskieradio.pl/eo/
Vatican Radio:
www.radiovaticana.org
Religious organizations:
Christianity:
http://www.chez.com/keli/
Catholicism (approved officially by the Vatican):
http://www.ikue.org/
(You can also read the words of the late Pope John Paul II in the original Esperanto. He himself praised the language on more than one occasion, in both Italian and Esperanto itself for he himself could speak the language.)
Buddhist:
International:
http://esperanto.us/Budhanaj/malgxusta_url.html
China:
http://www.ebudhano.cn/
Japan:
http://www001.upp.so-net.ne.jp/jble/budhismo.html
Baha'i:
http://bahaaeligo.bahai.de/
Oomoto:
http://www.oomoto.or.jp/
Ŭonbulismo</B>
http://www.uonbulismo.net/
Commercial uses:
Google:
http://www.google.com/intl/eo/
You can read more about Esperanto here. By the way, Esperanto is one of Wikipedia's most used languages. It may not be near the top, but it has still surpassed many languages on there. Impressive for this kind of language.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto
Education:
http://www.ilei.info/
By the way, the best free language-learning site I've ever come across was for Esperanto:
http://www.lernu.net/
It's a shame other language communities can't create a free site of the same quality with all the resources at their disposal. This site is completely interactive, allows students to learn on their own or work with others. Each word is 'clickable' on the spot, even in the bbs forums! Yo have access to pop music with exercises, etc.
And I nearly forgot, Espearnto TV:
http://www.internacia.tv/
And with all the problems going on with Iran, you might want to exchange ideas directly with them. There are Yahoo groups for practically every country, not to mention national organizations. Here is Iran's:
http://www.espiran.itgo.com
Can you do that so easily with English or French as your foreign language? Here in China, only those with master's degrees in English are competent enough to write contracts in my book. And even then, I've run into legal problems due to bad English on their part. Master's degrees in English. Think about it. The Chinese I've met who speak Esperanto are completely fluent. One of them teaches in a local university and is appalled at how the Chinese don't know their own grammar well since they spend so much time trying to elarn English for tests, and still can't speak it well. So much for the cultural element.
I'm not knocking the idea of Esperanto, but truthfully it will never have the appeal of a natural language.
You'd be surprised at the language loyalty it engender, primarily due to its 'interna ideo', the idea of language justice for all. Justice does have appeal for some.
Speaking of natural languages, Malay is one. It is not a planned language, it just has a highly standardised form to make communication between the island dialects easier.
Not planned? It relates to Bahasa Indonesia. Read its history. It is planned:
http://itotd.com/articles/310/bahasa-indonesia
It may not be planned to the same extent Esperanto it, but certainly more than French with its Academy Francaise. this is all relative. English is planend to a very small extent via prescriptive grammars such as Fowler's, or those of publishing companies. French a little more so via the Academy Francaise. Bahsa Indonesia, while it did start off as a natural trade pidgin, it had gone through considerable reform through commettees, not to mention that it is still a second language for most today. And it was adopted primarily as a rallying cry to unite a nation, though some still object to it. Esperanto is based on roots from many languages, organized in a logical manner. And Volapuk is even more planned in that it even modifies the roots to a considerable extent (vola = world, puk = speak).
So in the end, the question of planend versus ethnic really is not so black and white, but more of a spectrum. Who decides where along it we should draw the line?
It itself is a natural language related to others.
It depends on how you define 'natural'. According to some definitions, even English and french are not natural, but learned behaviour.
I never said that Anglophones all over the world are required to learn French, I'm saying that traditionally, French has been the second language of choice for Anglophones.
I'm well aware of that. And traditionally Southern Europe, and England for a short time, along with North Africa, were ruled by Caesars. So will we go back to the glories of the Roman Empire? Should we reinstate Latin? Tradition has nothign to do with logic, but rather sheepish mimicry.
Look it up.
Just read Gibbon's decline and fall. It was Latin, not French, if you really wanna be traditional. Hey, I believe in going to the roots. If you're gonna argue based on tradition, then get traditional will ya.
The problem is not that students in Canada are required too much to study French, the problem is that not enough emphasis is put on it.
Fine. You volunteer your money for it. But keep taxes out of it. Why should I pay more money towards it when I'm aware of a more efficient solution. If you want the government to reinstate the horse and buggy, fine. But I'd rather government offices use the internet. Maybe not very traditional, but much more efficient wouldn't you think?
Anglo-Quebeckers are required heavily to learn French in school today, and the result has been that where practically no anglophones in Quebec spoke fluent French before the Quiet Revovlution, today about 66% can.
Anglo-Quebecers do not compare with Anglo-Albertans now do they? They can actually use the language in their daily lives, and so that reinforces the learning in the classroom. There is no way you will ever get the entire population of Charlevoix to be fluent in English without massive investment in English lessons. They would have to even sacrifice quality in other areas such as maths and sciences, and maybe even French, to find the time in school to elarn it. or the other option is to go Chinese and have them go to school six days a week, shorter holidays, longer school days, etc. Fine, you donate the the money then. I'll root for ya.
As the old guard starts to die off, that number will creep up to near 100%.
So people have to die off to accomplish a task? We're talking about humans here.
For some people, the French and English languages will be a necessity, for others it will be another subject in school like all the others, and I'm fine with that.
I'm not fine with that. What we learn in school ought to be of use outside school, otherwise it
s a waste of human potential. Instead let him excel at whatever he will learn. If he ikes languages, let him specialize in it and be the best he can be at it. Fo rthe rest, then then excel at maths, or sciences, etc. To do that, just them learn an easy second language instead. This will free resources for the advancement of civilization.
It still isn't a waste of money to educate the population of a country in the official language they don't speak, even if they don't become totally fluent, they'll have some grasp of it one day when a francophone who's English is a bit shaky comes into contact with them, they can meet in the middle and get the point across.
Talk about aiming at mediocrity! If you're going to learn a language, learn it well. If you can't learn it well, then learn an easier language... well! Whatever you do, do it well. Whatever you learn, learn it well! What's the mesage we send our students when we're willing to put up with horse and buggy mediocrity all in the name of tradition when the excellence of the computer can propel us forward?
Canada has a responsibility to keep French alive in North America, because its a living language in our country and it is part of our history.
I fully agree. But to ahve everyone learn English well would require such a vast investment of time on the part of the student, where will he find the time to develop his own language? An easier second language can free him of that time so that he can then develop his own language. Even here in China, even I (and my Chinese is not that good) pick up errors in people's native grammar. A professor friend of mine lamented the same. Many Chinese today don't know their own grammar well. Yet they spend hours every day trying to elarn English. Now there we see their priorities. Assimilation should not be the goal. Clear and precise high level communication in the most efficient manner possible ought to be.
The French language is an essential part of any well-rounded education for an English Canadian.
Says who? I can speak French and English, and Esperanto, and can read a little Arabic and Persian. A fat lot of good that did me when I came to China, eh. So what constitutes a persons' well-rounded education will vary according to circumstances. Certainly a Canadian living in BC and who's about to inherit his father's trans-atlantic company would be better off learning an Asian language, no? Don't forget, the world is much smaller today than it ever was. Canada is just a little speck of dust on the map.
That is why core French has been, is, and will continue to be a required subject in every school in English Canada.
That's really useful in Vancoucer.
And as far as Québécois are concerned, there are plenty of people who have good enough English. Just this afternoon I was in a café in downtown Chicoutimi listening to a waitress speak English to a new server who was an Anglophone, albeit with an accent but what do you expect? I get people all the time wanting to talk to me and practise their English, and yeah they make mistakes, but so do you when you write in French so probably when you speak it too. It's no big deal. People make mistakes in their own bloody language too.
No big deal? Have you ever had to sign international contracts? Legal implications.
NOw as for that waitress, wonderful. Chicoutimi is not the smallest town in Canada either. You're picking people and saying, look, he can speak it. Wonderful. But we're not talking about he and she, but rather about an entire population, including those living in small town Quebec. It's a democracy, remember. We have no caesars anymore.