"We cannot afford Gaelic teaching in downturn"
Posted: Fri Apr 22, 2011 12:05 am
Seo litir sa Chourier 21/4:-
agus seo a sgrìobh mi (tha mi 'n dòchas gum bi iad ga foillseachadh):-Courier letters wrote:We cannot afford Gaelic teaching in downturn
Sir,-With education facing a squeeze in the current financial climate, it appears strange that there is no shortage of money to promote Gaelic teaching in schools.
In modern Scotland, fewer than 100,000 people speak the language.
With Scotland competing in a global market, education should be broadening its curriculum accordingly.
R. H. L. Mulheron.
28 Cowgate,
Tayport.
mise wrote:Dear Editor,
It was quite eye-opening to realise the depth of ignorance surrounding the provision of Gaelic teaching displayed by R.H.L. Mulheron in your letters section.
Currently, for instance, Fife Council spends several million pounds on school teachers – quite rightly so. And not one penny of that is spent on Gaelic. The only Gaelic provision of any kind in Fife is for self-funding adult education classes, of which there are a growing number.
This illustrates quite vividly that there is a growing demand for Gaelic education in Fife. All very well, I hear Mr/Ms Mulheron say, but what of the relevance?
One way that Scotland “competes in a global market” is in the field of tourism. And the fact that there still are 100,000 or so Gaelic speakers is quite an attraction. Not only that, but Gaelic summer schools – to say nothing of Gaelic cultural events – bring in a considerable amount of foreign revenue to Scotland. But there’s just not enough teachers etc. to satisfy the demand: we need many more Gaelic teachers.
And we’re not going to get them by leaving it to the residual bands of Gaelic-speaking highlanders and islanders. We need to train up people from all over Scotland for the task. Just as we need to train up French teachers, German teachers etc.
While places such as Fife continue to ignore the need to produce this vital element in Scotland’s economy, it’s hard to see a way out of the current economic downturn.
So, let us broaden the educational curriculum in response to global demands – and introduce Gaelic into Fife schools.