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Singapore’s language policy and its globalised concept of Bi(tri)lingualism
Oleh:
Chua, Siew Kheng Catherine
Jenis:
Article from Journal
Dalam koleksi:
Current Issues in Language Planning vol. 11 no. 4 (2010)
,
page 413-429.
Topik:
language policy
;
globalisation
;
bilingualism
;
multilingualism
;
Singapore
Fulltext:
Vol. 11, No. 4, November 2010, 413–429.pdf
(245.3KB)
Isi artikel
This paper examines Singapore’s bilingual policy, i.e. English and one other designated Mother Tongue,1 its second language acquisition policy (i.e. Mother Tongue), and its ‘Speak Mandarin Campaign’. The bilingual policy has successfully transformed Singapore into an English-knowing country, and its ‘Speak Mandarin Campaign’ has effectively replaced the Chinese dialects with Mandarin (or English) at least among the younger members of the Chinese community in Singapore. Thus, language policy and planning in Singapore have played an important role in the country’s education and in its socio-linguistic makeup, but more importantly, in its nation-building process. Although English was the country’s colonial language, it was chosen as its lingua franca because of its importance as a communicative tool in world trade. While the government’s deliberate interventions have succeeded, as evidenced in its high literacy rate, they have also created unplanned side effects, such as a decrease in the desire to learn the Mother Tongue languages. With globalisation, the rise of the economic importance of India and China and the freer movement of skilled individuals, the traditional concepts of individual bilingualism and societal multilingualism have had to change to include learning other languages and relearning Mandarin. Thus, the government and the Ministry of Education have taken a prestige planning approach to the ‘Speak Mandarin Campaign’ and have introduced a series of changes to the educational second-language policy in an attempt to encourage Singaporeans to move beyond mother tongue bilingualism and to become trilingual instead.
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