We have been unable to obtain any kind of mastery over the English language in all but a few of the most prestigious schools; people who visit government schools to inspect standards say even Urdu is patchily taught in many cases. Children learn lessons by rote and genuine literacy is not common. We are told that Chinese is to be taught because China and Pakistan are ‘good friends’ and children who pass the Chinese exam at the matriculation level will be entitled to foreign scholarships, presumably in China. While that all is well and good, surely such friendship between two nations shouldn’t come at the expense of Sindh’s children. One wonders if it would have been better to increase focus on English language teaching. This is available in Sri Lanka and South India and has opened up avenues for jobs and growth. We have a base in English, even if it is becoming increasingly weak. Perhaps we should build on this and promote a language the world, including the Chinese, aspire to learn rather than introducing a brand new complication in our already crumbling education system.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 8th, 2011.
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And who will teach the language? Minister himself via Skype and Google translator?
Shah Abdul Latif has lot to say about such harebrained ideas.
A language has no magical power. If that was the case then every German speaking person would be Einstein and every English speaker would be Shakespeare.
Can anyone define idiocy?