Not a good plan
Posted Feb 6, 2006 1:48 UTC (Mon) by
man_ls (subscriber, #15091)
In reply to:
Translations done by the students of today may be the staple textbooks of tomorrow by xoddam
Parent article:
$100 Laptop: Great for the world, great for Linux (ZDNet)
You said what??!?!?!?!!
I'm sorry to break the news: people out there have other priorities before learning English. I know several English teachers in Spain, within the EU, firmly planted in the west and surrounded by US brands and messages; English is being rammed down kids' throats since primary school, and yet most of them manage to avoid learning the bare essentials. Don't ask me why; theoretically it's in high demand, and yet most people don't speak the language. Certainly English is not required most of the time to get a good job, so maybe they are not so stupid after all. Still, I know kids in Spanish schools are not able to translate anything; maybe it's better in the third world, but allow me to doubt it.
IMHO teaching English to poor kids as a strategy to have more teaching materials is a bad idea. Your priorities shift when you are hungry; suddenly learning the universal language is not one of them. If it is going to be a prerequisite, as Latin was necessary to get any education at all in other times, then the $100 laptop is just a vehicle of cultural colonialism and as such it will be rejected in most third world countries, like in Africa or South America. Based on what you say India was a poor example.
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