<div dir="ltr"><div class=""><h3 class="">Earlier language lessons for Queensland kids</h3></div>
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<p class="">Tuesday August 26 2014, 10:35am</p>
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<p class=""><b>The Department of Education has announced that
Queensland kids will start learning a language earlier in a bid to
improve early student development.</b>
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<p class="">All Year 5 students will learn a language, previously mandatory only for Year 6-8 students.
</p>
<p class="">Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek said learning a language helped students in aother areas.
</p>
<p class="">“Everything we do in education is directed towards
better student results and it’s widely acknowledged that learning a
language has a positive impact on a student's overall literacy,
enhancing their learning in other areas,” Mr Langbroek said.
</p>
<p class="">“While this announcement ensures students can
receive an extra year of language education from 2015, schools are still
strongly encouraged to offer languages from Prep to Year 12.
</p>
<p class="">“State schools decide which languages to offer in consultation with their school community."
</p>
<p class="">The change to the Queensland Government’s languages policy coincides with a new phase anguages education in state schools.
</p>
<p class="">Mr Langbroek said the 'Global Schools – Creating
successful Global Citizens' proposal would see all state primary schools
offer languages from Prep by 2025 and all state schools commence
implementation of the Australian Curriculum: Languages in 2016.
</p>
<p class="">“This proposal, that we will consult the community
about, envisages a system in which all state primary schools will offer
education in a language or languages other than English right from
Prep,” he said.
</p>
<p class="">“This is part of preparing our young people to thrive in a global society.
</p>
<p class="">“Learning another language provides students with
communication skills, opens their minds to new ideas and builds social
and cultural understanding.”
</p>
<p class="">Mr Langbroek said Queensland state schools should
become familiar with the Australian Curriculum: Languages in 2015 ahead
of its implementation in 2016.
</p>
<p class="">“The teaching of languages in Queensland schools is already well established and widespread,” he said.
</p>
<p class="">“Ultimately we want to see an increase in the number of students leaving Year 12 with high levels of language proficiency.
</p>
<p class="">“This will require a strong workforce, quality school programs and strong leadership.”
</p>
<p class="">One of the findings from the Queensland Plan was
support for students having Asian language skills, with the majority of
Queenslanders seeing this as an indicator of a flexible, future-focused
curriculum in the state’s schools.
</p>
<p class="">Currently more than 950 Queensland state schools are
teaching a Language Other Than English (LOTE) to primary students, with
around half of those, some 490, teaching Japanese.
</p>
<p class="">In 2013, around 135,500 Prep to Year 12 state school students learned a language. <br></p><p class=""><br></p><p class=""><a href="http://www.tourismportdouglas.com.au/Earlier-language-lessons-for-Queensland.11757.0.html">http://www.tourismportdouglas.com.au/Earlier-language-lessons-for-Queensland.11757.0.html</a><br>
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