Preserving Language
Andre Cramblit
andrekar at NCIDC.ORG
Thu May 15 21:09:34 UTC 2003
Preserving native language
OSU hosts conference in hope of preventing native language extinction
By Brenna Doheny Barometer Staff Writer
Global development has a detrimental impact on more than just natural
resources. Native languages and cultures are becoming increasingly
endangered by the globalization trend.
OSU is hosting the second annual conference on Native American language
preservation in hopes of saving native languages from extinction.
"For a number of reasons that go back beyond the 19th century, these
languages have been progressively jeopardized," said Joseph Krause, chair
of the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures.
Krause compared language extinction to the disappearance of a species in
the environment. "That disappearance has an effect on the larger
ecosystem," he said. Similarly, "when a language disappears, a lot
disappears with it."
The conference will focus on preservation strategies, including curriculum
development and methods for archiving languages. The applications of
technology to language education, through such methods as language
software, video production and distance education will be addressed.
Krause expects a large delegation from the Native American community to
attend and hopes that each of the 10 recognized tribes in Oregon will be
represented. Native Americans from Montana, Arizona, Canada and Alaska will
also be in attendance.
The theme of the conference is "Speaking to the Seventh Generation." "We
are looking toward the future," Krause explained.
"Languages will disappear unless something is done to have the younger
generation learn them," he said. "If something is done, the seventh
generation will still be speaking them."
The Oregon state government is aware of the plight of native languages.
Senate Bill 690, passed last year, allows for special teacher certification
procedures for native speakers to help bring language programs to schools.
"Some of the only remaining speakers of Wasco, for example, may be in their
60s or 70s and won't go through the normal procedures of getting a
teacher's certification," Krause explained.
The new certification program, approved last summer, recognizes the
sovereignty of Native American tribes. If an applicant has the tribe's
authorization, "the process of obtaining a certificate is expedited,"
Krause said.
Only a few speakers have gone through the certification process thus far,
however, and non-native language teachers are somewhat opposed to the
program.
"One of the fundamental purposes of the conference is so growth can occur
between native and non-native language teachers," Krause said.
The conference will begin with an opening convocation at noon Thursday in
LaSells Stewart Center, and lectures and workshops will continue until the
last lecture at 7 p.m., resuming at 9 a.m. on Friday.
The conference will conclude on Friday with a presentation of "Atanarjuat:
The Fast Runner,"a film that won Camera D'Or at the 2001 Cannes Film
Festival. Lucy Tulugarjuk, who starred in the film and won Best Actress at
the American Indian Film Festival, will give an introduction to the film.
The screening will begin at 6 p.m. at Milam Auditorium.
All of the conference events are free and open to the public.
Roylene Keouli, external coordinator of the Native American Longhouse at
OSU, understands the plight of native languages. "The Hawaiian language is
dying," she said.
Keouli, a native Hawaiian Islander, speaks Hawaiian because she learned it
through six years of language courses at a school for natives. She
explained that the general population speaks English or Japanese.
Through higher education and the use of technology, the prevalence of the
Hawaiian language is increasing, she said.
"Before there were only 400-500 native speakers," Keouli said. "Now the
number is increasing, but [the Hawaiian language] is still not common."
Brenna Doheny covers news for The Daily Barometer. She can be reached at
baro.news at studentmedia.orst.edu, or at 737-2232.
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