Language policy affects supply of nurses
Coady, Maria
mcoady at coe.ufl.edu
Tue Jan 18 13:05:00 UTC 2005
Forgive me, gang, for lurking, but according to the article the nurses CAN communicate but lack a certain written command of the language. The question is: how does their knowledge of written French (or lack thereof) impact their ability to do their job effectively?
Maria
Maria Coady, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
ESOL/Bilingual Education
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL 32611
mcoady at coe.ufl.edu
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-lgpolicy-list at ccat.sas.upenn.edu on behalf of Nassira Nicola
Sent: Tue 1/18/2005 3:28 AM
To: lgpolicy-list at ccat.sas.upenn.edu
Subject: Re: Language policy affects supply of nurses
I have to admit that I'm a bit disturbed at the tone of the article,
which seems to imply that the nurses' right to employment is the only
right at stake here. There's no mention of the right of Francophone
patients to treatment in their language.
In a political territory with one official language, the care of a
patient who speaks that official language should not be contingent
upon that patient's ability to speak a second language ... especially
when the patient is under stress and in poor health and thus *less*
likely to be able to communicate effectively in L2.
And, call me crazy, when this political territory is a small part of a
larger territory where English-speaking nurses are in high demand, my
sympathy doesn't really lie with an Anglophone nurse who cannot
communicate with Francophone patients and who might therefore be
putting those patients in danger.
Nassira
-------------------------------------------
Nassira Nicola
Harvard University
nicola at fas.harvard.edu
-------------------------------------------
On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 08:40:54 -0700, Michelle Daveluy
<michelle.daveluy at ualberta.ca> wrote:
> What about registering to writing classes in order to improve abilities with
> a language these individuals claim knowledge and use of?
>
> Human resources are lacking in the health services all over Canada.
> Employment opportunities are indeed available in English only environments.
>
> The media coverage of this specific case is to be understood in the current
> debate on the funding and construction of 2 research hospitals in Montreal:
> one English, the other French.
>
> MD
>
> le 12/01/05 08:46, Harold F. Schiffman à haroldfs at ccat.sas.upenn.edu a
> écrit :
>
> > Language cops bust Quebec nurses
> >
> > By BRIAN DALY
> > Canadian Press
> >
> > POSTED AT 8:29 PM EST Tuesday, Jan 4, 2005 Montreal Two nurses at an
> > English hospital have had their licences revoked after failing a written
> > French test even though Quebec faces a nursing shortage. Elizabeth
> > Davantes, 47, and Eulin Gumbs, 43, who both speak French, say they'll look
> > for work outside Quebec after losing their jobs recently at the Jewish
> > General Hospital.
> >
> > Quebec's language watchdog and the provincial nursing federation require
> > that all nurses, even those in English hospitals, pass a written French
> > test. Ms. Gumbs has failed the test five times, while Ms. Davantes has
> > failed on four occasions. Ms. Gumbs, a single mother of two, said Tuesday
> > she's looking for a job elsewhere now that she can't work here.
> >
> > I don't want to leave, said Ms. Gumbs, who rates her spoken French as
> > excellent. Quebec is my home. My family lives here, my kids live here. But
> > I cannot support myself on nothing. The Office de la langue francaise
> > recently warned the use of French in the workplace is in a precarious
> > state in Quebec and Premier Jean Charest has hinted at a crackdown.
> >
> > However, the province faces a major nursing shortage. A report released in
> > 2003 suggested the province will lose 16 per cent of its nurses to
> > retirement in 2006. Head nurse Serge Cloutier, who worked with the two
> > women, said the ranks of his profession are already thin and won't be
> > helped if nurses are forced out. It's a bad situation, Mr. Cloutier said
> > in an interview.
> >
> > Of course, if you lose two nurses it makes a difference. The nursing
> > federation did not return phone calls on Tuesday. The hospital said
> > Tuesday it did its best to help the women. The Jewish General Hospital
> > actively tried to keep (the nurses) on staff, even though they failed the
> > written section of the French exam, the hospital said in a statement.
> >
> > Officials at the hospital wrote several letters to the nursing federation
> > and spoke with the language agency in an attempt to have the nurses'
> > licences extended, said the hospital. But the nurses had their licences
> > revoked in October, said the hospital. A spokesman for the language
> > watchdog, the Office de la langue francaise, said his organization isn't
> > to blame for the two nurses losing their jobs.
> >
> > Gerald Paquette said the French tests are drafted with the help of
> > professional orders and employers. Rev. Darryl Gray, president of the
> > English-rights lobby group Alliance Quebec, said Quebec is showing ill
> > will towards the women.
> >
> > Anglophone nurses definitely are not going to jeopardize the French
> > language in this province, he said in an interview. Rev. Gray said he
> > wonders why the province won't work with Ms. Davantes and Ms. Gumbs to
> > help them improve their written French skills. How can we attract people
> > to this province if it has been made clear to us by the province that
> > we're not wanted? he asked.
> >
> > http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20050104.wnurz0104/BNPrint/
> > National/
> >
>
>
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