[lg policy] Ghana government urged to adopt clear language policy

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at gmail.com
Wed Jul 20 14:29:50 UTC 2016


 Ghana government urged to adopt clear language policy
Category: General News
<https://www.ghanabusinessnews.com/category/general-news/> July 19, 2016 87
0

[image: GILLBT]
<https://i2.wp.com/www.ghanabusinessnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Screen-Shot-2016-07-19-at-6.13.22-PM.png?ssl=1>Stakeholders
from various sectors have called for the need for government to adopt a
clear language policy to specify the roles of “our Ghanaian languages and
other languages in our national life”.

They said the need for a national language policy “is a necessity and not a
choice” adding that “this policy must have a legal backing to ensure its
enforcement”.

This was contained in a communique issued after a two-day language policy
conference organised in Tamale by the Ghana Institute of Linguistics,
Literacy and Bible Translation (GILLBT).

It was attended by stakeholders from public and private institutions,
researchers, academia, civil society organizations (CSOs) and the media.

The conference provided the opportunity to remind policy makers, parents
and all stakeholders on the importance of the use of the mother tongue as a
medium of instruction for improvement in literacy and education outcomes.

The conference was on the theme: “The Mother Tongue in National
Development”.

The communique recommended that public universities assist in the training
of teachers or language professionals in the Ghanaian languages as well as
in the production of training materials such as textbooks, dictionaries,
literature books and other literacy materials to enhance the use of the
local languages.

It also recommended that the Ministry of Education, University of
Education, GILLBT and other stakeholders should assist in the development
of orthography for Ghanaian languages to enhance the use of local languages
as a medium of instruction in all public schools, at least at the lower
primary level.

It also recommended that public universities should have terminology
centres for language modernization and terminology development just as was
done in Tanzania and South Africa.

The communique called on national and local governments to show more
commitment by making resources available for the development of the local
languages.

It called on GILLBT to assist in the translation of national documents such
as the constitution, campaign messages of political parties among others in
the local languages.

It concluded by calling on Ministries of Education, and Finance, GILLBT,
CSOs, Non-Formal Education Division, chiefs, parents amongst other
stakeholders to support the use of the mother tongue as a medium of
instruction at lower primary levels in all public schools across the
country.

Source: GNA

https://www.ghanabusinessnews.com/2016/07/19/ghana-government-urged-to-adopt-clear-language-policy/


-- 
**************************************
N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to its
members
and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner or
sponsor of the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who
disagree with a message are encouraged to post a rebuttal, and to write
directly to the original sender of any offensive message.  A copy of this
may be forwarded to this list as well.  (H. Schiffman, Moderator)

For more information about the lgpolicy-list, go to
https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/
listinfo/lgpolicy-list
*******************************************
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/lgpolicy-list/attachments/20160720/1d7d3e39/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
_______________________________________________
This message came to you by way of the lgpolicy-list mailing list
lgpolicy-list at groups.sas.upenn.edu
To manage your subscription unsubscribe, or arrange digest format: https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/listinfo/lgpolicy-list


More information about the Lgpolicy-list mailing list