Did You Read This Advice?

Did you read this advice on languages from the Scottish Chambers of Commerce, reported in Holyrood for 9 April 2015?

 

Holyrood 9 April

 

Studying a foreign language should be compulsory from the year children start school in order for Scottish firms to compete in the international export market, a business group has urged.

 

Mandarin, Spanish, Portuguese, Hindi, Arabic and Russian have been pinpointed by the Scottish Chambers of Commerce (SCC) as "international languages of business" that must be made mandatory in the education curriculum from primary 1 onwards.

 

It has called on government to implement the measure by 2020 to ensure Scottish businesses have sufficient cultural and language skills to tap into a number of growing economies. 

 

"If we want to be more international, then we need to think more international, beginning in our schools, where international business languages must be taught from primary school right through to the end of secondary schooling and beyond," said SCC director and chief executive, Liz Cameron OBE.

 

"Over the past two decades, the number of students studying modern languages at Higher or equivalent has fallen by over 20 per cent. This is a damaging trend which needs to be reversed.

 

"We should look more closely at where economic growth will be attained and that should determine the languages delivered by the supply side, ensuring the curriculum reflects needs of business more."

 

Next SCEN Update

I have already decided the title of my next SCEN Update in May 2015: To boldly go. Despite the split infinitive, I have always wanted to emulate Captain James T. Kirk. So the SCEN Board will be considering ambitious plans when it meets on 13 May: Mandarin Matrix, a Conference with Principals of Hong Kong Schools, joint Learning Together projects with schools in China, SCEN's move West to Dunoon and beyond, and more besides.

Just wait!

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SCEN Learning of Chinese Project in East Lothian

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British Academy Schools Language Awards 2015