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Why are more African countries adopting English as an official language? Patrick Plonski, PhD., Asratie Teferra, & Rachel Brady Presented at the African Studies Association Annual Conference November 23, 2013
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Why are more African countries adopting English as an ... · Why are more African countries adopting English as ... Limited educational resources in mother tongue ... 21% of countries

Jun 29, 2018

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Page 1: Why are more African countries adopting English as an ... · Why are more African countries adopting English as ... Limited educational resources in mother tongue ... 21% of countries

Why are more

African countries

adopting English as

an official language?

Patrick Plonski, PhD., Asratie

Teferra, & Rachel Brady

Presented at the African Studies

Association Annual Conference

November 23, 2013

Page 2: Why are more African countries adopting English as an ... · Why are more African countries adopting English as ... Limited educational resources in mother tongue ... 21% of countries

English: a world language

[Politics]

- 85% of international organizations use

English as official language

- official working language of most

international political gatherings

[Economy]

-The “global language of business”

[Academia]

- Language of majority of academic

publications—80-90%!

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Language in Africa

800 languages

About 50 African

languages have more

than 500,000 fluent

speakers

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Liberia

Madagascar

Malawi

Mauritius

Namibia

Nigeria

Rwanda

Seychelles

Sierra Leone

Somalia

South Africa

South Sudan

Sudan

Swaziland

Tanzania

Uganda

Zambia

Zimbabwe

Botswana

Cameroon

Eritrea

Gambia

Ghana

Kenya

Lesotho

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Tanzania

Patrick in Tanzania

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Ethiopia

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Rwanda

Rachel in Rwanda, 2010

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Why English?

Language of Commerce

International trade

International tourism

Foreign Investment

Regional Trade & Relations

Cuts through linguistic & cultural barriers

Language of Unity

Rwanda post-genocide

South Sudan after independence

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English & Education in Africa

Most African

Universities teach in

English

Secondary…or

younger?

Examples:

Rwanda

Ethiopia

SHARED UNDERSTANDING of importance of English language acquisition

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English & Education in Africa

“Local Buy In”

Somalia

Mother tongue instruction as “second class”

2005 Pan African reading conference

Limited educational resources in mother tongue

800 languages!

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Books For Africa Case Study

Photo: Betty Press

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0

50

100

150

200

250

1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Books For Africa Container Shipments and Shipping Grants (1990-2013)

Containers Shipped (BFA Warehouse) Shipping Grants

0

50

100

150

200

250

1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Books For Africa Container Shipments and Shipping Grants (1990-2013)

Containers Shipped (BFA Warehouse) Shipping Grants

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Books For Africa Case Study

BFA is demand driven and the demand is

increasing

Increased shipments to Rwanda since 2008

21% of countries served by BFA do NOT use

English as an official language

Demand in traditionally French speaking nations

Burundi

Cameroon

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Negative Implications

Language of Imperialism?

Loss of cultural identity

Loss of local & tribal languages

Imperfect education

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Conclusions

1. There is a growing demand for English language

usage across Africa

2. This demand is going to stick around

3. There are some negative consequences