Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa

Background: Mother-tongue education in South African primary schools remains a challenge to policymakers. The situation is problematic in multilingual lok’shin (township) schools where the lok’shin lingua is not recognised as ‘standard’ language. This article raises the controversial possibility of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rockie Sibanda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2019-08-01
Series:Reading & Writing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/225
id doaj-2d7810f8392a4bf995649ca9c3aa005a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2d7810f8392a4bf995649ca9c3aa005a2020-11-25T02:02:00ZengAOSISReading & Writing2079-82452308-14222019-08-01101e1e1010.4102/rw.v10i1.225108Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South AfricaRockie Sibanda0Department of Languages, Cultural Studies and Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, JohannesburgBackground: Mother-tongue education in South African primary schools remains a challenge to policymakers. The situation is problematic in multilingual lok’shin (township) schools where the lok’shin lingua is not recognised as ‘standard’ language. This article raises the controversial possibility of positioning of lok’shin lingua in a formal education langscape. Objectives: The article’s first purpose is to highlight recent international and local research which depicts controversies surrounding mother tongue instruction in primary schools. The second purpose is to conceptualise lok’shin lingua as a dialect present in children’s everyday vocabulary. Method: Data was gathered through a qualitative approach using interviews. The interviews were conducted with parents and educators at a township in South Africa. Results: Findings show notable differences in school language of instruction and the languages children speak outside school. Conclusion: Mother tongue teaching is problematic as it is incongruent with learners’ language repertoires. Therefore, a call is made for the recognition of lok’shin lingua in educational contexts as a way to promote more research into mother-tongue education.https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/225Dialecthome languagelok’shin lingualangscapetownshipmother tonguemultilingualstandard language.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rockie Sibanda
spellingShingle Rockie Sibanda
Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
Reading & Writing
Dialect
home language
lok’shin lingua
langscape
township
mother tongue
multilingual
standard language.
author_facet Rockie Sibanda
author_sort Rockie Sibanda
title Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
title_short Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
title_full Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
title_fullStr Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: Possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in South Africa
title_sort mother-tongue education in a multilingual township: possibilities for recognising lok’shin lingua in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series Reading & Writing
issn 2079-8245
2308-1422
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Background: Mother-tongue education in South African primary schools remains a challenge to policymakers. The situation is problematic in multilingual lok’shin (township) schools where the lok’shin lingua is not recognised as ‘standard’ language. This article raises the controversial possibility of positioning of lok’shin lingua in a formal education langscape. Objectives: The article’s first purpose is to highlight recent international and local research which depicts controversies surrounding mother tongue instruction in primary schools. The second purpose is to conceptualise lok’shin lingua as a dialect present in children’s everyday vocabulary. Method: Data was gathered through a qualitative approach using interviews. The interviews were conducted with parents and educators at a township in South Africa. Results: Findings show notable differences in school language of instruction and the languages children speak outside school. Conclusion: Mother tongue teaching is problematic as it is incongruent with learners’ language repertoires. Therefore, a call is made for the recognition of lok’shin lingua in educational contexts as a way to promote more research into mother-tongue education.
topic Dialect
home language
lok’shin lingua
langscape
township
mother tongue
multilingual
standard language.
url https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/225
work_keys_str_mv AT rockiesibanda mothertongueeducationinamultilingualtownshippossibilitiesforrecognisinglokshinlinguainsouthafrica
_version_ 1724954426481836032