首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
As English Spreads, Indonesians Fear for Their Language Paulina Sugiarto’s three children played together at a mall here the
As English Spreads, Indonesians Fear for Their Language Paulina Sugiarto’s three children played together at a mall here the
admin
2013-05-19
51
问题
As English Spreads, Indonesians Fear for Their Language
Paulina Sugiarto’s three children played together at a mall here the other day, chattering not in Indonesia’s national language, but English. Their fluency often draws admiring questions from other Indonesian parents Ms. Sugiarto encounters in this city’s upscale malls.
But the children’s ability in English obscured the fact that, though born and raised in Indonesia, they were struggling with the Indonesian language, known as Bahasa Indonesia. Their parents, who grew up speaking the Indonesian language but went to college in the United States and Australia, talk to their children in English. And the children attend a private school where English is the main language of instruction.
"They know they’re Indonesian," Ms. Sugiarto, 34, said. "They love Indonesia. They just can’t speak Bahasa Indonesia. It’s tragic."
Indonesia’s linguistic legacy is increasingly under threat as growing numbers of wealthy and upper-middle-class families shun (避开) public schools where Indonesian remains the main language but English is often taught poorly. They are turning, instead, to private schools that focus on English and devote little time, if any, to Indonesian.
For some Indonesians, as mastery of English has become increasingly tied to social standing, Indonesian has been relegated to second-class status. In extreme cases, people take pride in speaking Indonesian poorly.
The global spread of English, with its sometimes corrosive (逐渐破坏的) effects on local languages, has caused much hand-wringing (焦虑) in many non-English-speaking corners of the world. But the implications may be more far-reaching in Indonesia, where generations of political leaders promoted Indonesian to unite the nation and forge a national identity out of countless ethnic groups, ancient cultures and disparate dialects.
The government recently announced that it would require all private schools to teach the nation’s official language to its Indonesian students by 2013. Details remain sketchy, though.
"These schools operate here, but don’t offer Bahasa to our citizens," said Suyanto, who oversees primary and secondary education at the Education Ministry.
"If we don’t regulate them, in the long run this could be dangerous for the continuity of our language," said Mr. Suyanto, who like many Indonesians uses one name. "If this big country doesn’t have a strong language to unite it, it could be dangerous."
The seemingly reflexive preference for English has begun to attract criticism in the popular culture. Last year, a woman, whose father is Indonesian and her mother American, was crowned Miss Indonesia despite her poor command of Indonesian, The judges were later condemned in the news media and in the blogs for being impressed by her English fluency and for disregarding the fact that, despite growing up here, she needed interpreters to translate the judges’ questions.
In 1928, nationalists seeking independence from Dutch rule chose Indonesian, a form of Malay, as the language of civic unity. While a small percentage of educated Indonesians spoke Dutch, Indonesian became the preferred language of intellectuals.
Each language had a social rank, said Arief Rachman, an education expert. "If you spoke Javanese, you were below," he said, referring to the main language on the island of Java. "If you spoke Indonesian, you were a bit above. If you spoke Dutch, you were at the top."
Leaders, especially Suharto, the general who ruled Indonesia until 1998, enforced teaching of Indonesian and curbed use of English.
"During the Suharto era, Bahasa Indonesia was the only language that we could see or read. English was at the bottom of the rank," said Aimee Dawis, who teaches communications at Universitas Indonesia. "It was used to create a national identity, and it worked, because all of us spoke Bahasa Indonesia. Now the dilution (淡化) of Bahasa Indonesia is not the result of a deliberate government policy. It’s just occurring naturally."
With Indonesia’s democratization (民主化) in the past decade, experts say, English became the new Dutch. Regulations were loosened, allowing Indonesian children to attend private schools that did not follow the national curriculum, but offered English. The more expensive ones, with tuition costing several thousand dollars a year, usually employ native speakers of English, said Elena Racho, vice chairwoman of the Association of National Plus Schools, an umbrella organization for private schools.
But with the popularity of private schools booming, hundreds have opened in recent years, Ms. Racho said. The less expensive ones, unable to hire foreigners, are often staffed with Indonesians teaching all subjects in English, if often imperfect English, she added.
Many children attending those schools end up speaking Indonesian poorly, experts said. Uchu Riza — who owns a private school that teaches both languages — said some Indonesians were willing to sacrifice Indonesian for a language with perceived higher status.
"Sometimes they look down on people who don’t speak English," she said.
She added: "In some families, the grandchildren cannot speak with the grandmother because they don’t speak Bahasa Indonesia. That’s sad."
Anna Surti Ariani, a psychologist who provides counseling at private schools and in her own practice, said some parents even displayed "a negative pride" that their children spoke poor Indonesian. Schools typically advise the parents to speak to their children in English at home even though the parents may be far from fluent in the language.
"Sometimes the parents even ask the baby sitters not to speak in Indonesian but in English," Ms. Ariani said.
It is a sight often seen in this city’s malls on weekends: Indonesian parents addressing their children in sometimes halting English, followed by nannies using what English words they know.
But Delia Raymena Jovanka, 30, a mother of two preschoolers, has developed misgivings (担 忧). Her son Fathiy, 4, attended an English play group and was enrolled in a kindergarten focusing on English; Ms. Jovanka allowed him to watch only English TV programs.
The result was that her son responded to his parents only in English and had difficulties with Indonesian. Ms. Jovanka was considering sending her son to a regular public school next year. But friends and relatives were pressing her to choose a private school so that her son could become fluent in English.
Asked whether she would rather have her son become fluent in English or Indonesian, Ms. Jovanka said, "To be honest, English. But this can become a big problem in his socialization. He’s Indonesian. He lives in Indonesia. If he can’t communicate with people, it’ll be a big problem."
Ms. Jovanka’s friend and relatives were trying to persuade her to send her son to ______
选项
答案
a private school
解析
这两句提到,Jovanka女士正考虑来年sending her son to a regular public school,但亲戚朋友都劝她choose a private school,也就是说,亲戚朋友都劝她把儿子送到a private school,故答案为a private school。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/MPg7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Claysuggestsgoingthroughthein-boxessystematicallyandthoroughlyeverymorning,andlessoftenifnecessary.InDarling’s
Throughouthistorypeoplehavebeenputtodeathforvariousformsofwrongdoing.Thedeathpenaltyisthemostcontroversialpe
Theproblem____________(过支一直没有解决).
Howdidtheearlypeopledotheircounting?Atfirst,theydidalltheircountingwithsmallstones.Later,theylearnedtouse
Whichofthefollowingbestsummarizesthemainideaofthepassage?AccordingtoLeeAnn,youcannottrainanordinarydog___
AcademyAwardsEveryFebruaryOscarFeverhitstheentertainmentcommunityandfilmfansaroundtheworld.Hundredsofmilli
AIDSAcquiredImmunodeficiencySyndrome(AIDS),isakindofhumanviraldisease(病毒病)thatdamagestheimmunesystem,weake
Likemanyhighschoolheads,MikeWarbelhadaplanreadywhenthebadnewscame.Itproveduseful,yet【C1】______madehimfeela
AnewtropicalstormhasformedintheCaribbean,matchinga72-year-oldrecordforthehighestnumberofAtlanticstormsinas
A、Avoideatinganyfood.B、Preparetherighttypeofpietoeat.C、Washhishandsthoroughly.D、Practiceeatingapiequickly.A
随机试题
使用氧气时,不应将瓶内氧气全部用完,应留有不小于()的余压。
A.麻疹B.鼠疫C.狂犬病D.甲型肝炎E.乙型肝炎进行呼吸道隔离的疾病是
以下何种措施不利于改善遵医行为
甲公司已将其自有的机器设备给乙公司设立了质权(乙公司同意甲公司可以就该批设备再设定其他担保物权)。后丙公司为向银行贷款8000万元,丙公司找到甲公司请求其提供担保,于是甲公司将机器设备又抵押给银行,但明确只担保其中的3000万元贷款,并且没有办理抵押登记。
短期投资是指企业各种能够随时变现,持有期()。
随着人口的老龄化,老年人的服务需求逐渐增多,受制于有限资源,某社会服务机构组织员工讨论在未来三年是为更多的老年人提供满足基本生活需要的服务,还是为具有特殊需要的少数老年人提供专业性服务。这种策划是()
在长度为n的有序线性表中进行二分查找,最坏情况下需要比较的次数是()。
对"将信息系99年以前参加工作的教师的职称改为副教授",合适的查询为
A、Becausenobodyknewhisaddress.B、Becausenobodyknewhisage.C、BecausePenbury’sprivatelifewasasecret.D、BecausePenbu
A、Therearenodevelopingcountriestojoinrichercountriesinreducingemissions.B、Developingnationsarehavingalittleeff
最新回复
(
0
)