26 November 2010
We warmly welcome the recognition by the Government that a
foreign language is part of the essential knowledge and
understanding which all pupils should have to take their
place as educated members of society. The Government has rightly
recognised that the study of a foreign language is a core subject
discipline common to national curricula across the globe, and we
are pleased to see it as one of the subjects which will make up the
English Baccalaureate.
We welcome also the focus on
international comparisons as a measure of how well
our education system is performing. In calling for increased status
for languages in the school curriculum we have often highlighted
how poorly the UK fares in languages compared to other countries.
We are delighted that, in addition to the international surveys
mentioned in section 4.3 of the White Paper, England is also to
take part in the forthcoming European
Survey of Language Competences.
If we are to be judged by international
standards we must give due importance to languages in the
primary phase. Over the past decade we have made
enormous progress in bringing provision in English primary schools
in line with international practice. Over 92% of our primary
schools now teach a language and we want to see this taught with
the same rigour and challenge as other subjects, across the four
years of key stage 2. We need to maintain and build on this
momentum, through continued support for teachers and schools, so
that children in English primary schools enjoy the same benefits
from language learning as their peers in high performing
countries.
We are aware of the
challenges that the inclusion of a foreign
language in the English Baccalaureate will present for those
secondary schools where provision has dwindled over the last few
years. They will need support to rebuild their capacity and to
ensure that teaching in languages is stimulating for all pupils.
CILT will continue to play its crucial role in driving forward
excellence in language teaching through professional development
for teachers.
The White Paper places a strong emphasis on
GCSE as the main qualification taken by pupils. However, we welcome
the freedom it gives to schools to innovate and offer equally
rigorous non-GCSE qualifications to meet the needs of pupils. In
our response to the Wolf Review of vocational
education we set out our belief that languages have a
crucial role to play in supporting our economic recovery, and that
all pupils on all programmes, whether academic or vocational,
should be able to combine their study with a language, gaining a
general qualification such as GCSE or a vocational language
qualification such as NVQ.
We look forward to working with the DfE, and
with schools and teachers, to take forward this important agenda
for languages.
Read the full paper.