FORUM ON MINORITY ISSUES
12TH SESSION, 28 – 29 NOVEMBER 2019
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
Statement on Agenda Item No. 4: Effective practices for education in, and the teaching
of, minority languages.
Paul Sixpence – Minority Rights Fellow, Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights; Coordinator (Human Rights Advocacy Projects), Centre Stage
Media Arts Foundation Zimbabwe
Madam Chair,
Recognising progressive provisions on the protection and promotion of minority
languages as exhibited through sections 27, 33 and 63 of the Zimbabwe constitution.
Further, inline with Article 4 subsection (3) and subsection (4) of the 1992 United
Nations Declaration on Minorities, I would like to call this August house and my
government to constructive dialogue and engagement on how we can improve
learning outcomes for children from linguistic minorities.
Madam Chair, we are concerned about the poor grades among children from
linguistic minorities. The national schools examinations management body,
Zimbabwe School Examinations Council has over the years recorded zero percent
pass rates in schools located in areas inhabited by ethnic and linguistic minorities,
namely, the south western parts of the country. For example, last year 29 schools in
Matabeleland North province, recorded zero percent pass rates.
Researchers and educationists have noted that, one of the causes of these low pass
rates is learners being taught in foreign languages and by educators who are not
conversant in local languages.
Again, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation, learning and stimulation of learners in their languages ensures that
children have what is necessary to boost their sensory, emotional, cognitive, social and
physical development.
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