Oral statement
By the Mikó Imre Association for the Protection of Minority Rights
For the Twelfth Session of the UN Forum on Minority Issues
The education in and the teaching of minority languages has become a staple of minority rights
advocacy, and rightly so, as more and more scientific studies have shown the wide benefits of
ensuring access to education in the mother tongue. Moreover, based on the principles of equality
and non-discrimination, all children, including children attending a school where the language of
education is a minority language, should be ensured equal access not simply to education, but to
quality education, preferably high-quality education.
Children in Romania belonging to a national minority generally have access to minority language
education, depending on their number and the size of their local communities. For example,
Hungarian children studying in their mother tongue make up around 5% of the total number of
pupils in the country. Regarding access to quality education, however, there is still considerable
room for improvement.
For instance, a recent study looking at the results of the national tests for 8th graders found that the
success rate for pupils attending a Hungarian school was much lower than the national average, the
main reason for their low scores being poor test results in Romanian language and literature. Of
course many factors may contribute to low test results among these pupils, but experts agree that the
inadequate teaching of the state language is certainly one of them, arguably the most important one.
And this is one area where a lot can be done to improve the situation.
In recent years, there has been a slow, but progressive adaptation of the national methodology for
teaching Romanian to minorities. The aim is for these children to study Romanian as a second
language, instead of studying it according to the same methodology as children whose mother
tongue is Romanian. However, there are still a number of problems when it comes to implementing
the new methodology. Firstly, this modified curriculum only applies until 7th grade, and even there
the new Romanian textbooks have not yet arrived in schools. Moreover, teachers that we have
surveyed agree overall that content focused on theoretical grammar and difficult literary texts
should be further reduced, and significantly more practical exercises should be included into these
new Romanian textbooks, exercises that focus primarily on useful language and develop the