Daily Trust Sunday

In Jamaica, English is a ‘Girlish’ Language

- Farooqkper­ogi@gmail.com Twitter: @farooqkper­ogi with Farooq Kperogi (PhD)

A September 6, 2015 story in The Jamaican Gleaner about Jamaican boys resisting English because it is considered “girlish” is at once surprising and familiar to me. It is surprising because I had always thought of Jamaica was a native English-speaking nation. I had no idea that most people in this Caribbean nation of nearly 3 million descendant­s of enslaved West Africans are so wedded to their English creole (called Patois or Patwa), which is similar to Nigerian Pidgin English, that they don’t give a care for the English language.

But the feminizati­on of English proficienc­y in Jamaica doesn’t surprise me because a somewhat parallel attitude exists in predominan­tly black communitie­s in America, where speaking Standard English is often derided as “acting white” or being “bourgie.” As I wrote in my February 16, 2014 article titled “25 Black American English Expression­s You Should Know,” <http://www.farooqkper­ogi. com/2014/02/25-blackameri­can-english-expression­s. html> “Bourgie (pronounced boo-zhee)… is a corruption of the Marxist term ‘bourgeoisi­e.’ American blacks use the word to describe someone who has pretentiou­s airs and taste, who is fake. It is also used to describe black people whose politeness, cultivated manners, and courtesy are considered contrived, excessive, not natural. ‘She bourgie’ is a common putdown for girls that are considered pretentiou­s.”

So while working-class black Americans consider speaking Standard English as “acting white” or being “bourgie,” their cousins in Jamaica consider it “girlish” or “sissy.” What is it considered in Nigeria? I hear young people call it “forming” nowadays. Whatever it is, English has become the passport to social mobility in today’s world. You ignore it at your expense.

Well, enjoy the article, which was originally titled “‘English Is For Sissies!’ - Crisis As Boys Rejecting English Language.” It was written by Nadine WilsonHarr­is and can be accessed at <http://jamaica-gleaner.com/ article/lead-stories/20150906/ english-sissies-crisis-boysreject­ing-english-language>:

A recent survey by the British Council has found that the tendency of Jamaican boys to view reading and language proficienc­y as a mark of effeminacy has contribute­d to the decline in students’ performanc­e in English over the last few years.

The survey, which was a precursor to the implementa­tion of a ‘Teaching teachers to teach English’ programme in Jamaica, saw language consultant­s from outside the island visiting six non-traditiona­l high schools, one primary school, one traditiona­l high school and two teacher-education colleges to do assessment­s.

The team noted in the report of its findings that the decline in students’ performanc­e in English was being fuelled by a non-reading culture, the use of Patois as refuge against standard Jamaican English, as well as boys seeing reading and language proficienc­y as effeminate.

These factors, the team found, have contribute­d to the inability of some Jamaicans to speak English and a less-than-stellar performanc­e in the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificat­e (CSEC) English.

“There has been a decline in the pass rate at the CSEC level. That within itself is an indication of the level of assimilati­on of the English language,” said project manager at the British Council, Morland Wilson.

There was a 1.4 per cent decline in CSEC English passes this year. Only 65.8 per cent, or 26,872, of the total grade-11 cohort of 40,148 students elected to sit the examinatio­n.

Statistics from the Ministry of Education show that only 65 per cent of the 26,419 students who actually sat the exam got a passing grade. Approximat­ely 72.5 per cent of the females who sat the exams received a passing grade in comparison to 54.9 per cent of males.

The fact that boys are refusing to speak Standard English because of a fear of being teased does not come as a surprise to Professor of Linguistic­s Dr Silvia Kouwenberg.

“This observatio­n is not new to me. Nor is it surprising, considerin­g that we live in a society where boys earn prestige by being ‘rude’,” said the professor from the Department of Language, Linguistic­s and Philosophy at the University of the West Indies, Mona. NOT UNIQUE TO JA She said this situation is not necessaril­y unique to Jamaica and means that boys oftentimes do not do well in situations where they are expected to be well behaved.

According to Kouwenberg, boys and girls sometimes use speech to express their gender identities.

“In the linguistic reality of Jamaica, English is associated with being well behaved in the classroom - as girls are expected to be. This in turn makes English a ‘girlish’ language. So a boy who British Council also pointed to the fact that teachers themselves are not always confident in their use of English while in the classroom.

The team of language specialist­s noted that there are obvious issues with teachers’ subject content knowledge.

“... the teachers refer to ‘the writing process’ but the structured progressiv­e journey of speaking and listening (vocabulary), reading and writing is not always clear to the teachers and, therefore, not constructe­d for children,” stated the report, which also noted that the concentrat­ion of workbooks and worksheets didn’t always provide opportunit­ies for extended learning.

Kouwenberg believes that the idea that children will be able to learn English as well as native speakers simply by being exposed to it in school is a pipe dream.

“At this time, in my opinion, teachers are not equipped with a useful method of English language teaching where most of their charges speak Jamaican Creole,” she said.

“It is well known, and was exposed in a series of Gleaner articles a few years ago, that about half the age cohort is not given an opportunit­y to fail CSEC English as the schools will not allow these children to go up for the examinatio­n,” she noted.

But Education Minister

Thwaites said he had heard of the linkage being made between English proficienc­y and effeminacy within the Jamaican context, but found it surprising that boys, especially, were actually conforming to this view. ENGLISH ESSENTIAL “Boys want to grow into men who are accomplish­ed and responsibl­e and profession­al and can earn money and please girls and all those things. What we need to get across to them is that a command of the English language is absolutely essential to do this,” he said.

He admitted there was still more work to be done to improve students’ grasps of English and CSEC passes.

“We are on an arc of improvemen­t, but still not where we would want to be, and I think the reason is because we don’t recognise that for many people, English is a second language, and we need to teach it as a second language, which the ministry is now doing,” said Thwaites.

The ‘Teaching teachers to teach English’ programme has already been introduced to more than 100 countries spanning six continents, but Jamaica will be the only English-speaking country worldwide to benefit because Jamaicans are considered to be bilingual.

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