Western Mail

Schools put at heart of one million Welsh speakers vow

- Abbie Wightwick Education editor abbie.wightwick@mediawales.co.uk

THE WELSH Government today launches details of its plan to help schools deliver one million Welsh speakers by 2050.

Speaking at the launch, minister for the Welsh Language and Lifelong Learning Baroness Eluned Morgan will say she is “delighted attitudes towards the language have changed”, recalling how stones were thrown at her school bus by people objecting to the first Welsh medium secondary school being created in Cardiff.

Her multi-million-pound plan outlines how Welsh-medium and Welsh language education will develop over the next four years to 2021. It says it aims to ensure all young people, from all background­s, leave school “ready and proud to use the language in all contexts”.

A new Welsh language curriculum and better training for teachers are among a raft of measures – many of which have already been published – drawn together in the document, Welsh in Education Action Plan 2017-2021.

Speaking at her former school, Ysgol Glantaf, Ms Morgan will recall how different things were when it was the only Welsh-medium secondary school serving Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan. There are now four.

“I was one of a handful of children from my estate in Cardiff who had my education through the medium of Welsh and distinctly remember having stones thrown at our bus full of primary school children as they objected to having a Welsh language school in their neighbourh­ood,” Ms Morgan will say. “I am delighted that

the attitude towards the language has changed fundamenta­lly from when I was a child.”

Today’s 45-page plan follows the first Welsh-medium Education Strategy for people of all ages in 2010.

It focuses solely on compulsory education stages.The report admits that Welsh in English-medium schools is inconsiste­nt and too often leads to low attainment.

It also says there are too few teachers able to teach through the medium of Welsh and better provision for students with additional learning needs is needed.

The plan says that by 2021, the Welsh Government aims to:

Develop a new Welsh language curriculum to inspire learners to learn and use the Welsh language;

increase opportunit­ies for children and young people to use Welsh in various contexts and embed use of Welsh from an early age;

support teachers to develop Welsh language skills so they have the knowledge and expertise to deliver the new curriculum through the medium of Welsh and teach Welsh as a subject;

increase numbers of pupils in Welsh-medium schools; and

ensure all children have equal access to Welsh-medium education.

Writing in the report, Ms Morgan and Education Secretary Kirsty Williams say: “We know that the developmen­t of Welsh-medium education over the last half a century has been extraordin­ary, particular­ly in attracting parents/carers and learners from both Welsh-speaking and non-Welsh-speaking background­s.

“However, we also know that the teaching and learning of Welsh in English-medium settings is inconsiste­nt and too often leads to low attainment.”

Research will be commission­ed early next year to investigat­e children and young people’s attitudes towards the Welsh language.

Over the next four years increasing value will also be put on Welsh as a subject in schools and as a medium for teaching and learning.

Future curriculum planning and teaching methods will be more informed by research and evidence about effective language teaching and learning, including language immersion, and how bilinguali­sm can boost learning.

But the report warns “the supply of teachers for the Welsh-medium sector continues to be a cause for concern”. A range of measures have already been taken to try to address this shortfall including a £5,000 cash incentive to undertake training as a Welsh medium secondary teacher.

Welsh Government targets are to increase the numbers of primary school teachers who teach in Welsh from 2,900 to 3,100 by 2021 while the numbers of secondary teachers who teach Welsh as a subject would rise from 500 to 600 by 2021 and secondary teachers who teach through the medium of Welsh would increase from 1,800 to 2,2000 in the next four years.

The report says: “Education and training alone cannot guarantee that speakers become fluent in Welsh, or choose to use the language in their everyday lives.

“However,it is clear that the education system has a key influence on young people’s potential to use the Welsh language in their everyday lives.”

The following spending has already been approved by Welsh Government;

trainee teachers to get a £5,000 cash incentive to teach Welsh or subjects through the medium of Welsh in secondary schools;

£3.1m to expand the Welsh language sabbatical scheme for teachers;

£2.6m to school improvemen­t consortia to support profession­al learning for Welsh language and Welsh-medium teachers;

£1m to improve Welsh language skills of learners through informal opportunit­ies;

£185,000 for communicat­ions and engagement activities; and

£200,000 for research into teaching methods for teaching Welsh.

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