King George VI wrote: » No they just need to think of a better way of teaching it to kids and making it more attractive to want to learn. Because my Irish teacher couldn't give a bollocks about whether or not we passed.
Mutant z wrote: » Thats the point isnt it why even after being taught it at school most struggle to pick it up when they can with languages such as French there's clearly a lack of interest with most students to really learn it so you wonder why it continues to be a compulsive subject surely there should be a choice on whether someone wants to learn it or not forcing it on people clearly isnt working.
Barry Badrinath wrote: » The statistics say it is slowly dying.According to the 2016 CSO figures, 1,761,420 people or 39.8% of the population surveyed were able to speak Irish. According to the 2011 CSO figures, 1,774,437 people surveyed were able to speak Irish. A drop of over 13,000 people. I have a basic knowledge of the language but would like to be able to speak more. I think it would be a shame to lose it completely even though I only occasionally use it. Tbh, the people who were employed to teach me it, didnt really give a fcuk and I was quite happy with that at the time. Just the bare minimum was covered with little to no encouragement to progress. That was 20 odd years go at this stage. Should it be made optional? I dont think so. I think it should be taught better and respected as our national language. My OH went to an "all Irish" school and still uses Irish regularly. In my experience, these are the students who really had it "forced" on them but have thrived from it. There is a difference in the calibre of teacher in an "all Irish" school and a regular school. Thats the issue I think.
2Mad2BeMad wrote: » Optional for LC Would of liked to have learned it myself But my Irish teacher came in every afternoon from 1-6th year, gave us an a4 page with irish translated to english and told to study that page while he read the Herald. If the teacher is not bothered, why would us students be.
2Mad2BeMad wrote: » Don't forget to account for the people who think they class themselves in the catagory of being able to speak Irish but only know a few sentences Unless I am wrong seen as I can string together a few sentences well then that number is shot by at least 1.
Fanny **** wrote: » I'd make it optional after the junior cert personally
Mutant z wrote: » Fair play to those who do want to learn it and become fluent but most never do and have no interest in it whats the point in trying to force the issue on that group when they will never speak it fluently and most will never encounter it in their day to day lives it seems completely pointless.
2Mad2BeMad wrote: » Don't forget to account for the people who think they class themselves in the catagory of being able to speak Irish but only know a few sentences Unless I am wrong seen as I can string together a few sentences well then that number is shot by at least 1. I reckon there is less then a million genuine fluent Irish speakers in this country.
Owta Control wrote: » My daughter goes to a primary school where 58% of the pupils are either born outside of Ireland, or have parents born outside of the country... English can be quite difficult for the child to learn as their native language is spoken at home.. often the children are teaching the parents how to speak English .... I'm on the parents council and see how difficult that learning Irish is for these children..and even though I personally want the language to flourish...we can't push it upon themselves these kids....the emphasis on Irish has to be scaled back in primary schools...and made a curriculum choice in secondary...just my own personal view
Mutant z wrote: » I think the time has come to make Irish a choice subject as opposed to the compulsory one it currently is whats the point in teaching it when many students are leaving school with barely 2 words of Irish the whole thing seems a complete waste of time. Whats the point putting so much money into a subject which has little relevance to everyday life it would be better spent on PE after all health and fitness is a much bigger part of everyday life than a language which is only spoken in tiny pockets of this country. Why are so few people fluent in speaking Irish despite being taught it at school clearly something isnt working make it optional so that those who want to learn it can and those who dont can opt out of doing it, that i believe is a perfectly reasonable suggestion.
Barry Badrinath wrote: » So we should actively place less importance of our national language to accomodate other nationalities to learn English while they already kniw their national language? Give Irish kids one language and let the "new Irish" learn a second? Or are you saying to exclude these kids from learning Irish? Either way, whatever hope we have of kids learning Irish is diminished by introducing it at second level.
cycle4fun wrote: » Only 8,068 Irish language forms were completed in the last Census, 2016. That tells you how many people use Irish. What a waste of hundreds of billions of euro.
Deleted User wrote: » And that's just on your maths classes...
Owta Control wrote: » My daughter goes to a primary school where 58% of the pupils are either born outside of Ireland, or have parents born outside of the country... English can be quite difficult for the child to learn as their native language is spoken at home.. often the children are teaching the parents how to speak English .... I'm on the parents council and see how difficult that learning Irish is for these children..and even though I personally want the language to flourish...we can't push it upon these kids....the emphasis on Irish has to be scaled back in primary schools...and made a curriculum choice in secondary...just my own personal view
Owta Control wrote: » Didn't say any of that
blanch152 wrote: » Less than a million? Probably much less than that.http://www.cso.ie/en/media/csoie/releasespublications/documents/population/2017/7._The_Irish_language.pdf "73,803 said they speak it daily outside the education system, a fall of 3,382 on the 2011 figure. " The Gaeltachts are dying as well: "The total population of all Gaeltacht areas in April 2016 was 96,090, down 0.6 per cent from 96,628 in 2011. Of these, 63,664 or 66.3 per cent, indicated they could speak Irish, while 20,586 (21.4 % of the total) indicated they spoke Irish daily outside the education system. This represents a fall of 11.2 per cent on the 2011 daily Irish speakers figure of 23,175. " There is no doubt that the Irish Language Act is failing and that the Government's Irish Language policy doesn't work. However, is that the fault of the government or are their policies just delaying the inevitable decline?