deise go deo wrote: » Actually the progress of language shift is usually measured in generations, a compleat language shift such as took place in Ireland almost never happens, even here it took the best part of 500 years from the first time the then Kingdom of England set out to replace Irish with English for the process to be compleated, and it took several mass depopulations along the way to do it.
deise go deo wrote: » Again your assuming that the number of Gaelscoil leavers will remain static at current levels, it wont, but lets not forget that the Gaelscoil movement 15-20 years ago was much smaller than it was now, the generation that came through the Gaelscoils even 10 years ago is much smaller than the one comming through now, by the time the third generation of Gaelscoil leavers come through the movement will be bigger again..
deise go deo wrote: » As for using the language, its called building a language community, its happening in many parts of the country at present. Lets take Village X, in this village there are a hand full of Irish speakers, they speak Irish to each other and nothing much changes from year to year, then a Gaelscoil is founded in Village X, still nothing much changes, some years later the kids who started out in the local gaelscoil start leaving, many of them stay in the village, get jobs and in time start a family, now the Gaelscoil is still there and naturally enough they want to send their kids to it just like they were, except this time at least one parent also has Irish, so it gets used in the home as the child is growing up, to get the child ready for the Gaelscoil a Nionra is needed, so one is started, when they are finished in the Gaelscoil, obviously a new Gaelcholaiste has to be set up for them to go on and get their second Level education through Irish, so they set one of them up too. So here we have a new generation of young people who have gone to Irish Play school, Irish Primary school and Irish secondary school, with Irish in the home too, young people who grew up with Irish, made friends through Irish. As they grew up youth groups through Irish got set up to provide activities for young Irish speakers, sports teams got set up that are run through Irish. Now we have a generation in Village X who have not just been educated through Irish, but who grew up through Irish, who socialise through Irish. This generation may well still be a small minority in Village X, but they are their own Language community. This is already happening around the country, its only starting off, there are only a handfull of areas that have Gaelscoils established long enough for a second generation to be comming through the school, but where there is, in places like Ballymun and Clondalkin, Loughrae in Galway there is already a vibrant Irish Language community that grows with each new year of kids that goes through the local school. Thats how Irish is being and will be revived.
someuser905 wrote: » we all speak english, get over it, its a much better language
Iwasfrozen wrote: » Irish has been trying to make a revival from the last 120 years to absolutely no long term avail. In fact the number of speakers has actually fallen hugely in this time period. What does that say about the future prospects of irish making a revival? That they aren't very high truth be told. And the type of comfortable living we have in the modern world makes drastic policy changes all the more unlikely.
You say it took the English 500 years to replace irish but you and I both know this isn't true. Irish was largely replaced by english in the main in the mid to late nineteenth century and not by the english (because language shifts can not be implemented from the top down) but by the people themselves. They realised that English was the language of business and science but more importantly America and Britain. Two places they could travel to to escape the drugery and dream of a new life. These are the only sort of condtions a true language shift can take place under. When the population is misguided, uneducated and ignorant with either an inferior complex (to get rid of the native language) or a superior complex (to bring it back)
"learing a new language brings many benifites to chuldren and adults. It even holds back alzheimer's."
That's the thing I'm not assuming, I've deduced. I believe the gaelscoil movement has a critical limit beyond which it will not grow because of Lack of government interest. Public apathy. And even down right opposition in some quarters. Union opposition. "My irish isn't good enough to teach in irish and I don't want to retrain." Though not in as many words. :P
The gaeltacht has been dying out since the beginning of the state this represents a long term population decline and language shift. What you are forgetting is that ambitious young people tend to not stay in their rural homelands. A huge amount try to make their way in the big smoke. This is evident if you look at the age demographics of Dublin. This is a huge problem for the gealgeoir movement becuase it scatters a relatively small number of irish speakers amongst a muge larger number of purely english speakers. This will only result in one thing. An "artificialisation" of the language occurs through the process that i described in my last post.
Villages are not the way to go to revive irish. If you want to have any hope at all you must conquer the alpha city in this country. Culture moves from urban to rural not the other way around. But then that would mean cutting off all that lucrative money the gaeltachts get for doing nothing. Which will lead to economic decline and futher population shift from the west. Scattering the irish speakers more. It's a vicious circle.
bb1234567 wrote: » I think everyone should be forced to speak irish on the street in public and if caught speaking english there given a small fine of 10 euro or so. But only in public, and Im sure people will get used speaking irish so much from being out in public that theyll eventually begin to speak irish at home too. And tourists or non natives can be given some kind of card to wear or something so theyre not fined, and people are allowed speak to said people in english.
LordSutch wrote: » And neither has there been over the last eighty years (well not vocally), and yet the language is stuck in limbo, many people say they want it, yet they can't be bothered to speak it, but its still a compulsory subject in school, right through to leaving cert. Question: What ground breaking change can possibly ignite the Irish language? or are we deemed to carry on with this farcical situation wherby we want the language, and we want it to remain as a compulsory subject in school, yet we don't really want to speak it (en masse) :cool:
conor.hogan.2 wrote: » We are never (ever, ever) going to speak Irish en masse. That is not a goal (of anyone?)
Conchir wrote: » what is the point in learning stories when you can't even understand them? It's taught as if it's peoples first language (eg English comparative texts at LC). You should be fluent before you go comparing poems and analysing their themes.
LordSutch wrote: » But surely if Irish is compulsory in school then the aim is to get everybody to speak Irish? Yes? Possibly in the same way as the Danes speak Danish, or the Norwegians speak Norwegian? And if its not the aim to get everybody speaking Irish en masse, then what is the aim of the Irish language lobby? and I ask this genuinely, and with the backdrop of mandatory Irish in school.
conor.hogan.2 wrote: » No it is to get everybody able to know some Irish.
GaryIrv93 wrote: » But sure many students leave school without a word of Irish, even after 14 years of being taught it. With the way its currently taught, there'll never be a significant number of competent speakers of it. Even those who can speak Irish well or even fluently in rare cases simply don't because it's simply of no benefit to them. It's method of teaching has to change if the government wants everybody to know some Irish. It's like asking Brits to speak Irish. Irish may be our native language, but English is our primary language for business, commerce, everyday communication etc. I never hear anybody speak Irish out on the street. Even if we all could speak Irish, how does it actually benefit the country internationally?
conor.hogan.2 wrote: » Stop talking nonsensical hyperbole. They do not leave with no Irish many leave without being fluent or even able to have anything above a basic broken conversation but they do know a lot of irish when prodded to remember. It is not a either/or choice. Of course we will continue to use English for the vast vast vast majority of out time and the majority of people will only speak English.
GaryIrv93 wrote: » Even those who leave knowing ''a lot'' of Irish words aren't necessarily fluent nor good at speaking it, so it's hugely wasteful after all those of years of being in contact with it. Even in a broken / faulty education system, you'd think that most students would at least be competent enough with the language after 14 years. If not, then there's absolutley no point in keeping it compulsory aside from those who show interest and commitment to the language. Other students should be let learn a subject which is of more relevance and interest to them, but they can't. Which is why I referred to Ireland's education system as broken and faulty.
in the fifties when i was being educated.....there were a lot of canings for our lack of interest in the irish language......so it became a big joke......and was hated..
Deleted User wrote: » It's easy to see why it was a big joke, the government didn't use it, the civil service didn't use it, the banks didn't use it & the teachers didn't use it (apart from while teaching it).
Wibbs wrote: » Eh... may I respectfully suggest you read more on the history of our country on this point.
conor.hogan.2 wrote: » This has changed. Oral and Aural is now worth 50% so give it a while and speaking will improve. I left school without being able to hold any decent conversation in Irish and my French was much worse and that class was basically all about speaking and basic things like essays using basic phrases and stuff. But if I was doing the LC now I would be concentrating on speaking/hearing as it is worth 50% of the grade and being good in this gives you an edge in essays etc in the other 50% You have 6 (or more) other subjects to choose in the LC...
GaryIrv93 wrote: » It's very frustrating.
conor.hogan.2 wrote: » I think you are wrong, obviously the new scheme will improve spoken Irish in students. Not that that will translate to them using it after school, that is different altogether. Most students do 7 subjects. You only need 6 honors. Drop down to pass Irish and if you can not do 6 honors and pass OL Irish then forget Engineering
GaryIrv93 wrote: » It might compel students to memeorize for the oral exam more, but that's about it. They'll memeorize phrases from their Irish textbook and spit them back out in the oral. Once they walk out of the exam they'll forget most of their Irish, just like a lot of peope would forget information walking out of any exam. Memorizing it doesn't mean that you actually know the stuff. For example I could memorize a maths formula and do the sum correctly in the exam, yet doesn't mean I actually understand it. So there's obviously no point then bring it up to 40% if it's just for the exam and not to improve the student's future competence in Irish.