Language and academic achievement: perspectives on the potential role of indigenous African languages as a lingua academica

Journal Article

2012

Permanent link to this Item
Authors
Journal Title

Per Linguam: A Journal of Language Learning

Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher

Stellenbosch University

Publisher

University of Cape Town

Series
Abstract
Although research literature abounds with studies that show the importance of language for academic achievement, the potential role of indigenous African languages in the educational sector in South Africa has not been adequately appraised or appreciated. Accordingly, ambivalence is still rife among parents, teachers, learners and government about the use of these languages for academic purposes. This ambivalence is evident from the existing national language education policies, school language policies, language curricula and language practices in schools. Thus, the purpose of this article is to discuss the perspectives on the potential role of indigenous African languages for academic purposes in South Africa. The focus is mainly on the use of these languages to provide a scaffold for academic language proficiency which is critical to academic success. To this end, a complementary language-use framework or model for using indigenous African languages to support the development of academic language in multilingual schools and universities is proposed.
Description

Reference:

Collections