Ngcobo S, Pre-service teachers’ attitudes.pdf (285.07 kB)
Pre-service teachers’ attitudes toward the teaching of Mandarin in South Africa
journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-10, 12:53 authored by Prof Sandiso Ngcobo, Dr Makhulu MakumaneThe Constitution for the Republic of South Africa (Act 108 of 1996)
embraces language as a basic human right and multilingualism
as a national resource. One latest foreign language to be given
recognition by the Department of Basic Education (DBE) in 2015
is Mandarin, a Chinese language, for incremental implementation
as a non-official optional language from 2016 in primary schools.
One of the stakeholders at the centre of the implementation
of this latest foreign language to be recognised, whose voice
has not been heard, are teachers. The methodology adapted in
the collection of data is quantitative in that pre-service teachers
completed a questionnaire. The results indicate mixed attitudes
with more appearing to be not entirely supportive of this move
by the DBE. Teachers do not share the same sentiments that are
expressed at political level about the significance of Mandarin for
trade and globalisation. The findings suggest a need for the DBE to
rethink this plan and training proportional to the minimum training
requirements for the teaching of a foreign language to be provided
to teachers. There would need to be some consultation to ensure a
greater teachers’ support as the project continues to be piloted and
implemented in more schools across the country.