Originally posted by swan at 22-3-2008 18:13
...so went the attitude that most people in those groups felt they didn't need to waste their time or put the effort in to learn chinese, as the system made the chinese conform to what whites constructed...
I am familiar enough with HK's history. But you miss my point. Children don't need to be taught a language, they absorb it naturally. In order for a child not to learn to understand/speak a local language, he must be actively prevented from learning it. That is, he must be isolated from the language. I was just curious how this could be the case for a small minority living among the Chinese. (As you yourself point out, many of the South Asians here speak excellent Cantonese.)
Learning to read is obviously a different subject altogether and illiteracy is a problem everywhere. Many recent immigrants to the States make the huge mistake of not speaking their own language at home for fear that their kids will be at a linguistic disadvantage in school. A needless concern, and the only result is that the kid never learns his parent's language!
I asked the above question because I wanted to know something about the educational system set up here in HK for South Asians. In particular, how and what languages they are taught. Do they have there own separate school system? Americans stationed for years in foreign countries usually send their children to American schools and the kids never learn the local languages. But probably most South Asians here in HK are too poor for that kind of self-financed education. So I would be surprised if the HK government doesn't provide some kind of economic support for the education of South Asian children. Is this the case? And if so, does the HK government not set standards that these schools have to meet. I'm sure the Brits had some kind of colonial arrangement for the education of non-Chinese - has the present administration simply continued with what was inherited from the Brits?
I don't know if your comments on arrogant whites was directed at me - but I speak/read 3 foreign languages quite well thank you. I came out to Asia to learn Mandarin and Japanese, then lived in Italy for 4 yrs to learn Italian. Not all Americans are cultural snobs.
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Last edited by Marsupial at 23-3-2008 12:26 ]