Hindi, Tamil among new languages to be taught in NSW schools

NSW has added five new languages to its curriculum.

Students learn Hindi at Darcy Road Public School in western Sydney.

Students learn Hindi at Darcy Road Public School in western Sydney. Source: SBS News

Tamil and Macedonian are among five new languages to be taught in NSW schools from next year. 

The NSW public school language curriculum has also been expanded to also offer Hindi, Punjabi and Persian, taking the number of languages on offer to 69.

Demographer Bernard Salt said the additions reflected modern Australian society, citing figures showing that 39 per cent of Sydney's population was born in another country.
Students at Darcy Road Public School will be able to learn Tamil next year.
Students at Darcy Road Public School will be able to learn Tamil next year. Source: SBS News
"We need to be world's best practice at learning languages and this is a great step toward taking Australia to the forefront of being a multi-lingual, cosmopolitan connected community," Mr Salt said. 

He told SBS News that being able to speak another language will be crucial for young people to operate in an increasingly globalised workforce. 

"Australia's future really is bilingual, if not multi-lingual," he said.

Students at Darcy Road Public School in western Sydney already speak English and Hindi.

School principal Trudy Hopkins said research showed that learning to speak their mother tongue first, improves children's English skills. 

"English is the largest language of all, but Hindi is the largest language of children that speak a second language," Ms Hopkins said. 

"We think it will expand and expand at our school as more Hindi-speaking children come to our school."

They plan to add Tamil to the list of subjects on offer next year.

"Our next second biggest language is Tamil and we would like the same thing to exist for those children in our school that speak Tamil." 

Professor Ken Cruickshank at the University of Sydney's School of Education and Social Work told SBS News learning a language should be made compulsory. 

"Victoria has done it and it would be great if we took that final step because to me all kids should have access to languages, you're not educated without it and we know that learning a language really helps you with all your school subjects," he said.

In Britain, it is compulsory for students to study a language until the age of 14 and 50 per cent of American students study a language for their final exams.

While Australia's uptake of languages ranks among the lowest of all OECD countries. 

"It's such a shame because, in actual fact, we've got the most number of languages in the community but what happens is the kids go to school with the language and often lose that by the time they get to Year 12."


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3 min read
Published 17 September 2019 9:29pm
Updated 17 September 2019 9:55pm
By Felicity Davey


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