Active Users:1108 Time:23/11/2024 12:50:34 AM
Re: /Survey: Foreign language knowledge in Europe - Edit 2

Before modification by Camilla at 24/09/2010 02:14:14 PM

And one has to wonder about how comparable the self-reported figures for degrees of proficiency are. Still, they're interesting. The dominance of English is also remarkable.


Is it?

Might as well add a mini-survey for European members (though Americans and others are welcome to answer as well if they like):

1) Which languages did you learn in school, and for how long?


English(8 years compulsory, 2 years elective), French (5 years elective, although everyone has to take a second language (apart from English) at least two years, I think), Spanish (2 years elective) and some Swedish/Danish (in between the Norwegian classes).

2) Which languages would you say you speak with some degree of fluency?


English, Spanish, Norwegian
I can understand Swedish and Danish more or less perfectly, but that is less to do with school and more ... general culture, I suppose, as well as similarity to Norwegian.
My French is perfectly adequate for reading the language, and I can usually keep up a conversation, but I am not fluent.

3) Do you think languages get too much attention in the school system you went to, too little, or just about enough?


Just about the right amount, I feel. Norwegian is such a minor language, we need to learn others. And I think it is healthy to learn a third. But I also think it is good that not everyone has to learn the same amount all the time.

4) What do you think of the remarkable dominance of English that appears in the data?


Unsurprising, surely.


Edit: I hate smiley codes that are perfectly normal combinations of signs.

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