Tuesday 22 November 2016

English in India


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Name: Gohel Ankita Kishorbhai
Roll no: 12
Course : M.a Sem-3
Year:- 1216-17
Paper name: English Language Teaching-1
Professor’s name: Dr.Dilip Barad
Topic: English in India
Submitted by:Department of English, M .K. Bhavanagar University.
                                   
            

Introduction:-                            
                                               
                                   English plays a vital role in increasing opportunity around the world. It provides access to the information with which individuals can learn and develop and it provides access to the networks which are vital in building and maintaining economic links. Perhaps more importantly, it provides a common language to share knowledge and ideas and to create the kind of relationships which go beyond a simple deal or contract. It enables people to explore cultural differences and to create the kind of trust and understanding which is vital in negotiating and agreeing our common future.
                                            One might assume that India, a country with a long history of English speaking, would be ahead of the curve in the teaching and learning of English, but increasing access to opportunity is a significant challenge. The challenge of taking what is currently the language of the elite and turning it into a tool for the masses is complex and daunting.

                              English Next India sits as part of a wider programme of work by the British Council in India, one which aims to contribute to the development of English language teaching and learning in India. The study aims to develop a better understanding of the issues facing India and draws on the contributions of a wide range of experts from India and the UK.

                           The project of English in India has cover up four ideas like

1) The story of English in India
2) English in India is growing
3) How many speak English?
4) English in India Trends and issues

1)  The story  of English in India:-

                                   When the British has came India  in the early  17 century in the form of East India company and they are more interested in trade than imperial possession. The company at that time needed employees to learn local languages, so they could negotiate the best deals and ensure their agents were not diverting profit into their own pockets.

                            We have remembered one name  from this period – Thomas Babington Macaulay. In 1835, as law officer to the Supreme Council, he gives a document which has become known as ‘Macaulay’s Minute on Education’.
                              Macaulay’s Minute has become  central one in the history of English-medium education in India, Focus on the Minute has distracted generations from understanding the wider socio-economic and political context in which English rapidly became so dominant in India.
                                      Apart from this rather practical and economic need, it seems the British had little desire to impose English on India, Macaulay was keen to bring into India ideas from modern science and technology, which had begun to transform European society and economies, and he saw English as the vehicle.
2)        English in India is growing
                  


                             The official position of English in India remains that of a transitional necessity. But this agenda has been overtaken by events. Economic growth means that more jobs require English; the expansion of education means that English is needed by more people for study; and for a growing, globalised, urban middle class English is playing a greater role in both their work and personal lives.

                                       In August 2009, the Indian television channel CNN-IBN carried out a ‘State of the Nation’ poll and they give the record of the English in India.,

          87% -feel that knowledge of English is
                                    Important to succeed in life
         54%- feel those who can speak fluent
                                      English are superior
          82% -feel that knowing the state language
                                         Is very important
         57% -feel that English is making us forget
                                    our moth tongue
         63% -feel jobs should be reserved for those
                                   who speak the state language.
                                   The Dalit movement’s demand for English (see right) is part of a wider desire from poorer sectors in Indian society for access to English. The British successfully restricted English is no longer a language only of the elite. The English language to an elite class. Subsequently it became a means for that elite to maintain their status in independent India. But the politics around English have shifted in the last decade. Where populist politicians once secured rural votes by promising to banish English, now there is a powerful grass-roots lobby to extend English to the masses.
                                   Improvements in education, a greater awareness of the wider world brought by television and better communications, and the prospect of well-paid jobs based on merit rather than social background, have fuelled the aspirations of the lower castes.


                                                 Dalit  activists such as Meena Kandasamy from Tamil Nadu, and Chandra Bhan Prasad from Uttar Pradesh, argue that English is a key to Dalit emancipation – not just because of the opportunities for social mobility it provides, but because it allows escape from the   traditional caste positioning which is encoded into the regional languages themselves.
                                         They also see English as the language
That unites the Dalit movement across India, allowing them to fight a common political cause – a parallel, perhaps, with the role that English played for those who originally fought for India’s independence.


3) How many speak English?

                                           India has a world reputation as being an English-speaking country but no one knows how many people actually know the language. For many years, estimates have hovered around 5% or less of the population, which at the start of the 20th century suggests around 10 million speakers, and in 2010 around 55 million.
                                            On the other hand,  Kchru  (2004) suggests 333 million people in India ‘use English’ – a figure based on a survey by the magazine India Today in 1997, which reported that over one third of Indians claimed to speak English.
                                However, the 2001 census data (released in late 2009) reports that 10.4% of the population claimed to speak English as a second or third language – that equates to around 126 million speakers in 2010.
                             Geography is one determinant that The south India has long had a reputation for producing more English speakers than the north; some north-eastern states use English as their official language and educate nearly all children in English.
                          A survey of wage earners in India, carried out in 2005, found that around a third claimed to be able to ‘read English’, but less than half of those also claimed to ‘speak English’. This no doubt reflects the fact that English has for a long time been treated as a ‘library language’ in India, used for reading textbooks and writing exam papers, but not for conversation.


4) English in India Trends and issues:-

                                   The story of how English came to India is still a contested issue in ideological debate in modern India. However, there are intriguing parallels between the arguments over English in the 19th century and those today.
                      
                               No one really knows how many Indians speak English today – estimates vary between 55 million and 350 million – between 1% of the population and a
third.
                       English is now closely associated with wider social and political aspirations. Where English was once a language of the elite, now demand is coming from lower castes and rural areas.



Conclusion:
                                               Throughout India, there is an extraordinary belief, amongst almost all castes and classes, in both rural and urban areas, in the transformative power of English. English is seen not just as a useful skill, but as a symbol of a better life, a pathway out of poverty and oppression. The challenges of providing universal access to English are significant, and many are bound to feel frustrated at the speed of progress. But we cannot ignore the way that the English language has emerged as a powerful agent for change in India. India can play a significant role in developing the international agenda created by the growing use of English as a global language.


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