'Medium of instruction' is the
language that is used in teaching. It may or may not be the
official language of the territory.
Mediums of instruction in different countries and regions
★ In
Australia, most schools use English.
★ In
Belarus, Russian is used since the government closed all
Belarusian language high schools.
★ In
Belgium, French and Dutch (and German in some parts of Brussels) are used.
★ In
Canada, English (or French in
Quebec) is the medium in most schools, but Inuit languages are used in the north. ''See
French immersion''
★ In the
mainland of the
People's Republic of China (PRC),
Mandarin Chinese is used as the medium of instruction in most schools. In elementary and secondary schools for ethnic minorities, the minority languages - such as
Mongolian,
Tibetan and
Korean are also used. However, the two
special administrative regions (SAR) of the PRC have their own policies on the media of instruction :
★
★ In the
Hong Kong SAR, Chinese and English, which are the official languages of the region, are used as the mediums of instruction in schools. When Chinese is used as the medium of instruction,
Cantonese Chinese is usually spoken, though Mandarin Chinese is spoken in some schools. Since 1997, the Hong Kong government has pursued a policy of encouraging schools to switch to mother-tongue teaching and has only allowed about 120 of the region's approximately 400 government and aided schools to continue using English as the medium of instruction. Following recommendations from the
Standing Committee on Language Education and Research the government has announced that from 2008 onwards, secondary schools will only be permitted to use English as the medium of instruction if at least 85% of students enrolling in F. 1 fall into the top 40% of students for English, mathematics and Chinese in primary school assessments, as it has deemed that only students who are in this category are able to benefit from E.M.I. This move has been controversial as parents are eager to send their children to E.M.I. schools which they consider will offer them better career opportunities, as there are fears that switching to C.M.I will make it more difficult for students to gain university places in the territory, English being the principle medium at tertiary level, and as members of non-Chinese medium ethnic minorities are expected to find it more difficult to get school places.
★
★ In the
Macau SAR, Chinese and Portuguese are the two official languages of the region. Chinese is used as the medium of instruction in many schools. When Chinese is used as the medium of instruction, Cantonese Chinese is usually spoken, though Mandarin Chinese is spoken in some schools. Portuguese is used in Portugal-backed schools. English, which is not an official language of the region, is also used in a lot of schools.
★ In
Estonia,
Estonian is used with 26 schools in the south teaching
Võro once a week.
★ In
Finland,
Finnish is the language used in most schools, but
Swedish, which is also an official national language, is used in a number of schools along the coast. The right to education in Swedish is based in the constitution. There are also a few schools where education is given to some extent in
Sami in the north. ''See also
Mandatory Swedish''.
★ In
France, legislation restricts languages other than French in state schools. Other
languages of France are the medium of instruction in non-state schools such as
Diwan Breton language-medium schools and the Calendretas in the south that use
Occitan. ''See
Language policy in France''
★ In
India, mediums of instruction alternate between English,
Hindi, and the respective state's official language. Private schools usually prefer one of the first two choices, while public schools tend to go with one of the last two.
★
★ In the state of
Goa, English or
Konkani is used.
★
★ In the state of
Maharashtra, English or
Marathi is used.
★
★ In the state of
Andhra Pradesh, English or
Telugu is used.
★ In
Ireland, English is used in most schools with a growing number of
gaelscoileanna using both Irish Gaelic and English.
★ In the
Isle of Man, English is used, but
Manx is being revived with on Manx-medium school at
St. John's.
★ In
Moldova, Moldovan (Romanian) is used but Russian is slowly being introduced.
★ In
New Zealand, English is used in many schools, but a growing number of
kohanga reo and kura kaupapa are using
MÄori instead.
★ In
Norway, the medium of instruction is
Norwegian.
★ In
Pakistan, most schools and all universities use English as a medium of instruction.
★ In the
Taiwan Area of the
Republic of China (ROC),
Mandarin Chinese is used as the medium of instruction.
★ In
Romania, the medium of instruction is Romanian but minorities, such as Hungarian and German, are allowed to teach in their respective tongues.
★ In the
United States, English is used, but in some schools, Spanish, French (in
Louisiana,)
Hawaiian (in
Hawaii) and local Indian languages are used as well.
★ In
Scotland, English is used the most because there is little or no education in Lowland
Scots, and
Scottish Gaelic is only just starting to be used again: see
Gaelic medium unit.
★ In
Slovenia,
Slovenian is used throughout the country, but the Hungarian and Italian minority are entitled to primary and secondary education in their language.
★ In
Switzerland, German, French, Italian, and/or
Romansch are used in most schools.
★ In
Tanzania,
Swahili is used in
primary schools (seven years), whereas English is used
secondary schools (four to six years) and
universties.
★ In
Wales, while the majority of schools teach through the medium of English, an increasing number teach through the medium of
Welsh.
See also
★
Bilingual education
★
Native-language instruction
★
English medium education
★
Language policy
★
Language revival