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Cut backs to language service announced

by isleofman.com 26th January 2011

FRENCH lessons for young children in the Island are the latest victim of government cut backs.

 

The Department of Education and Children (DEC) said the teaching of French to seven to nine year olds (Years 3 and 4) will be phased out.

 

Every effort will be made to redeploy the five staff affected to other roles within the department, a statement said.

 

The government has been forced to watch its spending much more closely after the UK changed the VAT sharing agreement with the Island which has left the Isle of Man millions of pounds out of pocket.

 

Chief executive officer of the Department of Education and Children Stuart Dobson said: "The reorganisation of the modern language service will make some savings at a time when we are adjusting to the current, widely recognised financial challenges and we are not disguising that fact.

 

"We have consulted schools widely over the last two years on where efficiencies can be made.

 

"While no change such as this will be universally popular, we have taken the opportunity, with the need for this reorganisation, to look at how we deliver French across the primary and early secondary phases and we believe that through a well-focused programme children will achieve very well in developing their modern language skills."

 

French will continue to be taught to children in Years 5 and 6, with lessons for Years 3 and 4 gradually being phased out.

 

From September the modern languages services will have seven staff focused on delivering French to Years 4, 5 and 6.

 

From 2012 lessons will be exclusively for Years 5 and 6.

 

The statement from the DEC said: "The new focus will be on improving the transition of language learning from primary to secondary school with the development of a new curriculum that measures children's progress effectively across primary and secondary key stages while continue to enthuse and engage them in foreign language learning.

 

"It is hoped that eventually the reorganisation of the service could lead to secondary school pupils being given opportunities to enter for nationally recognised qualifications earlier in their language learning careers, ie at the end of Year 9.

 

"The fiscal challenge facing the Island, which means the department must increasingly focus its resources on areas it is statutorily obliged to deliver, is one of the reasons for the change.

 

"It is also hoped that the modern language service will be able to offer some support to schools wishing to continue to offer a level of language learning to younger pupils in the future."

 

The announcement by the DEC marks the second time in two days a government department has announced a reorganisation.

 

Just yesterday the Department of Home Affairs said "significant changes" will take place in that department in order to balance the budget for 2011/12 and said it cannot rule out redundancies.

 

Posted by isleofman.com
Wednesday 26th, January 2011 03:45pm.

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