New Zealand’s Ministry of Education has released figures on secondary school enrollments in foreign languages in 2007, according to a newspaper report.
Education Ministry figures show nearly 70,000 pupils studied foreign languages at secondary schools last year, with 27,284 learning French.
Japanese was also popular (18,440), followed by Spanish (9531) and German (6623).
Chinese… attracted just 1687 pupils.
The total of those figures (63,565) seems considerably shy of “nearly 70,000.” So I suspect some languages more popular than Mandarin have been left off the list. Either way, Mandarin takes only about 2.5 percent of the total. And no indication is given of what percentage of those are “heritage” students.
That’s a lot of kids taking Japanese, though. Can anyone familiar with the situation in New Zealand comment on that?
I wasn’t able to locate the source of these figures. I did, however, find some figures from ten years ago, though they don’t include Mandarin. Also, I don’t understand the categories. But, FWIW:
Numbers of students studying second languages, July 1998
language | secondary learners | primary & intermediate learners |
---|---|---|
Japanese | 21,701 | 13,625 |
French | 20,990 | 8,413 |
German | 7,377 | 3,877 |
Spanish | 2,247 | 5,172 |
A few more lines from the 2008 report:
Under the new curriculum, schools must be “working toward” offering pupils in years 7 to 10 the option of learning a second language from 2011, in a push to make more Kiwis bilingual.
However, the ministry says it is up to schools and their communities to choose which languages are offered – meaning French is likely to remain popular.
A ministry spokesman said measures were underway to boost teachers’ ability to teach a variety of foreign languages in schools.
They included Maori medium scholarship and overseas exchange programmes.
sources:
- Warning on choice of languages, Dominion Post, September 6, 2008
- The key to communication, New Zealand Ministry of Education, Education Gazette, vol. 78 no. 11, July 5, 1999
further reading:
- Chinese Community News, New Zealand Ministry of Education