http://www.smh.com.au/national/educ...dents-falls-to-record-low-20131002-2usv2.html
What do you think? Personally, I find this very sad. Learning a language can enrich anyone's education.The proportion of students studying a foreign language for the Higher School Certificate is at a historic low and less than a fifth of what it was during the 1950s, new data shows.
The figures underline the challenge facing the new Abbott government, which has set a target of 40 per cent of high school students studying a foreign language within a decade and called for greater engagement with Asia.
Tony Abbott.
"Within a decade, the new government aims to have 40 per cent of high school students studying a foreign language" : Tony Abbott. Photo: Melissa Adams
Only 8 per cent of the more than 75,000 students enrolled in the HSC this year will sit a foreign language test when the written exams begin on October 14, down from more than 50 per cent in the '50s.
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French remained the most popular language for school leavers in NSW, but enrolments in all of the top five most popular languages except Japanese fell in the past year.
The popularity of Indonesian as a HSC course has fallen 76 per cent since it peaked in the mid-1970s, with just 173 students enrolled in the course this year.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has reaffirmed his government's commitment to lifting the number of students studying foreign languages during his diplomatic visit to Indonesia.
''Within a decade, working with the Australian states and territories, the new government aims to have 40 per cent of high school students studying a foreign language - as was the case in the 1960s - only this time the emphasis will be on Asian languages as well as European ones,'' he told a business breakfast in Jakarta on Tuesday.
An undersupply of language teachers was central to the decline in students taking a language course for the HSC, according to the president of the Secondary Principals Council, Lila Mularczyk.
''There most definitely is an issue in getting language teachers into schools,'' said Ms Mularczyk, particularly when it came to Asian and community languages.
The most popular subjects for students doing this year's HSC, after English and mathematics, are biology, business studies and PDHPE (personal development, health and physical education). The least popular - with just three students each - are the languages Dutch, Maltese and Ukrainian.
Certain subjects continue to be more heavily pursued by one gender. While Standard English is evenly split between male and female students, the higher-level English subjects are skewed towards female students, who make up 58 per cent of Advanced English students, 66 per cent of Extension 1 English students and 70 per cent of Extension 2 English students.
The opposite is true for mathematics. While male students make up 49 per cent of General Mathematics students, they account for 59 per cent of Extension 1 students and 64 per cent of Extension 2 students.
A NSW Department of Education and Communities spokesman said there was an adequate supply of language teachers but that their National Asian Languages and Studies in Schools Program included a range of initiatives to further increase teacher supply and stimulate student demand.
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