Tuesday, July 06, 2010

The writing's on the wall...

...and it's in English. Or so it seems, in some ways at least.

Recently, two major Japanese companies have announced that their official language for business - even internally - will be English. (I'm not entirely sure why this is headline news, as several other companies have already adopted this policy some time ago, but never mind about that.) They are both trying to break into international markets, so the potential benefits are pretty big (not denying that there will of course be disadvantages too, given the poor English language skills throughout the population here). English language education is also being introduced at earlier stage in education. That's over the howls of the nationalists, of course, who argue that the children will be "confused" by this and that English should be left until they are more secure in their Japanese.

From their own parochial and reactionary point of view, I wonder if they may have a reason to be fearful. For while all the research I have read indicates that bilingualism is easily instilled at an early age, and that starting early does not harm understanding of the "mother" tongue, there is also interesting new research showing how patterns of thought are shaped by language. In that study, it was found that people who learnt (as children) a primitive sign language which did not include clear concepts of relative position (left and right, under/over etc), performed much worse in tests of spatial communication than those who learnt a later version of the language which did.

So it is not implausible that learning only Japanese could be a factor which contributes towards ensuring that children learn to think only as Japanese.

We have been amused in management meetings where everyone is rattling along in Japanese, interspersed with words like "management" and "communication". It's a cheap shot to say well, the Japanese language obviously does not include these concepts. And only partly true. More accurately, these words are used to mean the Japanese version of what the original concept was, which may bear little relation to what we would expect. Like a "diet", for example - which includes anything related to exercise, as well as a reduction in calorie intake itself. And "smart" means slim. Once, someone here (well-educated, with overseas experience) proudly described the Japanese funding arrangements as "very democratic", because all of the senior sensei were given reasonably equitable budgets to disperse as they saw fit among their minions.

No, that is not "democracy", it's a feudal hierarchy. But confusion between the two might explain rather a lot about Japanese politics.

The lack of distinction between "right" and "privilege" is also notable IMO. Here, we are allowed to do whatever the Govt allows us to do. And it doesn't matter if we understand the law, so long as we obey it.

So I wonder what would happen if a generation of genuinely bilingual Japanese children grow up with a facility to understand and debate the differences between rights and privileges, or democracies and feudal hierarchies. It could make for interesting times. No wonder the reactionary bigots are against it.

Meanwhile, JAMSTEC is still bravely holding back the tide of English, Canute-like. This makes it very easy to ignore the deluge of administrivia that fills my email inbox. Long may it continue!

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

The problem with teaching English in Japan is that so many teachers - and almost all of the populace use Katakana English:

Aporu instead of Apple, Testo instead of Test, etc.

Even with Phonics being taught in some junior high schools the negative reinforcement away from school soon washes away any progress. Colour me sceptical as far as the chances of success of this project goes.

As an aside, I've often found that the kids at school who aren't whizzes - or just don't care - can communicate far better. It takes both English and Japanese to do so - but they aren't afraid of making a mistake, as the high scorers are.

William M. Connolley said...

"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Languages_of_Pao" is good. For bonus points, it is where "gone emeritus" comes from.

Lighthouse said...

So desu ka? :-)

Living for a time in Brazil's large Japanese community I was surprised how many students from Japan were arriving....to learn Japanese.
No teburus (tables), notos (notebooks) etc there no...

Peter
(ceolas.net)
.

Alastair said...

It is not just the Japanes, everyone is speaking Globish now!
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2010/apr/06/everyone-talking-globish-robert-mccrum

This new ligua franca is upsetting the French
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/7844192.stm

Cheers, Alastair.

Steve Bloom said...

AIUI Canute's role was to cut to the chase and demonstrate to his court the fallaciousness of suggestions that he could command the tides, sort of an early scientist. I assume you probably didn't intend by that reference to imply the imminent collapse of JAMSTEC's language policy via a similar demonstration by its head.

James Annan said...

I realise there is some debate over the underlying purpose of Canute's (possibly apocryphal) actions, but I was using the metaphor in the traditional manner. I don't think any of JAMSTEC's management have the vision or leadership to pull off such a trick.

James Annan said...

I agree with yea-mon that the standard of English teaching is woeful - not that I have direct experience, but judging from the results, and also from what everyone says.

So I don't kid myself that this will lead to widespread fluency overnight (or even within a generation). But still, it must be a step in the right direction.