Inspiring Research
Several of the poems in SiĂŽn Aledâs new collection, , were inspired by his experiences while conducting research with the School of Education at Âé¶čAV into the factors influencing school pupilsâ social use of Welsh.
As SiĂŽn explains, âArising out of the research work with schools in several parts of Wales, I had the opportunity to visit several parts of the world where groundbreaking work is happening to safeguard and to revitalise minority languagesâ.
SiĂŽn travelled to Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory in Ontario, Canada, Ireland, Scotland and the Basque Country. He also took part in a language revitalisation workshop in Thailand, where his meeting with Doc Wai, who feared he could be the last poet composing in the language, inspired a poem.
SiĂŽn believes that making and maintaining international links is vital to the field of language planning here: âThe challenges facing minority languages worldwide are often very similar to those we face in Wales, and we can learn so much from policy and practice in those other contexts â and there is so much we can contribute from our experience with the Welsh language as well.â
SiĂŽnâs research, involving almost 600 children in Years 6 and 7 in Welsh medium schools serving communities with widely varying percentages of Welsh speakers, revealed that the childrenâs attitude to the language is overwhelmingly positive but that a perceived lack of opportunities to use Welsh outside was often a cause for concern. The children had little engagement with Welsh on television, radio and social media, with English being viewed as the ânaturalâ language for use on those channels.
As SiĂŽn put it, âAs far as attitudes are concerned, the research paints a very hopeful picture, and what is happening within the schools is clearly valuable â but we need to pay far more attention to the place of the language in the community, particularly in terms of opportunities to use it. We could learn a great deal from the Basque Country, for example, where in language profiling and planning for the normalisation of the use of Basque among school age children the school and its community are viewed as an integrated whole. If we are to have a realistic hope of achieving the Governmentâs target of a million people who are not only able to speak Welsh but who actually use it from day to day by 2050, we must wake up today to the scale and complexity of the task ahead of us and recognise the substantial investment in time and money that will be necessary for success.â
Publication date: 3 August 2018