Gaelscoil Mhic Amhlaigh is to move to the next stage of planning
January 28, 2010
Gaelscoil Mhic Amhlaigh is to move to the next stage of architectural planning which will eventually see pupils no longer having to take classes in portacabins.
Education Minister Batt O’Keeffe has approved the school to go towards Stage 2A, the developed sketch scheme, which will allow it to plan for increasing its accommodation. The current school building can only cater for a maximum of 240 children but there are 414 pupils enrolled. This means that seven classes are held in portacabins and the two resource rooms are also housed in portacabins.
Pupil numbers at the school are expected to increase in September and so another portacabin will be required. This could result in exactly half of the pupils in portacabins and half in the main school building. Independent Galway West TD Noel Grealish has welcomed Minister O’Keeffe’s decision. “I am delighted the Minister has recognised the importance of providing new accommodation for the school in Knocknacarra,” he said. “I will be working closely with the Minister and the Board of Management to ensure the school progresses through the system as quickly as possible.”
Galway Advertiser – Kernan Andrews
28 Eanáir 2010
A Victory for Gaelscoileanna
January 28, 2010
Irish speakers a social and educational elite – report
January 9, 2010
IRISH IS the language of the elite in Ireland with speakers of the language enjoying higher incomes than the rest of the population, according to a controversial new report.
The report, compiled by researchers at the University of Ulster and the University of Limerick (UL), concludes Irish speakers are educated to a higher level and are less likely to be unemployed than people who have no Irish.
The main findings of the research published in the Economic and Social Review include;
– Non-speakers of Irish are twice as likely to be unemployed as their Irish-speaking counterparts;
– 42 per cent of Irish speakers worked in senior professional, managerial or technical jobs, compared to 27 per cent of non-speakers;
– Just 12 per cent of Irish speakers are in semi or unskilled jobs, compared to 20 per cent of non-speakers.
– Irish speakers were also seen to enjoy the advantage of a network of social contacts and all of the perks that go with such a network.
Prof Vani K Borooah of the University of Ulster said: “The strange thing about Irish speakers in Ireland is that many of them never speak Irish and of those that do, only a few speak it with any regularity.
“However, we found that they have a considerable advantage in the labour market.”
The research team used data from the 2006 Census to examine whether Irish conferred any advantage on those who spoke it.
Surprisingly, for a language that is rarely spoken outside of the Gaeltacht, the report found these benefits were significant.
Those who spoke Irish frequently were even more likely to secure a well-paid job , according to the report.
On education, some 25 per cent of Irish speakers hold a degree or a higher qualification, compared to 14 per cent of non-speakers.
Only 9 per cent of Irish speakers had primary or no qualifications, compared to 22 per cent of their non-Irish speaking counterparts.
The report says Gaelscoileanna have played a key role in raising educational attainment among Irish speakers.
It cites the 2009 Irish Times Feeder Schools List where 22 per cent of Gaelscoileanna sent all their Leaving Cert students to third level, compared to a progression average of 7 per cent.
Prof Borooah said Irish speakers in the Republic enjoy considerable social advantages as the language has been embraced by the middle and upper classes in the Republic.
Researchers found Irish speakers in Northern Ireland enjoyed similar employment benefits to their counterparts in the Republic.
In Northern Ireland, he said, learning Irish would generally be an opportunity enjoyed by Catholics at the upper end of the socio-economic scale in Northern Ireland.
He said the study was the first systematic investigation of any advantage enjoyed by Irish speakers on the island of Ireland.
Read the report in full here.
Gráinne Faller & Seán Flynn, The Irish Times 9th January 2010