Minister Bruton announces Gaeltacht School Recognition Scheme
April 28, 2017
Minister also announces two additional posts in NUI Galway to strengthen the supply of Irish-medium post-primary teachers
Following on from the launch of the Department’s Policy on Gaeltacht Education 2017-2022 last October, the Minister for Education and Skills, Richard Bruton T.D. today announced the commencement of the Gaeltacht School Recognition Scheme.
A circular, accompanied by an information pack, has been issued today to all primary and post-primary schools in Gaeltacht language-planning areas inviting those schools to participate in the Scheme. The Scheme will allow participating schools to seek to achieve Gaeltacht School Recognition on the basis of the implementation of specific language criteria over a five-year period and participation in the language-planning processes under the Gaeltacht Act, 2012.
A school’s decision to participate in the Scheme has to be taken in consultation with the whole-school community, including the principal, teaching staff, board of management, Chief Executive of the Education and Training Board (ETB), if applicable, parent representatives and local language-planning committee. To promote a consultative collaborative approach, the Expression of Interest Form submitted by schools to the Department must be signed by the school principal, chairperson of the board of management and chairperson of the relevant language-planning committee.
Schools participating in the Scheme will be eligible to access extra supports under the terms set out in circulars relating to the Scheme. Supports to be provided in the 2017/2018 school year are set out in Circular 0033/2017 and Circular 0034/2017.
“The Government is strongly committed to strengthening Irish-medium education in the Gaeltacht and the Gaeltacht School Recognition Scheme is a major step in that process,” said Minister Bruton. “In the next school year, the emphasis will be on providing professional development and support for principals and teachers in the scheme, so that they can plan how they will improve Irish-medium provision in their schools.”
Schools that will participate in the scheme will receive grants for additional educational resources and a range of professional development supports in 2017/18. Further supports will be announced in future years as the Policy on Gaeltacht Education is implemented.
“The approaches and supports outlined in the circulars that I have issued today have been discussed at length with a wide range of organisations in the Gaeltacht and with groups of primary and second-level principals in Gaeltacht schools. The views of all of these individuals and groups, as well as the support of my colleague, Minister of State for Gaeltacht Affairs, Seán Kyne and his department, have been invaluable in shaping the scheme,” said Minister Bruton.
“I encourage all schools in the Gaeltacht to seek to participate in the scheme and I am confident that this will contribute to supporting and promoting the future of Irish as a living language in Gaeltacht communities,” said the Minister.
Full details of the Scheme can be found in Circular 0033/2017 and Circular 0034/2017 http://www.education.ie/en/The-Education-System/Policy-on-Gaeltacht-Education-2017-2022/Policy-on-Gaeltacht-Education-2017-2022.html
Posts in NUI Galway to strengthen Irish-medium teacher education
Today Minister Richard Bruton also announced a further step to strengthen the supply of Irish-medium post-primary teachers. Two new posts will be created at NUI, Galway through secondments, to expand the Professional Masters of Education (PME), at NUI, Galway.
“The Policy on Gaeltacht Education recognises that we need to improve the supply of teachers who have the specialised skills needed to teach in Irish-medium and Gaeltacht schools. The creation of these two new posts is the first steps in implementing that commitment in the Policy on Gaeltacht Education, said Minister Bruton.
“NUI Galway already has a strong track record in the provision of teacher education for Irish-medium schooling, and I am delighted to be able to support the expansion of this provision,” said Minister Bruton.
It is expected that the secondment of the teachers to the MGO programme for the 2017-18 academic year will allow for an immediate and ongoing increase in the supply of Irish-medium post-primary teachers. This will be achieved through a range of measures including the upskilling of student teachers, outreach, online and blended learning opportunities, along with programme enhancement and promotion.
Maidin Caifé Gaelscoil de hÍde
April 27, 2017
Ag ócáid tiomsaithe airgid ar son Gaelscoil Mhíchíl Uí Choileáin, baillaíodh €4,106 thar an iomlán. Rachaidh an t-airgid i dtreao seibhísía chur ar fáil do dhaltaí sa scoil atá ar Speictream an Uathachais. D’eagraigh Jennifer Brennan an ócáid le cúnamh uaidh Rosaleen Fitzgerald agus tuismitheoirí eile de dhaltaí sna ranganna ar leith.
Bronnadh an seic go luath roimh saoire na Chásca ar Charmel Nic Airt, Príomhoide (lár an grianghraif) fad is a bhí múinteoirí na ranganna; Jerry Ó Ceocháin; Emer Ní Dhrisceoil, Shane Field, Máire Ní Chróinín agus Criostóir Ó Laoghaire i láthair, mar aon le tuismitheoirí agus clainní de dhaltaí sna ranganna. Rosaleen agus Jennifer a rinne an seic a bhronnadh. (Tá na múinteoirí ar fad chun tosaigh sa ghrianghraif seachas Criostóir Ó Laoghaire atá ar dheis.)
Ghabh na heagarthóirí den ócáid buíochas leo siúd taobh istigh agus lasmuigh den phobail scoile a thacaigh leis an ócáid tríd bácáil a dhéanamh agus tríd bheith i láthair ar an lá.
(Gaeilge) Folúntais ag Pobailscoil Neasáin
April 26, 2017
12 Surprising Benefits Of Learning A Second Language
April 26, 2017
Why should you learn a second language?
There are several obvious reasons. It’s fun and it allows you to communicate with people from other countries. If you’re going to travel abroad, you probably need at least basic language skills.
But there are a number of other surprisingly powerful benefits from learning a second language. Most people are unaware of these benefits.
If you need yet another reason to study a second language, pay attention. You’re about to discover 12 surprising benefits of studying a second language.
BENEFIT #1: It Forces You To Think Deeply
Learning a second language forces you to think in new ways. You’re forced to grapple with grammar rules, word meaning, prefixes, suffixes, and a host of other new challenges. This sustained thinking develops your ability to think deeply, express concepts in new ways, and solve problems from new angles. Learning a second language teaches to you to think in ways you’ve never traditionally done.
BENEFIT #2: Your Ability To Switch Between Tasks Is Increased
Switching between tasks can be hugely challenging if you’re not used to it. It requires disengaging from one activity, switching to a new mindset, and then fully engaging in a different activity. As the American Psychological Association wrote:
“[A]lthough switch costs may be relatively small, sometimes just a few tenths of a second per switch, they can add up to large amounts when people switch repeatedly back and forth between tasks. Thus, multitasking may seem efficient on the surface but may actually take more time in the end and involve more error. Meyer has said that even brief mental blocks created by shifting between tasks can cost as much as 40 percent of someone’s productive time.”
When you learn a second language, you become much more proficient at switching between tasks and the toll on your productivity is significantly minimized.
BENEFIT #3: Your Brain Becomes More Resistant To Dementia and Alzheimer’s
Believe it or not, learning a second language can significantly delay the onset of brain diseases like Alzheimer’s and dementia. This has been proven in several multilingual studies.
Speaking of one particular study, Alissa Sauer wrote:
After evaluating the participants, researchers found that those who spoke a second language delayed certain types of dementia by an average of 4.5 years. There was no additional benefit to those who spoke more than two languages and education, gender, and occupation had no effect on the delay.
Alzheimer’s is one of the leading killers in the United States and is a terrible disease. It is, essentially, a slow death. Being able to delay the onset of Alzheimer’s for even a year is significant, but for 4.5 years is an enormous benefit.
BENEFIT #4: Memory Is Significantly Improved
Memory is, in many ways, like a muscle. It is strengthened by working out. One unfortunate downside of the internet is that it has significantly weakened our memories. We can simply search for whatever we want with zero need to remember anything.
Learning a second language forces you to work your memory on a regular basis. It forces you to think hard about things and to store things in your short term and long term memory.
The Journal Of Experimental Psychology reported that bilingual children consistently outperform monolingual children in tasks requiring working memory.
If you find your memory slipping, making the effort to learn a second language can be a huge step in the right direction.
BENEFIT #6: Intelligence Is Increased
This sounds like infomercial hype, but there is legitimate scientific researching backing this benefit. It turns out that learning a second language has been shown to raise overall intelligence levels and reading levels.
This has broad implications. If you just want to be generally smarter (and who doesn’t?), you should consider learning a new language. And, if you or your child struggles with reading, adopting a second language can be a powerful boost.
No, learning a second language won’t turn you into a genius, but it can up your overall intelligence levels.
BENEFIT #7: Decision Making Skills Are Improved
One of the biggest hindrances to making good decisions is biases. Our biases cloud our judgment and can lead us to choose poorly when presented with a multitude of options.
Learning a second language has been shown to reduce our “heuristic biases”, which is one of the key factors in decision making. In other words, when we are presented with a series of choices, we are less reliant on our inherent (and often faulty) biases. Instead, we are able to choose based more on logic than gut feelings.
Heuristics are the series of simple rules we use to evaluate decisions. These consist of mental shortcuts that focus on a single issue of a complex problem and ignore other factors. For example, when asked if more English words begin with “K” or have “K” as the third letter, we instinctively choose the first option because it’s easy to think of words that begin with “K”. In reality, there are three times as many words with “K” as the third letter, demonstrating that our heuristics are helpful but often misleading.
Learning a second language forces you to think more carefully through problems, which in turn reduces your vulnerability to your instinctive, heuristic biases.
If you regularly find yourself making poor choices, learning a second language could be a lifesaver.
BENEFIT #8: Your Primary Language Skills Are Improved
One of the side benefits of learning a second language is that your primary language skills are also improved. Studying a second language forces you to think through things like vocabulary, conjugation, conversation, idioms, and a host of other things that we rarely think about when speaking our primary language.
Often, a person learning a second language becomes much more attuned to the nuances of the first language. They pick up on subtle things they never would have seen before and often develop a deeper understanding of the language.
While this may not be high on your language priority list, it certainly is a significant benefit.
BENEFIT #9: Increased Skill In Other Subject Matters
Interestingly, studying languages seems to increase other academic abilities such as mathematics. Studies have shown that individuals with a second language tend to perform better on standardized testing like the SAT.
The Center For Languages, Literature, and Culture at Ohio State University wrote:
Research has shown that math and verbal SAT scores climb higher with each additional year of foreign language study, which means that the longer you study a foreign language, the stronger your skills become to succeed in school. Studying a foreign language can improve your analytic and interpretive capacities. And three years of language study on your record will catch the eye of anyone reading your job or college application.
If you want to improve your mathematical ability, one surprising way to do it may be by learning a second language.
BENEFIT #10: Deeper Understanding Of Other Cultures
We often fail to realize how much our language influences our view of the world and other people. Immersing yourself in a foreign language opens new vistas and viewpoints. It allows you to understand other perspectives and embrace views other than your own.
Additionally, when you spend months learning about another culture, it’s difficult to be prejudiced against that culture. Suffice to say, one way to increase compassion and inclusiveness in the world would be to have everyone study a second language.
BENEFIT #11: Increased Career Options
We are increasingly living in a multicultural world. Companies open offices overseas, and remote jobs with foreign companies are being created. The need for bilingual individuals is greater than ever.
Learning a second language can, in many ways, double the number of career options available to you. You literally expand your job pool by multiple countries. Additionally, learning a second language can allow you to climb the career ladder faster. Positions within your company that were previously unavailable suddenly are within reach.
BENEFIT #12: Better Concentration Skills
Learning a second language has been shown to significantly improve a person’s ability to concentrate, particularly in environments with many stimuli (think school, dorm, etc.). The reason for this may surprise you. When speaking, bilinguals are constantly juggling two languages in their heads. The primary language is activated and the secondary language must be suppressed.
This constant juggling improves the brain’s ability to focus on one thing while tuning out other things. As one study noted:
The need to constantly control two languages confers advantages in the executive system, the system that directs cognitive processing. These effects have been demonstrated primarily using visual stimuli and are heightened in children and older adults. Specifically, bilinguals, relative to monolinguals, are better able to monitor conflicting sensory information and tune into a relevant stimulus or stimulus features amid irrelevant information, via a process known as inhibitory control.
In other words, knowing two languages increases a person’s ability to concentrate on one thing and ignore irrelevant information.
If you struggle with concentration, consider learning a second language!
Conclusion
Learning a second language is beneficial on so many levels. It increases your intelligence, improves your understanding of the world, and opens up new career options for you. It improves your cognitive skills and helps you be more sympathetic to other cultures.
Frankly, this is one of those subjects that has very little downside and tremendous upside. In addition to the benefit of learning a second language, you become a much more rounded person.
Do you see the power of a second language? Now’s the time to get started learning one.
Source: Deep English
(Gaeilge) Clann Lir ar stáitse san Axis i mBaile Munna
April 26, 2017
(Gaeilge) Folúntais i gColáiste na hInse
April 26, 2017
(Gaeilge) Folúntais i gColáiste na Mí
April 26, 2017
(Gaeilge) Folúntais i gColáiste Chú Chulainn
April 26, 2017
(Gaeilge) Caifé Cultúir!
April 25, 2017
(Gaeilge) Folúntais i gColáiste Oiriall
April 25, 2017