3 Questions: Michel DeGraff on Haiti’s new policy for teaching in Kreyòl

Monday, July 20, 2015 - 08:00 in Psychology & Sociology

This month, Haiti’s government announced a new policy to educate students in Kreyòl, the native language of most Haitians, rather than French, the language traditionally used in schools. Introducing Kreyòl-language instruction has been a cause of Michel DeGraff, a professor of linguistics at MIT and a native of Haiti. MIT News recently discussed the policy shift with him. Q. Why is it important to help Haitian students learn in Kreyòl? A. Research has shown that we learn best in the languages we speak most fluently. In Haiti, at least 95 percent of the population is fluent in Kreyòl only. The use of any other language of instruction is a recipe for academic failure. This failure becomes a national tragedy when it repeats itself generation after generation, with Kreyòl-speaking children being taught in French. According to research in cognitive science, becoming a good reader involves a “virtuous triangle” that seamlessly connects three sets...

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