The British Academy has joined forces with the CBI, the British Chambers of Commerce, the Education and Employers Taskforce and leading businesses to steer a major research programme designed to rescue the country from âa colourless monoglot futureâ.
Born Global: Rethinking Language Policy for 21st Century Britain, which will run until July 2015, is designed to bridge the yawning gap between âyears of declining capability in language competence in educationâ and ârecurrent reports of high levels of employer demand for language skillsâ.
It hopes to âinform government language policy development, the current national curriculum review for England and future developments in higher education language curricula and assessmentâ.
âCo-ownersâ of education
At the university level, the numbers studying languages have been falling for years.
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Ucas figures for âplaced applicants by subject groupâ show a decline of close to 11Â per cent for European languages between 2009 and 2013 (from 4,130 to 3,680) and around 16.5Â per cent for non-European languages (from 1,340 to 1,120).
Richard Hardie, non-executive chair of financial services firm UBS, is chair of the Born Global steering group.
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Launching the project at the companyâs London headquarters on 23 September, he spoke of âthe need to fix the language supply chain into educationâ and for employers to become âco-owners of the educational curriculumâ.
The data now being gathered by Born Global should certainly help ârescue future generations from a colourless monoglot futureâ, he added.
Principal researcher Bernardette Holmes, a programme director at the University of Cambridgeâs Language Centre, noted that the British language deficit meant that UK employers often looked overseas when recruiting vital staff.
The scholar asked: âAre our young people only fit for lower-grade jobs?â
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With the British Chambers of Commerce wanting to âensure that the next generation of business owners are âborn globalââ, it was time âto make the rhetoric countâ through âa research-informed strategyâ, she argued.
Compare and contrast
Born Global will consult with âa representative sample of employers over a two-year periodâ in order to âelaborate a conceptual framework to map language competence, identifying the range of knowledge, skills and understanding required to function effectively from administrative to executive levelsâ, according to an information pack on the project.
It will also follow a sample of young people with language qualifications at GCSE level, A level and university, and âcompare their employment outcomes in areas such as earnings and employment periodsâ with people from similar backgrounds and attainment who lack such qualifications.
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