Alexandra Frean
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A North-South divide is opening up in the study of modern foreign languages at GCSE, figures suggest.
In more than 100 of the 150 local authorities in England fewer than half of 16-year-olds took a GCSE in a modern foreign language. In ten areas, mostly in the North, more than three quarters of teenagers are dropping language study at GCSE, according to the Department for Children, Schools and Families.
Michael Gove, the Shadow Children’s Secretary, said that it was further evidence of a class divide. “Once again it is the poorest areas that are missing out as the opportunity gap between the fortunate and the forgotten widens,” he said.
Foreign language lessons became optional for 14 to 16-year-olds in 2004. Wealthier areas in the South have the highest take-up overall, but the top authority is Hounslow, West London, where 67.9 per cent took a modern language, a figure boosted by pupils studying home languages such as Urdu.
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The UK educational system is so wrong.That the government that should do a "program"for the whole country.No exception as in France...where the curriculum is the same for everybody,with several options available but with a strong common block
And it is FREE!:)
Marie, London, UK
My son worked hard learing the German language only to find when he came to enter sixth form he was not allowed to carry on his sudies. They explained to him that German was not considered to be a 'modern day language'! He was devastated-why allow students to work hard for 5 years then cut them off
Parent, Liverpool, Merseyside
"a figure boosted by pupils studying home languages such as Urdu"
Says it all really no one in london speakes english in the first place ofc they are more likley to learn a 2nd lang just so they can go shoping, in the north we dont have to every one speakes english.
MR Jones, Liverpool, England
There is so little available decent work up north, ( most are Mcjobs), that it doesn't matter if the kids don't study anything. You don't need languages to serve hamburgers.
judy, Liverpool, England