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I get that all the time in Dubai,
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"Here on holiday are you dear?"
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(Laughter)
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"Come to visit the children?"
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(Laughter)
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"How long are you staying?"
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Well, actually I hope for a while longer yet.
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I have been living and teaching in the Gulf for over 30 years
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(Cheers) (Applause)
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and in that time I have seen a lot of changes.
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That statistic is quite shocking, and I want to talk to you today
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about language loss and the globalization of English.
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I want to tell you about my friend,
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who was teaching English to adults in Abu Dhabi
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and one fine day, she decided to take them into the garden
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to teach them some nature vocabulary.
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But it was she who ended up learning all the Arabic words
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for their local plants, as well as their uses:
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medicinal uses, cosmetics, cooking, herbal.
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How did those students get all that knowledge?
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Of course, from their grandparents and even their great-grandparents.
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It's not necessary to tell you how important it is
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to be able to communicate across generations.
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But sadly, today, languages are dying at an unprecedented rate.
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A language dies every 14 days.
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I don't know how they know that but that's what they say, right?
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At the same time, English is the undisputed global language.
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Could that be a connection? Well, I don't know.
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But I do know that I have seen a lot of changes.
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When I first came out to the Gulf, I came to Kuwait,
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in the days when it was still a hardship post.
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Actually, not that long ago; that is a little bit too early.
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But nevertheless, I was recruited by the British Council
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along with about 25 other teachers,
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and we were the first non-Muslims to teach in the state schools there, in Kuwait.
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We were brought to teach English,
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because the government wanted to modernize the country,
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and to empower the citizens through education.
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And of course, the UK benefited from some of that lovely oil wealth.
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OK.
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This is the major change that I have seen:
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how teaching English has morphed
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from being a mutually beneficial practice
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to becoming a massive international business
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that it is today.
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No longer just a foreign language on the school curriculum,
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and no longer the sole domain of mother England.
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It has become a bandwagon
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for every English-speaking nation on Earth.
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And why not, after all?
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The best education,
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according to the latest world university rankings,
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is to be found in the universities of the UK and the US.
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So, everybody wants to have an English education, naturally.
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But if you are not a native speaker, you have to pass a test.
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Now, can it be right to reject a student
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on linguistic ability alone?
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Perhaps you have a computer scientist who is a genius.
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Would he need the same language as a lawyer, for example?
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Well, I don't think so.
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We, English teachers, reject them all the time.
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We put a stop sign, and we stop them in their tracks;
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they can't pursue their dream any longer till they get English.
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Let me put it this way,
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if I met a monolingual Dutch speaker,
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who had the cure for cancer,
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would I stop him from entering my British university?
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I don't think so.
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But indeed, that is exactly what we do.
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We, English teachers, are the gatekeepers,
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and you have to satisfy us first
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that your English is good enough.
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It can be dangerous to give too many...
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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to give too much power to a narrow segment of society,
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maybe the barrier would be too universal.
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But, I hear you say,
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"What about the research? It's all in English."
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The books are in English,
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the journals are in English,
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but that is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
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It feeds the English requirement, and so, it goes on.
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I ask you what happened to translation?
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If you think about the Islamic Golden Age,
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— there were lots of translation then —
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they translated from Latin and Greek
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into Arabic, into Persian,
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and then it was translated on into the Germanic languages of Europe,
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and the romance languages,
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and so light shone upon the Dark Ages of Europe.
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Now, don't get me wrong,
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— I am not against teaching English, all you English teachers out there —
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I am fine with it, I love it that we have a global language,
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we need one today more than ever.
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But, I am against using it as a barrier.
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Do we really want to end up with 600 languages
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and the main ones being English or Chinese?
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We need more than that.
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Where do we draw the line?
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This system equates intelligence
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with a knowledge of English —
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(Laughter)
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— which is quite arbitrary.
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(Cheers) (Applause)
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And I want to remind you
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that the giants upon whose shoulders today's intelligentsia stand,
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did not have to have English,
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— they didn't have to pass an English test —
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case in point, Einstein.
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He, by the way, was considered remedial at school,
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because he was in fact dyslexic.
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But fortunately for the world, he did not have to pass an English test
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because they didn't start until 1964
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with TOEFL, the American test of English.
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Now it's exploded.
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There are lots and lots of tests of English,
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and millions and millions of students do take these tests every year.
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You might think, you and me,
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that those fees are not that bad, they are OK,
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but they are prohibitive to so many millions of poor people.
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So immediately we are rejecting them.
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(Applause)
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It brings to mind a headline I saw recently,
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"Education: The Great Divide."
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I get it, I understand why people would want to focus on English.
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They want to give their children the best chance in life,
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and to do that, they need a western education,
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because, of course, the best jobs go
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to people out of the western universities that I put on earlier;
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it is a circular thing.
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Let me tell a story about two scientists, two English scientists.
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They were doing an experiment to do with genetics,
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and the forelimbs and the hind-limbs of animals.
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But they couldn't get the results they wanted,
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they really didn't know what to do,
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until along came a German scientist who realized
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that they were using two words for 'forelimb' and 'hindlimb',
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whereas genetics does not differentiate, and neither does German.
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So, bingo! Problem solved!
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If you can't think a thought,
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you are stuck.
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But if another language can think that thought,
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then by cooperating, we can achieve and learn so much more.
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My daughter came to England from Kuwait.
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She had studied science and mathematics in Arabic at an Arabic Medium School.
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She had to translate it into English at her Grammar School,
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and she was the best in the class at those subjects,
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which tells us that when students come to us from abroad,
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we may not be giving them enough credit for what they know,
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and they know it in their own language.
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When a language dies,
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we don't know what we lose with that language.
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This is a lovely —
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I don't know if you saw it on CNN recently,
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they gave the Heroes Award
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to a young Kenyan Shepard boy
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who couldn't study at night in his village — like all the village children —
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because the kerosene lamp it had smoke and it damaged his eyes,
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and anyway, there was never enough kerosene
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because what does a dollar a day buy for you?
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So, he invented a cost-free solar lamp,
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and now, the children in his village get the same grades at school
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as the children who have electricity at home.
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(Applause)
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When he received his award, he said these lovely words:
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"The children can lead Africa from what it is today,
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a dark continent, to a light continent."
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A simple idea, but it could have such far-reaching consequences.
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People who have no light,
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whether it's physical or metaphorical,
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cannot pass our exams,
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and we can never know what they know.
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Let us not keep them, and ourselves, in the dark.
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Let us celebrate diversity.
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Mind your language!
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Use it to spread great ideas!
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(Applause)