Education minister sends questionnaire to schools to validate their language plans
The Catalan education minister, Josep Gonzàlez-Cambray, has sent a questionnaire to school directors to validate their language plans.
On the day of the judicial deadline to introduce the 25% Spanish quota in classrooms was expiring, Tuesday, the cabinet asked schools seven questions to know whether the decree they approved the day before is going to be brought into effect.
Indeed, on Monday, the government countered the judiciary decision that ordered the quota with a new decree "not applying" such percentages strictly.
According to the legislation passed in an extraordinary cabinet meeting, the use of languages in classrooms should depend on the sociolinguistic situation of each center and its pupils, and not a "homogeneous" plan obliging all schools to have the same amount of hours in each language, as explained by the executive's spokesperson, Patrícia Plaja.
Seven questions
The seven questions include confirming that Catalan is used as the predominant working language in classrooms, also for those students who have just arrived in Catalonia, whether both Catalan and Spanish are used as a learning language, if the choice of teaching language is made after only educational and sociolinguistic considerations, if the level of languages shown in regular tests is taken into account, and whether strict percentages for each language – as mandated by the Supreme Court on November 23, 2021 – are avoided.
All school directors will have to answer the seven questions, and if they reply by saying 'yes' to all of them, they will not need to change their language plans next year – but they will have to do so if they reply 'no' to any of them. They have until June 30 to inform the ministry about the questions raised.
Gonzàlez-Cambray has also informed school heads that, following the decree passed on Monday, his department is "ultimately responsible" for the legality of their school plans as they will be verified.
The new decree has already come into force once published in the government's official gazette on Monday afternoon. However, it will not be applied until the next academic course, and in the coming weeks lawmakers in parliament have to approve it. Read More...