Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T11:24:13.056Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Place of Local-Language Literacy in Rural Development in Cameroon: Presentation of an Experimental Program

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

The question, “Which language for literacy?” is often asked in contexts where a number of languages are used in a given community or state (Bhola, 1983; Carron and Bordia, 1985; Fordham, 1985). Although pragmatic reasons for the choice of language—availability of materials and of teachers, and economic considerations—are sometimes adduced, it is generally agreed that the question is above all a political one.

The problem of language choice is acute in many developing countries, particularly in Africa, where a nation-state may be comprised of a large number of linguistically heterogeneous groups (Nigeria, for example, has 413. See Grimes 1988: 295). While the merits and demerits of developing and using such small languages are ardently debated (Fasold, 1984; Pattanayak, 1985; Skuttnabb-Kangas, 1981), it is rare to find studies of particular situations where attempts have been made to develop and use such languages for the purpose of rural development. This paper will present such a study.

Cameroon is a country of 10.5 million people where 238 languages are spoken (Dieu and Renaud, 1983). The bulk of the population (80 percent) live in rural areas where they are engaged in subsistence and cash crop farming (Biya, 1986). National development policy has emphasized the rural areas under the official banner of the “revitalization of village communities”; this policy has been adopted partly to seek to stem the rural exodus to the towns, and partly because of a recognition that Cameroon's main resource in the long term is agriculture.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Dieu, M. and Renaud, P., ed. 1983 Situation linguistique en Afrique centrale. Inventaire Préliminaire: Le Cameroun. Paris-Yaounde: ACCT/CERDOTOLA/DGRST.Google Scholar
Beavon, K. 1987Konzime Literacy Project.” In Alphabetisation expérimental en langue maternelle: Rapport Final, edited by Société Internationale de Linguistique, 135–44. Yaounde: SIL Cameroun.Google Scholar
Bhola, H. S., ed. 1983 The Promise of Literacy. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Blya, P. 1985Discours au IVe Congrès Ordinaire de l'UNC de Bamenda.” Cameroon Tribune no. 3232 (23 March).Google Scholar
Blya, P. 1986 Pour le Liberalisme Communautaire. Lausanne/Paris: Pierre-Marcel Favre/ABC.Google Scholar
Bonanni, C. 1980Indigenous Mental Structures: Their Functions and Limits in Non-formal Education Processes for Development.” In Tradition for Development—Indigenous Structures and Folk Media in Non-Formal Education, edited by Kidd, R. and Colletta, N., 272–79. Bonn: DSE/ICAE.Google Scholar
Bude, U. 1985 Primary Schools, Local Community and Development in Africa. Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft.Google Scholar
Cairns, J. C. 1986SIL Experimental Mother Tongue Literacy Program, Cameroon: Report of Pre-evaluation Mission, 17-28 May 1986.” Unpublished report, SIL Cameroon.Google Scholar
Cairns, J. C. 1987Experimental Mother Tongue Literacy Program, Cameroon: Final Evaluation.” Unpublished report, SIL Cameroon.Google Scholar
Cameroon Tribune. 1985Reportage sur l'inauguration de la semaine culturelle nationale 1985,” Cameroon Tribune no. 3273 (5 May).Google Scholar
Carron, G., and Bordia, A., eds. 1985 Issues in Planning and Implementing National Literacy Programmes. Paris: UNESCO/IIEP.Google Scholar
Chambers, R. 1983 Rural Development—Putting the Last First. Harlow: Longman.Google Scholar
du Renouveau, Congrès. 1985Resolution de politique sociale et culturelle (24.3.85),” Congrès du Renouveau de Bamenda de l'Union Nationale Camerounaise.Google Scholar
German Foundation for Development/Food and Agriculture Organization (DSE/FAO). 1985 International Expert Consultation on Challenge of Rural Poverty—How to Meet it. Feldafing: DSE/FAO.Google Scholar
Epule, K. 1986Promoting Effective Rural Development,“ Cameroon Tribune (5 May).Google Scholar
Fasold, R. 1984 The Sociolinguistics of Society. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Fordham, P., ed. 1985 One Billion Illiterates. One Billion Reasons for Action. Bonn/Toronto: DSE/ICAE.Google Scholar
Gagne, G., Daems, F, Kroon, S., Sturm, J. and Tarrab, E., eds. 1987 Selected Papers in Mother Tongue Education. Dordrecht/Montreal: Foris Publications/University of Montreal.Google Scholar
Grebe, K. 1987Development of Language Committee: The Case of Nso, Cameroon.” In Alphabetisation expérimentale en langue matemelle: Rapport Final, edited by Société Internationale de Linguistique, 153–64. Yaounde: SIL Cameroun.Google Scholar
Grimes, B. F., ed. 1988 Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 11th. ed. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics.Google Scholar
Hamadache, A. and Martin, D. 1986 Theory and Practice of Literacy Work—Policies, Strategies and Examples. Paris/Ottawa: UNESCO/Canadian Organization for Development through Education.Google Scholar
Irumu, A. K. and Edema, A. B. 1987Problèmes de la langue maternelle dans un pays multilingue.” In Selected Papers in Mother Tongue Education, edited by Gagne, G., Daems, F., Kroon, S., Sturm, J., and Tarrab, E., 103–10. Dordrecht/Montreal: Foris Publications/University of Montreal Google Scholar
Kidd, R., and Colletta, N., eds. 1980 Tradition for Development—Indigenous Structures and Folk Media in Non-Formal Education. Bonn: DSE/ICAE.Google Scholar
MESRES (Ministère de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche Scientifique). 1985 “Allocution d'ouverture du 4ème Congrès Régional de la SIL en Afrique prononcée par le Ministre de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche Scientifique.” Yaounde (27 May).Google Scholar
Oakley, P. and Marsden, D. 1984 Approaches to Participation in Rural Development. Geneva: International Labour Office.Google Scholar
Oakley, P. and Winder, D. 1981The Concept and Practice of Rural Social Development: Current Trends in Latin America and India.”In Manchester Papers on Development, vol. 1, 171.Google Scholar
Ouane, A. 1984Alphabetisation et formation des formateurs: l'expérience de l'Afrique francophone,” International Review of Education, 30/3): 329–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pattanyak, D. P. 1985Diversity in Communication and Languages; Predicament of a Multilingual National State: India, A Case Study.” In Language of Inequality, edited by Wolfson, N. and Manes, J., 399407. Berlin: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skutnabb-Kangas, T. 1981 Bilingualism or Not: The Education of Minorities. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters Ltd.Google Scholar
SIL (Société Internationale de Linguistique). 1987 Alphabetisation expérimentale en langue maternelle: Rapport Final. Yaounde: SIL Cameroun.Google Scholar
Tadadjeu, M. 1982L'intégration linguistique au Cameroun,” New Horizons, (Special Issue), (May 1982).Google Scholar
Ubels, E. and Ubels, V. 1987Karang Literacy Project.” In Alphabetisation expérimentale en langue maternelle: Rapport Final, edited by Société Internationale de Linguistique, 103–26. Yaounde: SIL Cameroun.Google Scholar
Wolfson, N. and Manes, J., eds. 1985 Language of Inequality. Berlin: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar