Media releases

  • Brock experts discuss disappearing languages, early learning ahead of International Mother Language Day

    EXPERT ADVISORY: February 15 2024 – R0021

    Brock University experts are hoping to shine light on the alarming rate at which the world’s languages are disappearing — and on the importance of preserving them.

    The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, which commemorates International Mother Language Day on Wednesday, Feb. 21, says a language disappears every two weeks, leaving an estimated 45 per cent of the world’s 7,000 spoken languages endangered.

    Brock Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Jean Ntakirutimana, who speaks the central-east African languages of Kirundi, Kiswahili and Kinyarwanda as well as French and English, calls the disappearance of languages a “big loss for humanity,” as each language is an intergenerational “database of knowledge.”

    “Each culture has a way of understanding, and expressing, the world around them: the fauna, flora, the people, everything,” he says. “We learn how to interact with the environment around us — how to maintain and take care of it and how that environment can be beneficial for us.”

    Ntakirutimana notes how maps showing endangered ecosystems line up with maps where languages are in various stages of becoming extinct.

    Replacing local languages with dominant, foreign languages can cause confusion, Ntakirutimana says. He recalls being taught in elementary school about the four seasons in French (printemps, été, automne and hiver) — concepts he couldn’t grasp well as a child because Burundi has only a rainy and a dry season.

    Despite the challenges, Ntakirutimana sees signs of a linguistic revival in Africa and elsewhere. Communications technologies are evolving and increasingly connecting people who speak the same language, he says, and new languages are evolving, especially among youth.

    Sherri Vansickle, Assistant Professor in Brock’s Indigenous Educational Studies program, who is from Onondaga Nation, Eel Clan, says that, along with celebrating Mother Language Day, there is also a grief process for Indigenous communities mourning their language loss.

    “Many Indigenous people in Canada don’t speak their mother language because of Indian Residential Schools,” she says. “Every time a language speaker passes on, it’s like losing a library to the Indigenous community.”

    Vansickle says many residential school survivors would not teach Indigenous languages to their grandchildren as a way of protecting the next generation from the harms they endured themselves.

    Through the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and its calls to action, Vansickle says there is a renewed hope Indigenous languages will be preserved. She notes that the Mohawk, Cayuga and Nishnawbe languages are taught at Brock University.

    “As educators, we make sure to always use Indigenous words: Skén:nen (peace), Kariwiio (power) and Kasastensera (righteousness),” she says. “Transmitting these foundational concepts to students gives us hope that future generations are learning about the formation of the confederacy.”

    For Associate Professor of Applied Linguistics Lynn Dempsey, educating children early in their mother tongue forms a strong base for subsequent language and brain development.

    Knowledge of grammar, sounds and conversational and storytelling skills children acquire in their mother tongue will transfer to other languages such as English, especially when the mother language has a similar sound system to the second language, she says.

    “It’s not just spoken language skills that transfer,” says Dempsey. “Research shows that skills in the mother language transfer to reading and writing in a second language. For example, early experience with books in the first language predicts reading comprehension in a second language later on.”

    Bilingual children seem to be better at “executive functions,” or switching attention between different aspects of a task, says Dempsey, adding they are “better at tasks that involve ‘tuning in’ to the sounds of language.

    “For example, they can count the number of sounds in a word better than monolingual children. Being able to ‘tune in’ to speech sounds helps children learn to read,” she says.

    Jean Ntakirutimana, Brock University Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures; Sherri Vansickle, Assistant Professor in Brock’s Indigenous Educational Studies program; and Lynn Dempsey, Associate Professor of Applied Linguistics are available for media interviews on the topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Take bullying seriously every day, Brock expert says as Pink Shirt Day nears

    EXPERT ADVISORY: February 14 2024 – R0020

    As Pink Shirt Day approaches on Wednesday, Feb. 28, Brock anti-bullying expert Tony Volk says parents, teachers and caregivers need to be mindful about their attitudes toward bullying.

    “We know that in classrooms where the message is that bullying isn’t a big deal, we find it being perpetrated more often,” says the Child and Youth Studies Professor, who has spent time researching bullying in Niagara classrooms and beyond.

    A member of Brock Research on Aggression and Victimization Experiences (BRAVE), one of Canada’s largest teams of child and youth bullying experts, Volk cautions that failing to consider bullying important actually makes it a more serious problem, and that with an abundance of research showing that the effects of bullying can last for years to come, ignoring or dismissing it as a rite of passage should never be an option.

    He draws a comparison to physical injury when considering the potential impact of bullying.

    “If you exercise your muscles, you make them sore and they become stronger, and similarly, if you experience social stress, you have to figure out conflict and navigate challenge to develop stronger social skills,” says Volk. “The problem in both cases is when you have extreme levels of stress and it causes a bone to break or causes damage to one’s mental well-being.”

    Volk notes that even once a broken bone is healed, it is never as strong as it was before — and the same is true for those who are bullied.

    “For some children, the stress of bullying is overwhelming, and it causes damage that we know impacts mental and physical health for decades,” he says. “But we don’t know ahead of time which kids are going to be resilient and overcome that stress and which kids are not.”

    Volk says that parents may assume their child is insulated from harmful effects of bullying, but that they need to consider how different factors in a child’s life can combine to increase vulnerability at any given time.

    “A child who is strong and athletic can slip and tumble in the wrong way playing a contact sport, get a concussion, and that’s the end of their sporting career,” he says. “In the same way, a child who hears that their grandmother is dying might then be called horrible names in gym class and that vulnerability causes the damage to happen.”

    Volk emphasizes that there are no group benefits when it comes to bullying.

    “Unlike in sports, where some risky play is good for child development, there’s really no positive for a group when it comes to bullying,” he says. “And because we can’t tell how any one child might be affected, there is no safe level of risk for bullying.”

    Instead, Volk says that it’s critical for adults to step in when a child is being bullied.

    “If a child is being bullied or says they’re being bullied, then we need to stop and take that seriously,” he says. “Adults need to be involved to restore the power balance. Remember, the bully has chosen this victim because they are not able to effectively fight back, so the fight is unfair. And if we trivialize it, we’re making it worse.”

    Brock University Professor of Child and Youth Studies Tony Volk is available for media interviews on the topic. A video of Volk discussing Pink Shirt Day, and ways to support a child who is experiencing bullying, is also available on YouTube for media use.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases