{"id":7597,"date":"2023-09-29T18:48:05","date_gmt":"2023-09-29T13:18:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/algeria-expands-english-classes-as-frances-influence-wanes-throughout-africa\/"},"modified":"2023-09-29T18:48:05","modified_gmt":"2023-09-29T13:18:05","slug":"algeria-expands-english-classes-as-frances-influence-wanes-throughout-africa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/algeria-expands-english-classes-as-frances-influence-wanes-throughout-africa\/","title":{"rendered":"Algeria expands English classes as France\u2019s influence wanes throughout Africa"},"content":{"rendered":"
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More than a year after Algeria launched a pilot program to teach English in elementary schools, the country is hailing it as a success and expanding it in a move that reflects a widening linguistic shift underway in former French colonies throughout Africa.<\/p>\n
Students returning to third and fourth grade classrooms this fall will participate in two 45-minute English classes each week as the country creates new teacher training programs at universities and eyes more transformational changes in the years ahead.<\/p>\n
“Teaching English is a strategic choice in the country\u2019s new education policy,” Education Minister Abdelkrim Belabed said last week, lauding the move as an immense success.<\/p>\n
CHINA, ALGERIA TO STEP UP COOPERATION ON SECURITY, DEFENSE<\/strong><\/p>\n English is the world’s most widely spoken language, accounts for the majority of content on the internet and remains a common language in business and science. And as France\u2019s economic and political influence wanes throughout Africa, Algeria is among a longer list of countries gradually transitioning toward English as their main foreign language.<\/p>\n This year, neighboring Mali changed its constitution to remove French from its list of official languages and Morocco made English classes compulsory in high schools.<\/p>\n Algeria has more French speakers than all but two nations \u2014 France itself and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Nearly 15 million out of the country\u2019s 44 million people speak it, according to the International Organization of the French Language. Its officials frame English classes as a practical rather than political shift, noting the language’s importance in scientific and technical fields.<\/p>\n But questions about French’s position in Algerian society have long been polarizing, as teachers and former education policy officials acknowledge.<\/p>\n