Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9363
Title: Language policy and instructional practice dichotomy: The case of primary schools in Ghana
Authors: Davis, Ernest
Agbenyega, Joseph S.
Keywords: Language policy
Ghana
Postcolonial theory
Sub-Saharan Africa
Education policy and pedagogics
Issue Date: 2012
Publisher: International Journal of Educational Research
Abstract: ‘‘Clear grounding in a location gives us the confidence to engage with knowledge from other locations as we deconstruct and reconstruct them with our purposes’’ (Canagarajah, 2005, p. 15). This quote serves the basis of what this paper presents on language policy and pedagogical practices in Ghana. Language plays an important role in pedagogy, it is the medium through which concepts are thought, learned and also assessed. The use of foreign language as a medium of instruction in multilingual classroom is often characterized by a number of challenges. This paper reports of a study which sort to explore headteachers’ and teachers’ knowledge about the Ghanaian medium of instruction policy and how this policy is being applied in Ghanaian schools. Interviews were carried out with 10 headteachers selected from 10 schools. Qualitative analysis of the results revealed what appeared to be gaps between what the policy says and what the research participants do in their schools. Implication for these gaps between policy and practice on students’ learning outcomes is discussed to inform future policies in Ghana and other Sub-Saharan Africa that have similar situation as in Ghana.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9363
Appears in Collections:Institute of Education

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