L-R: Gonul Daniels, Nick de Bois, Boris Johnson |
NEWS/UK
By Boulent Mustafa & İpek Özerim
A campaign to save Turkish exams in Britain has
secured widespread backing. First brought to the public’s attention by Londra Gazete in March, teachers, students and parents in the community were astonished by
national examination board OCR’s decision to abolish Turkish exams. As things
stands, no secondary school will be able to offer Turkish GCSE and A Levels
from 2017.
Since breaking the news, Londra Gazete has launched a community-backed campaign to reinstate
Turkish exams. A petition on Change.org has attracted just over 2,500 signatures
and there has been universal support from Britain ’s three big political
parties.
On 24 March, Nick de Bois (then Enfield North MP) led a
debate in Parliament about lesser taught minority languages in Britain and the
threat they were under. The heightened awareness has resulted in many other
high profile politicians throwing their weight behind the Save Our Turkish
Exams campaign, including Mayor of London Boris Johnson (himself of Turkish
heritage), former Lib Dem MP Lynne Featherstone, and Labour shadow Business Secretary
Chukka Ummuna and Catherine West, the new Labour MP for Hornsey and Wood
Green.
Labour was the first party to pledge to reinstate
the exams if they formed the next government. Shadow education secretary
Tristram Hunt called the decision to scrap Turkish “short-sighted”. The commitment has been met by the Conservatives,
while the Lib Dems have said they respect the independence of examination
boards, but if elected, would meet with the boards to impress upon them the
need to maintain Turkish and other diverse languages.
Catherine West and Chukka Ummuna |
The shock decision by OCR to scrap Turkish came
even after the British Council ranked it as the 8th most important
language to learn. The exam board claims there is insufficient demand for this
and a host of other languages, including Bengali, Guajarati and Polish, which
are also under threat of being scrapped. Yet their own stats from June 2014 show
more students took Turkish ‘A’ Level than either German or Spanish (618 for
Turkish, 586 Spanish and 398 for German), suggesting that other factors were
involved in their decision.
OCR’s decision will deprive Turkish-speaking
teenagers in Britain
of a vital bond to their cultural roots. While other exams in Turkish exist,
these are aimed at native speakers whose standard of Turkish is far higher. The
OCR examination is aimed as testing Turkish as a foreign language.
Londra
Gazete’s English News Editor Mike Daventry told T-VINE, “We will be tracking the issue after the
elections to ensure the parties follow through on their pledges and help
re-instate Turkish exams.”
You can show your support for the campaign by signing
the online petition here.
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