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fact_sheets:frisian_in_the_netherlands

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Frisian in the Netherlands

Language designations:

  • In the language itself: Frysk
  • ISO 639-3 standard: fry

Official language status

Official language in the province of Fryslân, the Netherlands

Status in the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages:

Frisian is covered under Part III of the Charter

Language vitality according to:

UNESCO Ethnologue Endangered Languages
Vulnerable 2 out of 10 (10 means extinct) Vulnerable

About the Frisian Language

Frisian is a West Germanic language closely related to Dutch. Until the fifteenth century Frisian was widely used in writing as well as speech in an area much larger than that of the current province, following the coastline of the present-day Netherlands and Germany. 1) .

Read more in Mercator's Regional Dossier

Language Area

Frisian is an autochtonous minority language spoken in large parts of Fryslân, one of the twelve provinces of the Netherlands.

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The Property Boundaries

 

Points of Interest
id symbol latitude longitude description
The Property Boundaries
KML file KML track KML track: frisian

Demographics

  • In 2015, ~ 67% of the 646.000 inhabitants of Frisia speak Frisian (reasonably) well.
  • ~ 94% understands Frisian.
  • ~ 15% writes the language well

Writing skills seem to have improved somewhat in the last few years2).

Percentage of Frisians that speak the Frisian language in different age classes:

source:3)

Percentage of students that speak Frisian at home


Frisian education in the Netherlands

0-3 Years old: preschool education

Legislation

Dutch law states that group leaders are free to use Frisian.

Teacher training

Educational materials

Practice

Frisian is used mainly in individual contacts with children or parents. When reading or singing Dutch is used much more often.

Read more

4-12 years old: primary education

Legislation

Dutch law states that, in primary education in the province of Fryslân, Frisian is an obligatory subject. It may be used as a medium of instruction. Schools may receive exemption from this law, and a few have.

Trilingual education

To improve Frisian language education in primary school, an experiment, set up by the Fryske Akademy, started in 1997 with trilingual education: seven primary schools committed themselves to use Frisian and English also as mediums of instruction: Frisian in all eight grades, English only in the last two. The experiment was successful and in 2010 the number of trilingual schools counted 38.

Teacher training

Teachers for primary education are trained at the Stenden Hogeschool and the NHL. A Frisian language course is part of the curriculum.

Educational materials

  • Studio F: a Frisian language teaching method. Their digital learning environment can be viewed online.
  • Begripend lêzen Frysk: CITO examination to test Frisian reading skills in the highest grade of primary education.

In practice

Regard for the minority language in class

  • In 2009, The subject Frisian was given for about 45 minutes per week (N=422).4)
  • 15 to 20% of primary schools use Frisian regularly as a medium of instruction.
  • 6% Of primary schools do not offer Frisian lessons at all.5).

Teacher skills

  • 20% of the teachers is not qualified to teach Frisian. Of 28% the qualification is unknown.6)
  • 85% of the primary school teachers claim to speak Frisian well
  • 69% claims to write it well.

Student accomplishments

Read more

12-16/18 years old: secondary education

Legislation

Since 1993, the Dutch law on secondary education prescribes that Frisian is an obligatory subject in the two lowest grades. However, since 2006, the provincial government may grant schools exemption from this rule.

Teacher training

Educational materials

  • Searje 36: digital learning method to learn Frisian in the first year of secondary education.
  • Linkk: Frisian magazine and television.

In practice

Attention for minority language in class

In 2009 about 27% of secondary schools offered Frisian lessons.7)

Teacher skills

An estimated 40% of the Frisian teachers is unqualified.8)

Read more

Adult education

Read more

Evaluation of language education

The inspectorate (Inspectie van het Onderwijs) inspects Frisian primary and secondary language education every few years.


Educational resources

General resources

1)
Frisian in the Netherlands. / Riemersma, A.M.J.; Gorter, D.; Ytsma, J. The other languages of Europe : Demographic, Sociolinguistic and Educational Perspectives. Clevedon : Multilingual Matters, 2001. p. 103-118.
2) , 3)
Fryske taalatlas 2015, provinsje fryslân
4) , 6) , 7) , 8)
Inspectie van het Onderwijs (2010)Tussen wens en werkelijkheid
fact_sheets/frisian_in_the_netherlands.1467897308.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/07/07 15:15 by johanneke

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