languages:lower_sorbian_in_germany
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languages:lower_sorbian_in_germany [2016/10/06 11:04] – [European legislation:] johanneke | languages:lower_sorbian_in_germany [2024/10/16 11:59] (current) – [Language vitality according to:] ydwine | ||
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==== Language designations: | ==== Language designations: | ||
- | * In the language itself: | + | * In the language itself: |
- | * [[general_information: | + | * [[general_information: |
+ | * In German, next to // | ||
- | ==== Official language status | + | ==== Language vitality according to: ==== |
- | Lower Sorbian is not an official language in Germany | + | |
- | German is the only official | + | ^ [[https:// |
+ | | {{: | ||
- | ==== Status in the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages: ==== | + | ==== Linguistic aspects: ===== |
- | Lower Sorbian | + | * Classification: |
+ | * Script: //Latin with additional diacritics. Lower Sorbian alphabet: a, b, c, č, ć, d, e, ě, f, g, h, (ch,) i, j, k, ł, l, m, n, ń, o, p, r, ŕ, s, š, ś, t, u, w, y, z, ž, ź.// | ||
- | ==== Language | + | ==== Language |
- | ^ [[http:// | + | The standardization of both Lower and Upper Sorbian is connected to Reformation. The first religious texts were translated into Sorbian in the 16th century. A Bible translation in the Cottbus/Chóśebuz dialect (1709) led to the stardardization of Lower Sorbian on its basis (Marti 1990: 23).((Marti, Roland (1990) Probleme Europäischer Kleinsprachen Sorbisch Und Bündnerromanisch. München: Otto Sagner.)) Initially, the orthography of Lower Sorbian (and Upper Sorbian in Protestant areas) was based on German (Glaser 2007: 100).((Glaser, Konstanze (2007) Minority |
- | |{{ :endangerment:yellow.png?nolink |}}| {{ :endangerment:blue.png?nolink |}} | {{ :endangerment:orange.png?nolink |}}| | + | |
- | *UNESCO makes no distinction between | + | When it comes to the spelling system, when Latin letters started being used for German after WWII (substituting the [[https:// |
- | ===== About the Lower Sorbian Language | + | The exact changes introduced by the 1994 reform are discussed in detail in Norberg 2003: 90-94.((Norberg, |
- | Lower Sorbian (dolnoserbska rěc or Wendish) and Upper Sorbian (hornjoserbska rěč) are western Slavonic languages spoken in Lower Lusatia (located in the German state Land of Brandenburg) and Upper Lusatia (located in the German state Free State of Saxony). Especially | + | The institution responsible for the standardization |
- | [[http:// | ||
- | ===== Location ===== | ||
- | <olmap id=" | + | ===== Demographics |
- | </ | + | ==== Language Area ==== |
+ | Today' | ||
- | ===== Demographics ===== | + | The language continuum in Lusatia used to be divided by a line running from West to East (the barely populated forest belt) leading to the formation of two dialects (Lower Sorbian in the North and Upper Sorbian in the South) that became the foundations for the Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian standards. There was additionally a line running from North to South, resulting in Western and Eastern variants (Marti 1990: 22).((Marti, |
+ | The map below((Šewc, | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Speaker numbers ==== | ||
+ | According to the available demographic data, there were 164,000 Sorbs in Lusatia around 1840/41, 166,000 around 1880, 146,000 in 1904/05, 111.000 in 1936/38, 81,000 in 1955/56 (Lewaszkiewicz 2014: 41).((Lewaszkiewicz, | ||
+ | The surveys conducted in Lusatia in the 1980s returned 67,000 Sorbian speakers and 45,000 people identifying as Sorbs.((Elle, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The studies conducted in the 1990s estimated 7,000 Lower Sorbian speakers with around 60% of them older than 60 (Lewaszkiewicz 2014: 42).((Lewaszkiewicz, | ||
+ | In 2000 Elle((Elle, Ludwig (2000) "Die Heutige Situation Der Sorbischen Sprache Und Konzepte Zu Ihrer Revitalisierung" | ||
+ | |||
+ | Lewaszkiewicz (2014: 45) claims that by the year 2000 there was not a single person under 40 years of age who had learnt Sorbian as their native tongue at home.((Lewaszkiewicz, | ||
+ | |||
+ | The table below, adapted from Glaser 2007: 103, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 1: The number of Sorbian speakers | ||
+ | ^ Year ^ Total number of\\ Sorbian speakers ^ Number of Lower Sorbian\\ speakers (if known) ^ Source ^ | ||
+ | | 1849 | 140,010 | ? | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1858 | 164,000 | ? | Boguslawski | ||
+ | | 1880 | 166,000 | 72,000 (A. Muka) | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1886 | 166,067 | ? | A. Muka | | ||
+ | | 1900 | 106,618 | ? | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1904 | 146,000 | ? | Čermy | | ||
+ | | 1905 | 157,000 | ? | Čermy | | ||
+ | | 1910 | 111,167 | ? | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1925 | 62,045\\ /71,029 | 22,400 | Official census\\ (different sources) | | ||
+ | | 1933 | 57,167 | ? | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1936 | 111,000 | ? | Nowina | | ||
+ | | 1938 | 111,271 | ? | Nowina | | ||
+ | | 1945 | 143,702 | ? | Domowina | | ||
+ | | 1946 | 32,061 | ? | Official census | | ||
+ | | 1955/56 | 81,000 | 22,000 | Tschernik (1956) | | ||
+ | | 1987 | 67,000 | 16,200 | Sorbian Institute | | ||
+ | | 1995 | 58, | ||
+ | The table illustrates the general tendency of consistent decline over time. Differences within short periods of time (e.g. 1904/1905) or between different sources for the same year point to the unreliability of data. In most cases, the figures for Lower Sorbian are missing (in order words, Lower and Upper Sorbian speakers were counted together). The extreme difference between Domowina' | ||
+ | |||
+ | The first census after German reunification took place only in 2011 due to data protection issues and coordination difficulties between the federal states. Germany is also known for being very wary of questions concerning race and ethnicity in official statistics, making it extremely difficult to estimate the number of Lower Sorbs/ | ||
---- | ---- | ||
- | ====== | + | ====== |
+ | ===== History of language | ||
+ | The first schools in the Lower Sorbian settlement area were founded in the second half of the 18th century by church organizations, | ||
- | ===== European legislation: | + | During the GDR times, Lusatian school students of both Sorbian and German ethnic background were obliged to learn Sorbian (bilingual policy). |
- | Lower Sorbian | + | "In the early 1950s, a system of two types of schools with Sorbian |
- | ==Modified: 23-08-2016, 16:24== | + | In 1962, classes in Sorbian as the language of instruction were reduced, and two years later it was decided that children would only learn Upper/Lower Sorbian |
- | ===== National legislation ===== | + | |
- | Lower Sorbian | + | |
- | ==Modified: 23-08-2016, 16:24== | + | In 1947, an extended secondary Sorbian school (grammar school, Gymnasium) was established in Bautzen/ |
- | ===== 0-3 Years old: preschool | + | It is only possible to study Lower and Upper Sorbian at the University of Leipzig. In addition, some other universities offer sporadic seminars within the framework of Slavic/ |
+ | ===== Legislation of language | ||
- | ==== Legislation | + | ==== European legislation on minority language education |
- | Brandenburg: | + | In 1997, Germany signed |
+ | on National Minorities | ||
+ | the Danes, Frisians, Sorbians, the Sinti and Roma in Germany. | ||
- | Saxony: the State provides | + | In 1999, Germany signed the European Charter for Regional |
+ | or Minority Languages (ECRML) applicable to the Danish, Frisian, Lower | ||
+ | German, Romanes and Sorbian languages (Mercator 2016: 12).((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) The ECRML recognizes | ||
+ | ==== National legislation on minority language education ==== | ||
+ | Germany recognizes four national minorities living in the country: the Danes, the Frisians, the German Sinti and Roma, and the Sorbs. Membership of a minority is considered an individual personal decision and is neither registered, reviewed nor contested by the government authorities ([[https:// | ||
- | ==== Teacher training | + | Because the current German school system is governed by the federal principles of the state (Mercator 2016: 14), |
- | Training in Sorbian for group leaders | + | ==== Local legislation on minority language education |
- | * In Upper and Lower Lusatia by the [[http://www.witaj-sprachzentrum.de/|WITAJ Language Centre]]; | + | Lower Lusatia |
- | * In Lower Lusatia by the [[http://www.sorbische-wendische-sprachschule.de/|School for Lower Sorbian Language | + | * [[https://bravors.brandenburg.de/de/ |
- | * In Upper Lusatia by the [[http://www.lipa-ev.de/|Serbske kubłanske srjedźišćo LIPA]] (Sorbian | + | * [[https:// |
+ | * [[https://bravors.brandenburg.de/gesetze/ | ||
+ | * [[https://bravors.brandenburg.de/gesetze/ | ||
+ | * [[https:// | ||
- | ==== Educational | + | Nursery schools in the Sorbian settlement area "have to teach Sorbian culture and history. The Sorbian groups get financial support from the Foundation for Sorbian People. According to the new SWG, the federal state of the Land of Brandenburg has |
+ | to support the training and the further education for nursery teachers and provide Sorbian pedagogical | ||
- | Educational materials | + | In addition to the laws mentioned above, the Sorbian school affairs |
- | ---- | + | "If there are not enough pupils for a group in one grade, it is possible to teach the pupils of two grades together. At the Lower Sorbian Grammar School all pupils have to learn Lower Sorbian" |
- | ===== 5-10 or 12 years old: primary education ===== | ||
- | ==== Legislation ==== | ||
- | Saxony: the Sorbian language may be used as a language of instruction, | ||
- | Brandenburg: schools are obliged | + | ===== Support structure for education of the language: ===== |
+ | When it comes to education, | ||
- | ==== Teacher training ==== | + | The [[https:// |
- | In Lower Lusatia, | + | |
- | ==== Educational materials | + | ====Witaj program==== |
- | Educational materials are developed | + | The Witaj program was established in 1998 according to the model provided |
- | * [[http:// | + | |
- | * [[https:// | + | |
- | Different methods are available for teaching Sorbian as a first language, and as a foreign language. | + | |
- | ==== In practice ==== | + | At the beginning, his idea did not raise much enthusiasm among parents. He and his associates started giving lectures about the Diwan project in kindergartens to change parents' |
- | === Regard for the minority language | + | |
- | === Teacher skills === | + | In the next 10 years, 60 more Sorbian and German kindergarten teachers took part in the intensive courses preparing to work with the Witaj program.((Budarjowa, |
- | ---- | + | The program started in Cottbus/ |
- | ===== 12-16/18 years old: secondary education ===== | + | Witaj program is based on the principle of total or partial dimension. Children are spoken to in Lower Sorbian as often as possible. They learn to understand and speak it in a natural way typical for their age – through listening, singing and playing. Since the Witaj children are usually spoken to in German at home, the program can be considered a variety of the one person-one language principle and fosters early bilingualism. |
- | ==== Legislation ==== | + | In Lower Lusatia, full immersion is offered by 2 kindergartens (“Mato Rizo” in Sielow |
- | Saxony: the Sorbian language may be used as a language of instruction, and taught as a subject. Basic knowledge about the history | + | |
- | Brandenburg: | + | Witaj started as a revitalization project in Lower Lusatia, where the state of Sorbian |
+ | Witaj kindergartens have a good reputation – there are usually more children whose parents are interested in signing them for the program than places available. The program is also believed to facilitate children' | ||
+ | - bi- or multi-lingualism should be fostered as early as possible in the child' | ||
+ | - individual differences in children' | ||
+ | - bi- and multi-lingualism does not in principle overstrain children, | ||
+ | - language acquisition takes place in phases, | ||
+ | - bi- and multi-lingualism trains hearing (improves attention control), | ||
+ | - bi- and multi-lingual children are particularly creative, | ||
+ | - bi- and multi-lingualism facilitates logical and abstract thinking as well as concentration, | ||
+ | - memory loss in old age is slower in bi- and multi-linguals (Budarjowa (ed.) 2018: 62-64).((Budarjowa, | ||
- | ==== Teacher training ==== | + | Fostering bi- and multi-lingualism has always been instrumentalized as an argument for participation in the Witaj program in the communication with parents and the wider community. |
- | * The [[https:// | + | |
- | ==== Educational materials ==== | + | |
- | Educational materials are developed by | + | |
- | * [[http:// | + | |
- | * [[https:// | + | |
- | * [[http:// | + | |
- | Different methods are available for teaching Sorbian as a first language, and as a foreign language. | + | |
- | ---- | + | As the first groups of children graduated from Witaj kindergartens and transferred to primary schools, the program followed them there. In the school year 2000/2001, six children began a Witaj bilingual program at the primary school in Sielow. Out of over 1000 students learning Lower Sorbian at school, 12% participate in the Witaj bilingual education scheme. In the school year 2006/2007, in turn, the first group of Witaj children entered secondary school, and a bilingual class was established for them at the Niedersorbisches Gymnasium (Elle 2006: 12-13).((Elle, Christian (2006) "Stand und Perspektiven des WITAJ-Projekts in der Niederlausitz" |
- | ===== Adult education ===== | + | Table 2: Number of students participating in Witaj classes in Lower Lusatia' |
- | * The [[https:// | + | ^School ^ Grade ^^^^^^ Total ^ |
+ | | | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | | | ||
+ | | ::: | **Number | ||
+ | | Briesen primary school | 8 | 7 | 10 | 10 | 9 | 9 | 53 | | ||
+ | | Burg primary school | ||
+ | | Jänschwalde primary school | 14 | 20 | 20 | 16 | 21 | 4 | 100 | | ||
+ | | Sielow primary school | 15 | 14 | 15 | 14 | 10 | 9 | 77 | | ||
+ | | Straupitz primary school | 25 | 8 | 4 | 6 | 7 | 5 | 55 | | ||
+ | | Vetschau primary school | 6 | 3 | 8 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 21 | | ||
- | ---- | + | The most significant problem with the Witaj program is the fact that none of the Witaj teachers are native speakers of Lower Sorbian. They learn the language in intensive courses and additional/ |
- | ===== Evaluation | + | There have been some empirical investigations to evaluate the results |
- | Saxony: external evaluation of Sorbian language education is carried out by the [[http://www.sbi.smk.sachsen.de/|Saxon Education Institute]]. | + | At the same time, Witaj children seemed to score better in German, mathematics and English than children learning exclusively in German (Norberg 2010: 146), |
- | ---- | + | |
- | ===== Educational resources ===== | + | Norberg 2010((Norberg, |
- | * [[http:// | ||
- | ---- | + | ==== Language learning materials: ==== |
+ | At https:// | ||
+ | * under " | ||
+ | * under " | ||
+ | ===== Education presence ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==== preschool education==== | ||
+ | In 1998, the Sorbian School Association established the Witaj (often spelled with capitalized letters, WITAJ) program following the Breton example of Diwan immersion education in France. The concept of immersion assumes that participating children are surrounded by the target (minority) language the entire time, while they acquire the language of wider education (majority language) at home, in accordance with the principle “one person | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Lower Lusatia, few nursery schools apply the full immersion method in practice, some using the bilingual method (the teacher switches between Sorbian and German) and yet others – the supply model (children learn Sorbian customs, songs, dances, basic phrases and expressions). | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 3: Number of schools in Lower and Upper Lusatia offering Witaj education, copied from Mercator 2016: 22((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ^ region ^ state ^ church ^ independent ^ total ^ | ||
+ | | Lower Lusatia | 7 | 0 | 2 | 9 | | ||
+ | | Upper Lusatia | 8 | 3 | 19 | 30 | | ||
+ | | Dresden | 1 | 0 | 1 (daycare) | 2 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 4: The number of children in Lower Sorbian Witaj program, copied from Mercator 2016: 23((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ^ Institutions in Lower Lusatia ^ Number of institutions ^ Number of children ^ | ||
+ | | Nursery schools where children are educated\\ in Lower Sorbian through immersion | Full immersion: 2\\ Partial immersion: 7 | 110\\ 144 | | ||
+ | | Nursery schools with a small offer\\ to learn Lower Sorbian | 2 | changeable | | ||
+ | | Total | 11 | 254+ | | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== primary education==== | ||
+ | In Lower Lusatia, there are almost (or) no children who are native Sorbian speakers. Therefore, since 2000, "when the first children from Lower Sorbian Witaj-nursery schools came to primary school, Sorbian institutions and primary schools developed the model of bilingual lessons (…). Witaj-education is practiced at six primary schools. At these schools pupils also have the opportunity to learn Sorbian as a foreign language. Eighteen primary schools in Lower Lusatia only offer Sorbian as a foreign language and one school offers Sorbian in extracurricular working groups" | ||
+ | |||
+ | "The number of bilingual lessons differs between the schools. The subjects which are taught bilingually depend on the qualifications of the teachers. The typical subjects taught bilingually are mathematics, | ||
+ | |||
+ | All available offers to learn Lower Sorbian are optional (Mercator 2016: 28).((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | In the school year 2016/2017, 1143 students learnt Lower Sorbian as a foreign language in primary schools in Lower Lusatia (Budarjowa (ed.) 2018: 206; the publication contains detailed statistics)((Budarjowa, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 5: Number of primary schools with Lower Sorbian and of students learning it, copied from Mercator 2016: 29((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ^ Number of schools ^ Number of students ^ | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian as a medium of instruction\\ (Witaj program) or as a foreign language | 6 | 309 | | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian as a foreign language | 17 | 1,052 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | Norberg has a full list of the 6 schools with bilingual education, 17 schools with Lower Sorbian as a foreign language, and 4 schools with Lower Sorbian working groups (2010: 71-72), as well as detailed statistics concerning the number of students in these programs (2010: 72-78).((Norberg, | ||
+ | ==== secondary education==== | ||
+ | Lower Lusatia has only two secondary schools that offer Lower Sorbian classes as a foreign language on the voluntary basis. In addition, there is the Sorbian grammar school (Niedersorbisches Gymnasium) where Lower Sorbian is obligatory (Mercator 2016: 31). Students can take examinations in Lower Sorbian as a foreign language, while German is obligatory for everybody as an examination subject (Mercator 2016: 32).((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | "At grammar school, teachers use the Lower Sorbian language as the medium of instruction from the seventh to the tenth grade in some subjects, such as music, sports, ethics and history. In the ninth and tenth grade all pupils take part in these bilingual lessons, but in the seventh and eighth grade this only concerns those pupils who took part in the Witaj-education at primary school" | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 6: Number of secondary schools with Lower Sorbian and of students learning it, copied from Mercator 2016: 35((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ^ Number of schools ^ Number of students ^ | ||
+ | | Secondary school (Burg/ | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian Grammar school (Cottbus/ | ||
+ | | Secondary schools (Burg, Cottbus) with Lower\\ Sorbian as a foreign language | 2 | 14 | | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian Grammar school (Cottbus) with\\ Lower Sorbian as a foreign language | 1 | 503 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====vocational education ==== | ||
+ | In Germany, vocational training is meant for school-leavers who do not wish to study at university and adult learners who can do either a full-time or a part-time program (e.g., next to working). In Lower and Upper Lusatia it is possible to learn Sorbian during vocational training for kindergarten teachers. In Lower Lusatia, no kindergarten teachers or youth care workers are Lower Sorbian native speakers. All of them need to study the language during their vocational training as well as alongside their job. This makes it particularly challenging to broaden the pool of Witaj teachers (Mercator 2016: 36).((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 7: Number of students learning Lower Sorbian in vocational education institutions, | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ^ Number of students\\ per year in all classes ^ | ||
+ | | Lower Lusatia || | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian as a foreign language (voluntary offer) | 5-10 | | ||
+ | | Upper Lusatia || | ||
+ | | Sorbian as a foreign language for all students | 200 | | ||
+ | | Additional intensive Upper Sorbian classes in Witaj groups | 5-15 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====higher education==== | ||
+ | The only university offering Sorbian studies in Germany is the University of Leipzig. The Institute for Sorbian Studies (Institut za sorabistiku/ | ||
+ | |||
+ | Additionally, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 8: Number of students taking Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian at the University of Leipzig, copied from Mercator 2016: 44((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | | ^ Number of students ^ | ||
+ | | Lower Sorbian students | 2-6 | | ||
+ | | Upper Sorbian students | 30-34 | | ||
+ | | Total | 32-40 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Brandenburg University of Technology (die Brandenburgische Technische Universität, | ||
+ | ==== adult education ==== | ||
+ | Adult education centres (Volkshochschule) have a long tradition in Germany, offering courses for professional qualifications and a variety of personal interests at a relatively small fee. In Lower Lusatia, Lower Sorbian language classes are provided by various institutions, | ||
+ | |||
+ | Table 9: Number of courses organized by the School for Lower Sorbian Language and Culture and number of participants per year, copied from Mercator 2016: 46((Mercator (2016) Sorbian: The Sorbian Language in Education in Germany. Leeuwarden: Mercator European Research Centre on Multilingualism and Language Learning.)) | ||
+ | |||
+ | | ^ Number of courses/ | ||
+ | | School for Lower Sorbian\\ Language and Culture | 35-50 | 250-300 | | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Online learning resources ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [[https:// | ||
+ | * [[https:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | * [[https:// | ||
+ | * [[https:// | ||
+ | * [[http:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ====== Mercator' | ||
- | ===== Online resources: ===== | + | {{:images:dossier.png? |
- | * Sociolinguistic bibliography at Glottolog: [[http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/lowe1385]] | + | |
- | * Record at [[http://www.language-archives.org/language/dsb|Olac]] | + | |
- | * Record at [[https://en.wikipedia.org/ | + |
languages/lower_sorbian_in_germany.1475744685.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/10/06 11:04 by johanneke