English Mandated As Medium of Instruction for Rwanda Schools – Rwanda became a French-speaking nation when Belgium took control of the colony from Germany after World War I. While Rwanda gained its independence from Belgium in 1962, it retained its heavy francophone identity for the next 32 years as it remained heavily dependent on France and Belgium for financial and military support.
The influx of English-speaking Rwanda Diaspora after the 1994 genocide significantly changed the country’s linguistic landscape. English was soon added as a third official language along with Kinyarwanda and French. Last year the die was cast when Rwanda joined with the region’s three major English-speaking countries – Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania – to form the new East African Community, and English was adopted as the alliance’s official language.
Most significantly, Rwandans want to compete in the global marketplace. And they know that to compete, they must educate their youth to become global citizens – fluent in English, the global language of commerce and education. With its usual sense of urgency, Rwanda recently mandated that within four years, the language of English is to become the medium of instruction for all primary, secondary and post-secondary schools in the nation. This is no small task given that less than 1,000 of Rwanda’s 50,000 current teachers speak English well enough to use it in their classrooms.
President Kagame has asked Bridge2Rwanda to establish a new English Language faculty at Muhabura University to help the Ministry of Education prepare Rwanda’s teachers and top students for the English-speaking world.
Are you an English Language (ESL/EFL) teacher? Is God calling you to help Rwanda? Email Glen Woodruff, Muhabura University’s CEO, at gwoodruff@MUrwanda.org ,or check out the ‘jobs’ tab on the B2R homepage.
Rwanda’s Audacious Education Goals….Continued
English Mandated As Medium of Instruction for Rwanda Schools – Rwanda became a French-speaking nation when Belgium took control of the colony from Germany after World War I. While Rwanda gained its independence from Belgium in 1962, it retained its heavy francophone identity for the next 32 years as it remained heavily dependent on France and Belgium for financial and military support.
Most significantly, Rwandans want to compete in the global marketplace. And they know that to compete, they must educate their youth to become global citizens – fluent in English, the global language of commerce and education. With its usual sense of urgency, Rwanda recently mandated that within four years, the language of English is to become the medium of instruction for all primary, secondary and post-secondary schools in the nation. This is no small task given that less than 1,000 of Rwanda’s 50,000 current teachers speak English well enough to use it in their classrooms.
President Kagame has asked Bridge2Rwanda to establish a new English Language faculty at Muhabura University to help the Ministry of Education prepare Rwanda’s teachers and top students for the English-speaking world.
Are you an English Language (ESL/EFL) teacher? Is God calling you to help Rwanda? Email Glen Woodruff, Muhabura University’s CEO, at gwoodruff@MUrwanda.org ,or check out the ‘jobs’ tab on the B2R homepage.