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  • Helsinki Committee President Slams "Elite Schools For The Children O

    HELSINKI COMMITTEE PRESIDENT SLAMS "ELITE SCHOOLS FOR THE CHILDREN OF THE COUNTRY'S ELITE"
    Sona Avagyan

    http://hetq.am/en/politics/a-ishkhanyan/
    2010/05/20

    Avetik Ishkhanyan, head of Armenia's Helsinki Committee, said today
    that those supporting the idea of foreign language schools in Armenia
    had distorted the views of himself and others who see a danger in the
    new educational policy and call for pupils to first get a sufficient
    grounding in the Armenian language.

    "Back in the 1980's, when Armenian language schools were being closed
    and Russian schools opened, the answer given to those sounding the
    warning that the Armenian language was under threat was, 'So, are you
    against learning foreign languages?'", he argued, adding that no one
    who opposes the plan has ever said that they are against learning a
    foreign language.

    "I totally agree that the more languages a pupil learns the better.

    But a child's primary public education should begin with the mother
    tongue, to serve as a base to learn other languages and subjects. If
    the government cannot guarantee an adequate educational level for all
    subjects, including languages, then it should resign," Mr. Ishkhanyan
    said.

    He argued that there was a desire for independence during the Soviet
    era in those peoples who had retained and nurtured their native
    languages, Georgia and the Baltic states, for example. The children
    of those countries hardly attended Russian-language schools at all,
    he claimed.

    Commenting on the Armenian government's plan to allow for foreign
    language schools to operate in the country, Mr. Ishkhanyan described
    the plan as "a substantial blow to the state body of independent
    Armenia.

    "It's a complex. People who suffer these quirks now hold government
    posts. They cannot break free. They do not believe in the future of
    Armenia, in the Armenian government. Thus they want to build these
    elite schools for their kids. I just cannot understand how any
    independent nation could ever tolerate such an education minister
    like we have here, someone who wants to open these schools. But,
    I am convinced that he has the backing of the government in this. We
    have no need for such a government," Mr. Ishkhanyan concluded.
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