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Date Submitted: 12/04/2014 07:18 AM
YORÙBÁ CHILD LANGUAGE PERFORMANCE: A PROGNOSIS
ADEOSUN, Hezekiah Olufemi
DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS AND NIGERIAN LANGUAGES, FACULTY OF ARTS, UNIVERSITY OF ILORIN, ILORIN
E-mail: hezekiahadeosun@yahoo.com, 08033455897.
(Published by Anyigba Journal of Arts & Humanities (2008), 6; 41-48)
Abstract
The main thrust of this paper is to examine critically the barriers to child performance in Yoruba language, employing a post-colonialist theory as our theoretical framework. Of recent, the interest of some African Literary scholars has been focused on the purported neglect of African indigenous languages by the generality of the people. Therefore, effort has been greatly intensified to alert the stakeholders on the grave consequence of this ugly development. Notable among these scholars is ‘wa Thiong’o (1994:17) who describes the colonialist imposition of foreign language on African nations as unfortunate. He says “Learning, for a colonial child, became a cerebral activity and not an emotionally felt experience”. Reason being that the language of his conceptualization and the thought in him, take the visible form of a foreign language. In the same vein, since the colonizers have succeeded in imposing their language on Nigeria, we have perceived our indigenous languages as being inferior to the English Language. Hence, English Language has become the main determinant of a child progress up the ladder of formal education. However, this paper delves into factors that hinder the good performance of a Yoruba child in using his mother tongue and also suggests some solutions to the barriers.
1.0 Introduction
Language has been described as the means by which a person learns to organize experiences and thought. And, according to Adebayo (1995:230), the child learns to order and react to habits about environment through language. The totality of these habits is what anthropologists refer to as culture; language thus being the main link between all other...