I learnt Irish for 14 years, French and German for 6 years; left school 25+ years ago but you could abandon me in deepest France or Germany and I could communicate my way out whereas I honestly don't think I could hold any kind of converstaion in Irish. I don't know whether it's because it's compulsory or because of the way it's taught or maybe it's just a way harder language but children seem to take to other languages much more easily than Irish. I would much prefer to see children learn French/German/Spanish as a core subject and learn Irish as part of an 'Irish culture and language' subject.We all learned Irish for 10+ years and how many of us can speak it now! So I don't see why throwing another language into the mix without changing the system would lead to an outcome any different.
I learnt Irish for 14 years, French and German for 6 years; left school 25+ years ago but you could abandon me in deepest France or Germany and I could communicate my way out whereas I honestly don't think I could hold any kind of converstaion in Irish. I don't know whether it's because it's compulsory or because of the way it's taught or maybe it's just a way harder language but children seem to take to other languages much more easily than Irish. I would much prefer to see children learn French/German/Spanish as a core subject and learn Irish as part of an 'Irish culture and language' subject.
If anything, I've had more exposure to Irish in seeing 3 children through school and attempting to help with homework. Helping them with secondary school French, all the grammar etc. came flooding back whereas looking at Irish grammar is like looking into a black hole. My Irish was always way weaker - I just never clicked with the way it was taught.Slightly off-topic, but is that because since leaving school 25+ years you have kept up an interest in both French and german wheras you have no interest in Irish and therefore have 'isolated' yourself from it over a similar period?...
Almost all people I know repeat the mantra of 14 years of Irish and I can't speak a word but virtually all of those same people can't hold a conversation in whatever other language they did in school either. ...
This subtle idea that's sometimes floated that we're a nation of linguists being held back by Irish is stretching it to me.
Slightly off-topic, but is that because since leaving school 25+ years you have kept up an interest in both French and german wheras you have no interest in Irish and therefore have 'isolated' yourself from it over a similar period?
ok I am confused ,purples quote "our graduates were not fit for purpose. Our tradespeople are well below the standards of their mainland European counterparts. We rank amongst the worst in the OECD for foreign language fluency" .
the press briefings that the multinationals the ida are currently bringing in to the country are all saying how great we are at the above or is it really something else that's bringing them in (grants tax relief etc)?
and don't forget about our low corporation tax.......although I wonder how much longer we will have that card to play....Our collective fluency in English, and our membership of the Eurozone, are key factors in our favour.
Our collective fluency in English, and our membership of the Eurozone, are key factors in our favour.
They are hardly going to say they are coming here because of our tax rates. Therefore they need the fig leaf of just how wonderful we are. Don't get me wrong; we have a lot to offer but so do lots of other countries. Why do we get more US inward investment than most of Asia combined?ok I am confused ,purples quote "our graduates were not fit for purpose. Our tradespeople are well below the standards of their mainland European counterparts. We rank amongst the worst in the OECD for foreign language fluency" .
the press briefings that the multinationals the ida are currently bringing in to the country are all saying how great we are at the above or is it really something else that's bringing them in (grants tax relief etc)?
Any education system that spends more time on religious studies than science or maths has serious issues.
(a) They're even dumber.Don't get me wrong; we have a lot to offer but so do lots of other countries. Why do we get more US inward investment than most of Asia combined?
Of course tax is an important issue but a company like Intel won't build a multi billion euro manufacturing facility here instead of Israel because of a 12.5% tax rate. It will come down to the whole package.
Does anyone really think Intel pays 12.5% tax here?
Does anyone really think any company pays the headline tax rate anywhere in the world? Ireland is no different. The gap between Ireland's headline rate and effective rate is a lot smaller than other countries. Look at the effective corporate tax rate in France.
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