"How do you know it's because children attend gaelscoil that they gain an academic advantage in later years? Even if there is ( and I have no proof that there is ) an association between attending a gaelscoil and having an academic advantage in later years, does not mean that attending a gaelscoil will result in an academic advantage in later years . Do they not they teach you in gaelscoil that correlation does not prove causation?"
That's not really the point; In a free market, parents are in fact choosing gaeilscoileanna, and the children of those parents are indeed showing better academic and overall progress.
There are three possibilities: that these children are doing better than average in spite of their parents' choice, that they are doing better because of their parents' choice, or that they are doing better due to other unrelated factors.
The point is that there is no evidence whatever to support the assertion that children do better without Irish and there is some evidence which is at least consistent with the assertion that they do better with Irish.
Will it make any difference, putting a warning in irish on packets of cigarettes? Its costing a fortune using irish in EU, printing all government forms in irish and now this? What a waste of money
Scots and welsh don`t ram it down their schoolkids throats for 14 years. Any interest in their native tongues is by choice, not force.. The Scots and Welsh show pride in their language, can we not do the same?
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This is getting silly. I have not offered or sought to offer 'proof' that attending gaelscoil will lead to better academic progress. I have said that there is evidence which is consistent with the hypothesis.
Failure to advance a positive proof does not mean that a hypothesis is disproved. Statistics 101 indeed.....
If there were enough people wanting to speak Irish there would be no need for government funding.
I think Irish should remain compulsory but the curriculum should be re-visited so that we are not simply 'learning' it for the sake of it.
Why should Irish remain compulsory? Computer studies should be compulsory, not Irish.
Its a cultural thing. If we turned our backs on all that is hard we wouldn't be in the 1st world country we're in today. Culture stands the test of time, even computer studies will be surpassed.
What would be wrong with treating it the same as Irish music? - Just let those who have in interest in learning it, learn it? This is not turning our back on it.
(As for Ireland being a first world country - well that's debatable, and probably a topic for another thread. We certainly have a lot of rich property developers.)
This teacher has probably cost some lives in this country.
I certainly wouldn't discourage anyone from learning something new, whether it is Irish language, juggling, Irish Music or Latin. On the other hand, I wouldn't bother forcing people to learn stuff they don't want to learn either.Because I think alot of parents would have a similar attitude to you and discourage their children from taking up the language, I think it has to be helped along.
I thought this debate was about warnings as gaeilge on cigarette packs rather than Gaelscoileanna. I questioned (semi-ironically) earlier whether some of the cigarette companies had sponsored this move. Anything which dilutes the effect of a message like "Smokers Die Younger" on a cigarette pack (for example by including translation into a second language) is imho to be regretted.
You don't need to hear about cancer, gangrene or heart disease - you don't even need to read the 'smoking kills' labels on the side of a cigarette packet.
Cigarette companies love these warning because they know that when most people who smoke stop to think about how dangerous it is, they have to have another cigarette to calm themselves down.
Back to the cigarette package.
I think this is a bad thing as it will mean that the english language warnings will either be reduced in size (to accommodate Irish alongside) or half of them will be replaced by Irish language warnings.
This will significantly reduced the effectiveness of the warnings as most of the population do not speak Irish.
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