Is it really necessary for us as Country to continue teaching Swahili as an examinable subject in our schools!
Couldn’t we leave it to parents and the society in general to teach Swahili in our communities – the same way vernacular dialects are handled in rural Kenya.
Let’s face it what tangible benefit do we derive from teaching Swahili all the way to high school.
I understand all the sentimentalities about national language et cetera, which in practical terms amounts to no more than ornamentalism.
Come to think of it, does the Swahili spoken across Kenya have any direct connection with Kiswahili the subject in our Schools. Would that spoken Swahili suffer any significant negative effect if we stopped teaching Swahili as a compulsory and examinable subject up to form four?
Why burden our kids with such subjects that aren’t taking them anywhere anytime soon?
Make no mistake about it Swahili as a subject aren’t a walk in the park. What with all the Ngelis, kanushas, kinyumes, methalis, ningali…, ningeli…., uchache, wingi, ndogo, wastani, ukubwa and so on.
Is it even a complete stable and stand alone language – it keeps on morphing constantly, compared to other languages. If you left high school more than 15 years ago, the Swahili you learnt has considerably been modified – sanifu vs mufti.
As an economy we expend resources to teach it to all of our kids, all the way to KCSE. Then what! How many thereafter take it further than that and to what purposes! May be training as teacher to go back and teach the same – which leaves us in a vicious cycle. May be a few journalists to serve a E. African population. Irony is, even here in Kenya, the real prime time for watching Television, and catching up with News – 9pm, the language of choice is English!!
To serve this narrow and limited need, we can make Swahili a choice subject for the few who are so inclined so they may end up becoming journalists in Swahili or “Scholars” for whatever it is worth.
For our Schools therefore, I would suggest that we only universally induct the pupils to Kiswahili up to class three and then drop it.
They can then concentrate on Maths, Sciences, economics and other disciplines relevant to today’s world such as ICT.
I don’t know about CRE/IRE.
Isuni yilu yi maa me muyo - ni Mbisuu