From the CBC:
“Ottawa
launching bursary fund to help anglophone postsecondary students study in
French”
The federal
government will spend $12 million over the next four years on bursaries to help
English-speaking students pursue post-secondary education in French. Approximately
3,400 bursaries worth $3,000 each will be available to anglophone secondary
school graduates who enrol in French-language programs at select CEGEPs,
colleges or universities. The government says the funding will be disbursed
through post-secondary institutions and special consideration will be given to
students from under-represented groups. The initiative is part of a push by
Ottawa to strengthen bilingualism in Canada as debate over the state of the
French language intensifies in Quebec. "We know that, for a long time,
Canadians have been wanting to learn French but sometimes they didn't have the
opportunity," said Official Languages Minister Mélanie Joly in an interview.
"The idea is to make sure that young Canadians that want to study in their
second language have the chance to do so and that the federal government can be
there to help them out when they're not able to pay their tuition." To be
eligible for a bursary, students must be Canadian citizens or permanent
residents whose first official language is English, and must have graduated
from an English-language high school. They must be at least 17 years old, be
enrolled in their first year of study in French, have sufficient knowledge of
French to be able to study in that language and plan to take 50 per cent of
their coursework in French.
Concerns
about the state of French in Quebec The funding announcement comes as the
provincial Coalition Avenir Québec government plans an overhaul of Quebec's
language laws, with an eye to strengthening protections for the French
language. Many in Quebec have argued in recent years that French is losing
ground to English, especially in Montreal. Quebec Premier François
Legault has said that the legal overhaul may include quotas that limit the
number of students who can enrol at English CEGEPs in order to counter the
growing number of French students enrolling in English programs after high
school. The provincial minister responsible for the French language is
expected to table legislation in the near future. Chris Dick is a first year law student at
the University of Manitoba who studied in French this year using a different
bursary. He said he welcomes the new funding as a way to promote linguistic
diversity in Canada. "I think it's really great news. It will
encourage a lot of students that would otherwise just pursue university in
English to try their hand at the French side of things," he said. "A
program like this is definitely going to benefit and promote bilingualism and
the diversity of language in Canada." Last month, Joly added a
series of federal proposals that would modify the Official Languages Act to the
mix. One of those proposals would guarantee the right to work in French in all
federally regulated private businesses with more than 50 employees in Quebec,
and in other predominantly French-speaking communities across Canada. Other
proposals include establishing a framework for a francophone immigration
policy, enshrining into law a requirement that Supreme Court of Canada justices
be bilingual and eliminating waiting lists for French immersion programs. The
document said the reforms are meant to establish a "new linguistic
balance" in a world where the growth of digital technology and
international trade is encouraging the use of English, while the use of French
at work and at home is declining. "For a long time, we've always
really made sure that the federal government itself would be bilingual,"
said Joly. "What we want to do is we want to go further and we want to
help people become bilingual themselves."
^ This is much
needed to encourage English-Speaking Canadians to learn and use French since
right now the only real Bilingual Canadians work for the Federal Government or
are native French-Speaking Canadians using English. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/youth-french-immersion-1.5951969
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