TEJO news
от qwertz, 1 октября 2011 г.
Сообщений: 3
Язык: English
qwertz (Показать профиль) 1 октября 2011 г., 16:48:57
Hej,
its quite interesting that current TEJO team sees enlargement of KER holders like an deep anchor insides EU bureaucracy. That could be facts to let EU bureaucracy accept that Esperanto has an significant amount of active speakers and could be treated like deserving protection of an language minority.
"...kaj akceptita subvenciigo de rabato al junuloj por la KER-ekzameno..."
ĝp,
its quite interesting that current TEJO team sees enlargement of KER holders like an deep anchor insides EU bureaucracy. That could be facts to let EU bureaucracy accept that Esperanto has an significant amount of active speakers and could be treated like deserving protection of an language minority.
"...kaj akceptita subvenciigo de rabato al junuloj por la KER-ekzameno..."
ĝp,
pikolas (Показать профиль) 2 октября 2011 г., 1:17:40
Sorry, could you be a bit more clear by what you mean?
qwertz (Показать профиль) 2 октября 2011 г., 2:28:34
Katalin did a lot of efforts to develop the Esperanto language version of Common European Framework of Reference for Languages - CEFR.
But because of KER/CEFR's official character it needs some kind of fee to attend at this test. Now TEJO seems to grants some part of that KER fee to young esperantists (KER C1). Its part of their cooperation with Internacia Ligo de Esperantistaj Instruistoj - ILEI that also runs dozens of other initatives to bring Esperanto at basic primary schools curriculum. Its not issue to open an Esperanto language course at European universities, but its quite difficult to bring Esperanto at European basic primary schools curriculum. An significant amount of young Esperantist holding an KER certificate would strenghens that efforts, because due to that Esperanto community could reach official language minority status inside the some part of EU. That furthermore could means later, language minority status at whole EU area. Currently EU parliament and commission drives strong Multilinguaism politics.
But because of KER/CEFR's official character it needs some kind of fee to attend at this test. Now TEJO seems to grants some part of that KER fee to young esperantists (KER C1). Its part of their cooperation with Internacia Ligo de Esperantistaj Instruistoj - ILEI that also runs dozens of other initatives to bring Esperanto at basic primary schools curriculum. Its not issue to open an Esperanto language course at European universities, but its quite difficult to bring Esperanto at European basic primary schools curriculum. An significant amount of young Esperantist holding an KER certificate would strenghens that efforts, because due to that Esperanto community could reach official language minority status inside the some part of EU. That furthermore could means later, language minority status at whole EU area. Currently EU parliament and commission drives strong Multilinguaism politics.