Decolonisation of curriculum: the case of language education policy in Nepal
Decolonisation of curriculum: the case of language education policy in Nepal
While decolonisation is usually discussed in relation to countries that were formally colonised, countries that have not been formally colonised have also faced challenges related to colonialism. In this case, it is worth considering whether decolonial theory has more widespread applicability to respond to global challenges faced in the postcolonial era. This article documents the historical trajectories of colonisation and decolonisation of the school curriculum in Nepal. Although Nepal was never formally colonised, the introduction of modern schooling in Nepal was informed by the British colonisation of India, where local languages were replaced by English in the curriculum, diminishing the value of local languages and knowledges. Against this backdrop, the Nepal government issued a series of policies supporting Nepali supremacy, but the expansion of English was not significantly challenged. Rather, the policies resulted in a double colonisation of ethnic/Indigenous languages: external colonisation by English, and internal colonisation by the Nepali language. However, significant decolonisation efforts have recently made space for minoritised languages in the curriculum. This article illustrates these colonisation and decolonisation waves, shaped by the government, local communities and other actors. Drawing on Nepal’s legislative and educational policies, the article relates language policy decisions and actions as decolonial efforts to support ethnic/Indigenous languages and explores the implications for understanding tensions around decolonisation of curriculum.
curriculum, decolonisation, ethnic/Indigenous languages, language education policy
Prem, Prasad POUDEL
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Jackson, Liz
9752a333-6651-40ae-aed8-2dbcf37f4c42
Choi, Tae-Hee
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1 June 2022
Prem, Prasad POUDEL
d649663b-d349-43ff-86f2-ecd5b3b3589a
Jackson, Liz
9752a333-6651-40ae-aed8-2dbcf37f4c42
Choi, Tae-Hee
3cec7c93-92cd-4329-b0a7-3b208c65dcb7
Prem, Prasad POUDEL, Jackson, Liz and Choi, Tae-Hee
(2022)
Decolonisation of curriculum: the case of language education policy in Nepal.
London Review of Education, 20 (1), [13].
(doi:10.14324/LRE.20.1.13).
Abstract
While decolonisation is usually discussed in relation to countries that were formally colonised, countries that have not been formally colonised have also faced challenges related to colonialism. In this case, it is worth considering whether decolonial theory has more widespread applicability to respond to global challenges faced in the postcolonial era. This article documents the historical trajectories of colonisation and decolonisation of the school curriculum in Nepal. Although Nepal was never formally colonised, the introduction of modern schooling in Nepal was informed by the British colonisation of India, where local languages were replaced by English in the curriculum, diminishing the value of local languages and knowledges. Against this backdrop, the Nepal government issued a series of policies supporting Nepali supremacy, but the expansion of English was not significantly challenged. Rather, the policies resulted in a double colonisation of ethnic/Indigenous languages: external colonisation by English, and internal colonisation by the Nepali language. However, significant decolonisation efforts have recently made space for minoritised languages in the curriculum. This article illustrates these colonisation and decolonisation waves, shaped by the government, local communities and other actors. Drawing on Nepal’s legislative and educational policies, the article relates language policy decisions and actions as decolonial efforts to support ethnic/Indigenous languages and explores the implications for understanding tensions around decolonisation of curriculum.
Text
Poudel Jackson & Choi (2022) Decolonisation of curriculum- the case of language education policy in Nepal
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2022
Published date: 1 June 2022
Additional Information:
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, Prem Prasad Poudel, Liz Jackson and Tae-Hee Choi.
Keywords:
curriculum, decolonisation, ethnic/Indigenous languages, language education policy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 470875
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470875
ISSN: 1474-8460
PURE UUID: c247a11e-f794-4a54-b890-e28f6097ca66
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Date deposited: 20 Oct 2022 16:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16
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Author:
Prasad POUDEL Prem
Author:
Liz Jackson
Author:
Tae-Hee Choi
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