Abstract

The objective of the study was to examine the performance characteristics and differences between English and Oriya medium school children on various cognitive processing, reading, academic achievement, and teacher perception measures. The sample consists of 243 schoolchildren, 120 from Grade IV and 123 from Grade VII from three different schools of Cuttack city in Orissa, India. The children were individually administered the Figure-Copying, Raven’s Progressive Matrices, Matching Familiar Figure Task, Serial Recall, Digit-Span, Wechsler’s Intelligence Scale for Children, Block Design, Cloze Reading Comprehension, and Oral Reading tasks. Classroom Achievement scores on different subjects and the teachers’ ratings about their students were also taken. Results revealed that children reading in English medium schools outperformed their Oriya medium counterparts in some cognitive measures such as Figure Copying, MFFT, RPM, and Digit-Span tasks irrespective of levels. However, the children studying in Oriya medium schools scored higher in Reading Comprehension task and commit less error compared with their English medium counterparts. However, in case of academic achievement measures at primary level, the Oriya medium children performed better in social science, whereas the English medium students excelled in first language and mathematics. The teachers of Oriya medium schools also rated their children better in general conduct, motivation, and effort in schoolwork, whereas, at the secondary level, there was no difference between these two groups in academic achievement or teacher perception measures.

Highlights

  • The article 350A of the Indian Constitution states that every state and local authority shall endeavor to provide adequate facilities for instruction in the mother tongue (MT) at the primary stage of education, for all children belonging to linguistic minority groups

  • This has been reiterated in the “Programme of Action” (POA, 1992), which is based on the National Policy on Education (Department of Education, Ministry of Human Resources and Development, Government of India, 1986), as mentioned in a government resolution (Curzon cited in Evans, 2002) inspired by Viceroy Lord Curzon’s statement way back in 1904: As a general rule the child should not be allowed to learn English as a language until he has made some progress in the primary stage of instruction and has received a thorough grounding in his mother-tongue

  • The medium of instruction in mother tongue at the primary stage has remained a desirable component in school curricula

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Summary

Introduction

The article 350A of the Indian Constitution states that every state and local authority shall endeavor to provide adequate facilities for instruction in the mother tongue (MT) at the primary stage of education, for all children belonging to linguistic minority groups This has been reiterated in the “Programme of Action” (POA, 1992), which is based on the National Policy on Education (Department of Education, Ministry of Human Resources and Development, Government of India, 1986), as mentioned in a government resolution (Curzon cited in Evans, 2002) inspired by Viceroy Lord Curzon’s statement way back in 1904: As a general rule the child should not be allowed to learn English as a language (i.e., as a subject) until he has made some progress in the primary stage of instruction and has received a thorough grounding in his mother-tongue.

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