Published: 29 Dec 11 09:30 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/38210/20111229/
Many of Sweden's municipalities fail to place newly arrived immigrants in Swedish language classes within the time frames stipulated by law, a new investigation has found.
External link: The Schools Inspectorate report (in Swedish) »
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I did look at the SFI courses but honestly thought they were amateurish (in my area anyway) - with frequent checks in progress because new arrivals to the class meant we had to re-cover stuff already done. In the end I left and, like bourgeoisieboheme, took it on myself to learn more.
A big help is to take out a subscription to a quality Swedish newspaper, and get a dictionary !!
It is true some immigrants do not seem to want to be immersed into the society here which is a shame but there is still plenty of work to do to make it easier for those that do.
For those who commented that immersion being the best way to learn a language, that is a myth that has been well researched. Just goggle it. Yes, one does learn phrases and a good deal of slang, but grammar pronunciation mistakes become fossilized when in immersion. To this day, I have to stop my self from ordering Ja-Chi bimbim bap verses Jam-chi bimbim bap at a Korean restaurant ( penis rice verses tuna rice) as this mistake went uncorrected for the first 3 months of a ten year stay in Korea. I didn't learn the difference until I formally studied the language. Here, when ever I try to speak Swedish I don't corrected, the cashier at 7-11 just wants to take care of the next customer.
If the government of Sweden wants to encourage immigrants to learn Swedish they must re-vamp a system that has not done well with privatization and provide
real incentives to learn Swedish.
I came to Sweden with a job, and my partner has now been looking for work for over 4 months. All expect you to speak fluent Swedish.
We started in one kommun where it took around 2 months for the staff to finally offer a place. We moved to a rental in the next kommun 2 weeks later, and they will not start a new course until January 9th. So in total the kommuns have held up the SFI classes by over 4 months = no job, no wages, weeks of frustration.
The aim is to obtain a job and contribute to the local society, and unless businesses have intentions to hire non Swedish speaking nationals, then the language system requires a serious revamp. Perhaps some serious textbooks might be a good start instead of leaving it to commercial publishers with few takers.
no such thing as immersion or assimilation there, just a basic integration.
Our SFI program in Gävle is pretty well staffed and managed, but there are so many things that COULD be done to make it better. More integration with native speakers, mentoring sessions, conseling in native language regarding study and work options, more work study opportunities, more extracurricular activities using the Swedish language... bl.a.
A lot of information and help was posted in Arabic while I attended, but nothing in English... so remained fairly clueless as to what was going on.
One way to significantly reduce the burden of needing to teach new immigrants the Swedish language is to significantly curtail, if not eliminate altogether, the masses of refugees that are imported into the country.
Problem solved!
I am a two-years Master Student in Lund.
Just imagine they do not provide me with a Swedish course here!!!
I am shocked!!! My residence permit is for 10 months, that is meant I am not eligible for immigrant courses, and university provided me with courses only for money. And it is 3500 SEK per month!!! This is enough to buy monthly plane ticket to my home country and take courses here!!!
How it is possible!!! Spending two years in Sweden and learn only Tack så mycket. !!!