Australia’s ‘monolingual mind’ widens its isolation from Asia
- Australians’ lack of Asian language mastery is undermining their homeland’s influence. Change will require a ‘fundamental rethink’
“Languages study has continued to deteriorate at alarming levels”, Australian education experts Louisa Field, Rachel Wilson and Ken Cruickshank revealed in a recent paper. This is in spite of broad recognition that mastering regional tongues is vital for Australia’s economic and geopolitical interests.
The academics’ research, which analysed the take-up of language courses over a two-decade period, found “little to no improvement” since a 1994 national push to prioritise four key Asian languages: Japanese, Mandarin, Korean and Indonesian.
This failure to nurture cross-cultural understanding is now drawing scrutiny from Australia’s neighbours.
“For Australia to understand Southeast Asia and vice versa, there needs to be a mutual understanding on both sides,” said ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute senior fellow William Choong at the May forum, organised by the think tank and the Australian High Commission in the city state.