Singapore Tamil Youth Conference 2018 Toolkit Toolkit 2018 Final | Page 8

Communication in Spoken Tamil Minority language status and language preservation Those seeking to preserve a particular language often assume that they would receive unrestricted systemic and societal support for its revitalisation. However, they often overlook that to properly upkeep a language in society, one needs to evoke a passion for the language which involves creating deep emotions towards the medium to prevent it from being abandoned (Dauenhauer and Dauenhauer 1998). The effects of a lack of shift towards a dominant language are often seen as stemming from the presence of supportive infrastructure such as an ethnic-language mass media. • Despite the presence of a very strong ethnic-language Tamil mass media in Singapore, the number of youths who seem to be benefitting linguistically from these mediums seems to be declining. • According to a survey conducted by YJC in 2011 on Tamil Language and mass media communication technology, only 33.9% of students read the Tamil Murasu (the Tamil National Daily) and barely 50% of students listened to Oli 96.8FM, the Tamil radio station. • However, perhaps, due to the availability of multiple channels over 24 hours a day and the variety of programmes offered, the numbers are more encouraging for students watching Tamil Television, which stands at 66.1% Language learning is a social activity that is acquired in social interactions (Vygotsky, 1978). • Singapore Tamils have few opportunities to congregate and use the language outside their homes as there are no longer any ethnic enclaves except Little India (Kadakara, 2011). • This drastically reduces the opportunities that are available for Spoken Tamil acquisition, leading to a decline in the usage of Spoken Tamil amongst the general population. For language groups that are huge in numbers, there are naturally more avenues to encourage people to speak in their mother tongue and maintain its status in society. As a result, in such a case, a shift away from one’s mother tongue towards a more dominant language is either slow or does not occur at all. • Given that the Tamil Population in Survey on Tamil Language and Mass Media Communication Technology Watches Tamil TV Listens to Oli968 Singapore is in the minority, the shift towards a more dominant language, English, would be significantly faster and the effects of such a shift would be felt on a much larger scale. Reads Tamil Murasu 0 20 40 Percentage of Students 5 60 80