Language-in-Education Planning for Foreign Languages in Morocco: Analyzing the Historical and Structural Impacts of History, Social Class, Ideology, and Power Dynamics

Authors

  • Zakaria Jamaati Department of English Language & Culture, at the Faculty of Languages, Arts, and Human Sciences, Ibn Zohr University, Ait Melloul, Morocco https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3717-5969
  • Naima Trimasse Department of English Studies, at the Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Agadir, Morocco. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6338-2347
  • Mohamed El Ghazi Department of English Studies, at the Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Agadir, Morocco

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32996/jhsss.2024.6.11.1

Keywords:

Language-in-education planning; Historical-Structural Approach; Class structures; Ideology; Power dynamics; social injustice; Morocco

Abstract

The present paper analyzes language-in-education planning for foreign languages within the Moroccan educational system. These policies have been adopted and/or implemented as part of three successive educational reforms that the state has undergone in the last 25 years (e.g., the National Charter 1999, the Emergency Program 2008, and the Strategic Vision 2015). Despite the state’s advocacy for varying foreign language instruction, these policies have been marked by a consolidation of French instruction as a primary foreign language and a shift to using it as a medium of instruction for science and technology subjects in middle and secondary education as part of language alternation pedagogy. The study adopts Tollefson’s (1991) Historical-Structural Approach as a conceptual framework to analyze how the constructs of history, class structures, ideology, and power dynamics have influenced language-in-education planning to perpetuate the social, economic, and political privileges of a francophone-oriented elite. The latter have employed their economic and political power to influence the indecisive aspect of the language-in-education policies—both covertly and overtly—to increase socioeconomic inequalities and injustices, including linguistic disparities between the elite and lower social classes. This dominant position of French within the educational system has also been motivated by external influences, manifested in the heavy political and economic relationship with France, the former colonizer.

Author Biographies

  • Zakaria Jamaati, Department of English Language & Culture, at the Faculty of Languages, Arts, and Human Sciences, Ibn Zohr University, Ait Melloul, Morocco

    Zakaria Jamaati is an assistant professor at the Department of English Studies and Culture at the University of Ibn Zohr, the Faculty of Languages, Arts, and Human Sciences, Ait Melloul. He holds a Ph.D in Language-in-Education Planning from Ibn Zohr University. His research interests include Language Policy and Planning and Critical Thinking.

  • Naima Trimasse, Department of English Studies, at the Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Agadir, Morocco.

    Naima Trimasse is a full professor at the Department of English Studies at the University of Ibn Zohr, the Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences, Agadir. She holds a Ph.D in Education from the Faculty of Education, Rabat, Morocco. Her research interests include Second Language Acquisition and Language Teaching.

  • Mohamed El Ghazi, Department of English Studies, at the Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Agadir, Morocco

    Mohamed El Ghazi is a senior professor at the Department of English Studies at the University of Ibn Zohr, the Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences, Agadir. His major specialization is in Generative Syntax. He is currently lecturing and conducting research in the Sociology of Language and Language Policy.

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Published

30-10-2024

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Jamaati, Z., Trimasse, N., & El Ghazi, M. (2024). Language-in-Education Planning for Foreign Languages in Morocco: Analyzing the Historical and Structural Impacts of History, Social Class, Ideology, and Power Dynamics. Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies, 6(11), 01-21. https://doi.org/10.32996/jhsss.2024.6.11.1