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‘Spain’s PM would fail high school English’

Nine out of every ten English teachers in Spain think the country's Prime Minister wouldn't pass a high-school English test, a new survey by Cambridge University Press reveals.

'Spain's PM would fail high school English'
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy (L) and US President Barack Obama: File photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP

Three out of every four teachers surveyed also believe Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy — who recently turned down free English classes — wouldn't even pass a primary school English exam.

But it wasn't just Rajoy who came out looking less than brilliant in the survey.

Some 92 percent slammed Spain's politicians in general for slacking off when it comes to studying English while 88 percent believed the country's politicians had worse English than any of their peers in the European Union.

A further 94 percent said they had felt shame when listening to Spanish politicians speak English.

These are just some of the findings of Cambrige University Press's latest Monitor on the status of the English language in Spain.

The publishing company spoke to nearly 1,000 teachers in schools, universities and private language academies across the country to get its results.

It found that 73 percent thought the level of English spoken in Spain was "low" or "very low".

In fact, around half of all teachers surveyed also said it would take 15 years for Spain to bring these levels up to those of other European countries.  

"We have a historical and cultural hang-up which is hard to shake," Cambridge University Press spokesperson Julio Redondas told Spain's Efe news agency. 

"Many things can change over a generation, but not in two days," said Redondas who said "persistence" was key to learning a language. "Either you don't speak English and you are isolated, or you speak English and you are part of the world," he said.

SEE ALSO: 'I can't speak to Obama yet': Spanish Prime Minister

But he highlighted that almost all teachers (98 percent) said Spaniards were more aware of the need to speak English than 10 years ago.

At the same time, teachers surveyed by Cambridge believed cuts to education were seriously jeopardizing progress. 

An overwhelming 96 percent said budget cuts to education had reduced the quality of education in Spain, and nearly the same number said politicians had no idea what classrooms are really like. 

While Spaniards like to criticize their political leaders' poor foreign language skills, some of Spain's leaders have been linguistic powerhouses.

Outgoing King Juan Carlos can speak French, Portuguese, Italian and English while his son Felipe — soon to be king of Spain — has near-perfect English as well as speaking Catalan, French and some Greek.

The former president of the Madrid region, Esperanza Aguirre, is proficient in English and fluent in French.

Former Foreign Affairs Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos can even speak some Serbo-Croatian and Arabic. 

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EDUCATION

Italians ranked among worst in the EU at speaking English – again

Despite some progress in their foreign language skills Italians are still behind most other EU countries when it comes to speaking English, according to a new global ranking.

Italians ranked among worst in the EU at speaking English – again
How does English teaching in Italy compare to other European countries? File photo: Mychele Daniau/AFP

Italy's English proficiency is second to last in the European Union, going by how its nationals scored in language tests, with only Spaniards performing worse.

Italy ranks 30th out of 100 countries where English isn't a national language in the latest English Proficiency Index  from global language training company Education First, on par with Malaysia and well behind top-scoring countries in northern Europe.

The Netherlands, Denmark, Finland and Sweden topped the table, while Saudi Arabia, Oman, Iraq and Tajikistan scored lowest worldwide.


An extract from Education's First's 2020 English Proficiency Index.

Within the EU, Italy and Spain were the only two countries where English-language skills are classed as “moderate” rather than “high” or “very high”. 

And even though Italy has climbed the ranking compared to last year – when it came bottom in the EU and 36th overall – its two biggest cities performed worse than any other EU city included in the index. Even Madrid and Barcelona in Spain showed “high proficiency” compared to “moderate proficiency” in Rome and Milan, Education First said.


An extract from Education's First's 2020 English Proficiency Index.

People with moderate English skills should be able to make small talk, take part in meetings and write professional emails about subjects they're familiar with, the company says, but cannot necessarily read a newspaper, understand TV shows, give work presentations or communicate at an advanced level in social situations.

Italy has long lagged behind its neighbours in the index, with a lack of native-speaker teachers in public schools, lessons that focus on memorising grammar rules than practicing speaking and the tendency to dub foreign films and TV shows all cited as factors in why Italians struggle to perfect their English.

READ ALSO: 

“The gap in English proficiency is particularly concerning because both Italy and Spain suffer from high rates of unemployment, particularly among the young, and could desperately use the new economic opportunities that faster, smoother communications with the rest of Europe would bring,” Education First said.

Its ranking is based on scores from more than 2.2 million English learners worldwide who took its free online language test in 2019. People who choose to take the test are probably interested in studying English, which means that people who already speak it to a high level are less likely to take part.

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