From: Michael Everson
Message: 5615
Date: 2005-08-30
>I believe that you are ignoring research to the contrary.Suzanne, the standard Ethiopic keyboards are alphabetic. Bugger the
>On other points, have you read Scribner and Cole, The Psychology ofYes.
>Literacy, 1981.
>Few Vai are biliterate in English and Vai. Fewer still can read VaiWell, Suzanne, I have challenged you or anyone else to offer design
>in the English alphabet. However, the Vai literates have little
>access to electricity so they won't be likely to use a computer for
>Vai at all. Then who will write Vai - one supposes English literates
>who have learned to use the English alphabet for Vai and can now
>input Vai roman orthography and have it appear as Vai script.
>The greater number are monoliterate, in descending frequency fromSo what?
>Vai script to Arabic to English; close to one-third are literate in
>two scripts;
>and a few individuals have achieved mastery of all three writing
>systems. Biliterates overwhelmingly represent the combination of Vai
>syllabary-Arabic learning. Considering all Vai script literates,
>better than 40% know Arabic as well; or, considering all Arabic
>literates,nearly one-half, (49%) also know Vai script. In contrast,
>co-occurence of either Vai script or Arabic with English is rare.
>Going to an English school seems to represent a cutting point, an
>educational choice that turns the individual away from participation
>in learning either of the two traditional scripts. Exclusivity of
>English and Arabic is understandable, since both literacies require
>extended daily study during roughly the same age period. The rupture
>between English and Vai script rests on less apparent factors. Vai
>script does not require an extended periond of study and is
>customarily learned in adulthood. Our conjecture is that youth who
>attain English literacy in school are drawn to pursue opportunities
>in the cash economy, thus cutting themselves off from available Vai
>script tutors as well as the cultural supports fostering interest in
>the script."