University of Minnesota Duluth education professor Mary Hermes says saving an endangered language goes beyond just enriching the people who speak it. "I think people have got to get beyond thinking it's just for the Ojibwe people, that we want to save their Ojibwe language. There's 10,000 years of human evolution and knowledge in that language," she says. With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), Hermes is combining the skills of native speakers with video technology to help others, young and old, learn the language in the most natural way. She's doing it by videotaping short movies of everyday situations, from going to a rummage sale to planting a garden to helping out a sick relative. "Because Ojibwe isn't spoken on a regular basis, there's not a store or a rummage sale or a resort, but part of what we're doing is trying to re-envision what that would be like," explains Hermes.
Thanks to Living Languages where I first read this :)
The rest of this article + (very interesting) video can be accessed here
'A Linguist's Language' has every and all things language. Whether it's new developments in language revitalization, language planning, language learning, or fun quirks about English or other languages, or interesting etymologies, or even information or updates on the status of Australian Aboriginal languages, this site is dedicated to all languages of the world, with lots of (fun) information about almost anything to do with languages and cultures.
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