READING PASSAGE 3
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Ebonics
A. Ebonics – also known by a host of other names such as African American Vemocular English, Black English, Black Vernacular, and so on — is an African-American language that has its roots in the trans-Atlantic slave trade, as African captives devised the means to communicate with each other and with their captors. In the South of the United States, these Pan-African languages co-mingled with Standard English and the Southern dialect. [Crack IELTS with Rob] Many uniquely African American components have arisen over the last two centuries, and all of these influences have forged what is now known as Ebonics.
B. In 1996, debates around the nature of “Ebonics’’ in the United States came to ahead. That year, the Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) in California enacted Resolution 597-003, which officially recognized that African-American students “as part of their culture and history as African people possess and utilize a language”. Alternatively referred to as Ebonics (literally “black sounds”), African Communication Behaviours, and African Language Systems, this language was declared to be “genetically-based” rather than a dialect of Standard English.
C. Within the profession of language research and pedagogy, a strong consensus formed behind the OUSD’s decision to recognise Ebonics. Linguistics professor John Rickford noted that Ebonics was not simply characterised by erroneous grammar and large slang vocabulary, but that underlying this language was a structured form and process of grammar and phonology that made English learning for Ebonics speakers far more complex a task than simply dropping bad habits. English teachers, Rickford counselled, must, therefore, accept and embrace these complexities.
D. The Linguistic Society of America (LSA) concurred with Rickford, adding that whether or not Ebonics should be defined as a dialect or a language does not matter in terms of its “validity”. [Crack IELTS with Rob] While linguists studying Ebonics typically restrain from prescribing edicts in favour of tracking changes in form and style, the LSA did point to the fact that speakers of Swedish and Norwegian can typically understand each other while conversing in different “languages”, whereas Mandarin and Cantonese speakers cannot understand each other’s “dialects” to conclude that spatial and social tensions, rather than strict linguistic criteria, were the crucial factors in defining these terms.
E. For many others, however, the OUSD’s decision was tantamount to endorsing lazy, vulgar, and “broken” English — the equivalent, perhaps, of acknowledging “text-speak” or Internet slang as a valid form of expression. Recognizing and fostering the use of informal, culturally-specific spoken language, say those detractors, traps users in a kind of linguistic ghetto in which they can interact with other disenfranchised and excluded citizens, but cannot engage within the public sphere in a meaningful way. Because of the dominance of Standard English in the United States, Ebonics-only speakers are essentially unable to go to university and work in high-valued professions, and they are unlikely to be electable to any kind of public office (even in areas with a high density of black residents, those who lose their Ebonics-tinged speech patterns fend to be more trusted).
F. Psychology professor Ladonna Lewis Rush has noted, however, that the OUSD’s resolution did not promote Ebonics instruction as an alternative to Standard English in an either-or approach but was intended to provide a better springboard for black achievement in English education. The systematic devaluation of Ebonics in American society parallels. [Crack IELTS with Rob] Rush has argued, the devaluation of African-Americans in general. While a demeaning attitude can lead to social exclusion, teachers are suggested to think inductively and encourage Ebonics speakers to use and collaborate their way of speaking while understanding that the language of the workplace, and of academics, is Standard English. Nobel Prize-winning journalist Toni Morrison has also found a reciprocal, mutually enriching use for both Ebonics and Standard English. “There are certain ideas and ways of thinking I cannot say without recourse to my [Ebonics, language … I know Standard English. I want to use it to restore the other language, the lingua Franca.”
G. In the media, the Ebonics controversy has mostly been portrayed as a revival of black-versus-white confrontation — this time over linguistic differences — but journalist Joan Walsh thinks there are bask elements inherent in the dispute that people do not want to openly discuss. She considers that there is increasing resentment by black parents and teachers who see enormous amounts of federal and state support going into Asian and Latino bilingual programmes. As immigration continues to increase, a greater proportion of the school budget is going into these programmes. [Crack IELTS with Rob] The question has to be raised: why should immigrant children get English-language assistance as well as reinforcement of their own language and culture while native-born African-Americans get no such resources? Walsh maintains inner-city black children are more isolated than in the past and have less social interaction with those fluent in Standard English. For this reason, they need help by trained teachers to translate the native tongue they hear at home into the English of the classroom.
H. Ebonics should be treated as a black contribution to culture in the way that jazz and rock-and-roll have been welcomed — the new vocabulary and imagery has added to the American language rather than devalued it. In Walsh’s eyes, there has always been “white mistrust of how black people handle their business” but “in the public realm, white disdain yields block intransigence more reliably than ‘P comes before e’”.
Questions 27 - 30
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the text for each answer.
Write your answers in blank spaces next to 27—30 on your answer sheet.
Ebonics originated from the (27) . The prisoners found a way to talk to other enslaved
TRANS-ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADEAfricans as well as to (28) . In the southern USA, several African languages mixed with
THEIR CAPTORSEnglish and the local (29) .
SOUTHERN DIALECTOver time, many distinctive (30) have been added to produce the Ebonics language of today.
AFRICAN-AMERICAN COMPONENTSQuestions 31 - 37
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-K. below.
Write the correct letter, A-K, in boxes 31 —37 on your answer sheet.
A to use Ebonies in order to express specific concepts
B to recognise the genetic differences between African-American students and others
C to acknowledge the systematic differences that Ebonies speakers must learn to overcome
D to consider Ebonies as lazy English rather than a unique form of expression
E to admit Ebonies users to university to gain more knowledge
F to make a statement about particular geo-social relationships
G to compare Scandinavian languages and Chinese dialects
H to declare Ebonies an independent language, not a variation on English
I to honour positive aspects of Ebonies, while emphasising the necessity of Standard English for formal use
J to approve the language of text messaging as a legitimate mode of communication
K to describe how Ebonies has developed without dictating rules for proper usage
31. In 1996, the Oakland Unified School District passed a measure
H32. According to John Rickford, it is a good idea when teaching Standard English
C33. Linguists studying Black speech patterns are only able
K34. The LSA nailed that definitions of “dialect” and “language” are generally away
F35. Critics of vernacular alternatives to Standard English tend
D36. Ladonna Lewis Rush argues that it is important for educators
I37. Toni Morrison finds it necessary
AQuestions 38 - 40
Complete the sentences below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in blank spaces 38-40 on your answer sheet.
Joan Walsh thinks that there is growing (38) by black people who witness a huge amount of government support.
RESENTMENTWalsh believes that native-born children seem to be more (39) than in the olden days.
ISOLATEDEbonics should be considered as a part of (40) culture instead of ruining it.
AMERICANq41-hide
Please click the red words below for other Reading Practice Tests:
Practice Test 1 | Academic Reading Passage 1 |
Practice Test 1 | Academic Reading Passage 2 |
Practice Test 2 | Academic Reading Passage 1 |