Javascript must be enabled to continue!
From Margins to Mainstream: Probing the Amazigh-in-Education Policy in Morocco
View through CrossRef
The teaching of Amazigh has been celebrated by plenty of activists as a cornerstone toward revitalizing the Amazigh language and culture. Grand efforts have been made to ameliorate both the process and product of this policy. However, several issues persist, raising questions about officials’ political will and the full engagement of educators, learners, and their families. The present paper delves into Moroccans’ attitudes and views on the Amazigh teaching experience. It adopts a qualitative approach, as data were collected using a questionnaire and analyzed through thematic analysis. Results show that Moroccans generally perceive the teaching of Amazigh as an essential step toward reconciliation with the Amazigh identity. The 21-year-long experience is, however, regarded by the majority of participants to be a fiasco for several reasons, including lack of resources and educational staff and the incessant insignificance and carelessness associated with Amazigh. Most of the respondents, nevertheless, strongly support the adoption of the Tifinagh script, suggesting that it is a requisite part of Moroccan history and culture. The future of the Amazigh language is yet held with great pessimism, especially due to the fierce competition of other languages. The study calls for working on changing Moroccans’ negative attitudes and beliefs on Amazigh, arguing that without a solid social foundation, neither activists’ militancy nor constant political changes would be of any value.
Title: From Margins to Mainstream: Probing the Amazigh-in-Education Policy in Morocco
Description:
The teaching of Amazigh has been celebrated by plenty of activists as a cornerstone toward revitalizing the Amazigh language and culture.
Grand efforts have been made to ameliorate both the process and product of this policy.
However, several issues persist, raising questions about officials’ political will and the full engagement of educators, learners, and their families.
The present paper delves into Moroccans’ attitudes and views on the Amazigh teaching experience.
It adopts a qualitative approach, as data were collected using a questionnaire and analyzed through thematic analysis.
Results show that Moroccans generally perceive the teaching of Amazigh as an essential step toward reconciliation with the Amazigh identity.
The 21-year-long experience is, however, regarded by the majority of participants to be a fiasco for several reasons, including lack of resources and educational staff and the incessant insignificance and carelessness associated with Amazigh.
Most of the respondents, nevertheless, strongly support the adoption of the Tifinagh script, suggesting that it is a requisite part of Moroccan history and culture.
The future of the Amazigh language is yet held with great pessimism, especially due to the fierce competition of other languages.
The study calls for working on changing Moroccans’ negative attitudes and beliefs on Amazigh, arguing that without a solid social foundation, neither activists’ militancy nor constant political changes would be of any value.
Related Results
Effectiveness and Timing of Congenital Nasolacrimal Duct Obstruction Probing: a Systematic Review
Effectiveness and Timing of Congenital Nasolacrimal Duct Obstruction Probing: a Systematic Review
Abstract
Introduction & Objectives : Most congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction (NLDO) cases could resolve spontaneously or only require minimal conservative treatment...
Against the Homeland: Popular Exilic Antagonism through “Azzouz is Mad” / Contra la Patria: Antagonismo exílico popular a través de “Azzouz is Mad”
Against the Homeland: Popular Exilic Antagonism through “Azzouz is Mad” / Contra la Patria: Antagonismo exílico popular a través de “Azzouz is Mad”
The Moroccan Diasporic Youtubers are silenced or neglected because they use vulgar language, and although they are becoming part of the Moroccan popular culture, researchers seem t...
“Moroccan” Artek: Colonized Textiles within 1930s Modernist Interiors
“Moroccan” Artek: Colonized Textiles within 1930s Modernist Interiors
Abstract
Shortly after opening in 1936, the Finnish interior design company Artek organized two exhibitions in Helsinki: a model apartment showroom and a display wit...
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Introduction This essay begins with the premise that resilience, broadly defined as positive adaptation despite adversity (Garmezy and Rutter), and resilience building are importa...
Piece by piece: Collaborative mosaic-making for inclusive policy development
Piece by piece: Collaborative mosaic-making for inclusive policy development
This report sets out the findings from one of four projects commissioned by Wellcome Policy Lab to pilot creative approaches to policy development. In this project, Scientia Script...
Persistence of Use Among Amazigh People of Medicinal Plants Documented by Ibn al-Baytar (Early 13th Century CE)
Persistence of Use Among Amazigh People of Medicinal Plants Documented by Ibn al-Baytar (Early 13th Century CE)
The long-term stability of orally transmitted ethnopharmacopoeias is of interest, but difficult to study for lack of information on plants used by a specific past culture. Similari...
The Amazigh Movement in a Changing North Africa
The Amazigh Movement in a Changing North Africa
This chapter traces transformations in Amazigh militancy over the past fifty years. Its engagements have gradually shifted from particular demands for cultural and linguistic recog...
Hydatid Disease of The Brain Parenchyma: A Systematic Review
Hydatid Disease of The Brain Parenchyma: A Systematic Review
Abstarct
Introduction
Isolated brain hydatid disease (BHD) is an extremely rare form of echinococcosis. A prompt and timely diagnosis is a crucial step in disease management. This ...

