Brazilians might as well just speak Spanish...

Penetra   Tue Apr 06, 2010 11:25 pm GMT
Brazilians trade with their neighbors in Spanish .
Realidade   Tue Apr 06, 2010 11:27 pm GMT
google translator:

Of the 25 thousand schools throughout the country, according to the Census of Basic Education, 2008, 6600 offer only the chair that was made mandatory by Law No. 11,161, passed by President Lula in 2005.

With just 14%, the average offer is worse in public, but the situation in particular is far from ideal, with 56%. The data are from the National Institute of Educational Studies and Research (INEP), an agency attached to the Ministry of Education.

By law, which took transition period of five years, teaching Spanish became mandatory on the part of the school. For the student, the course is optional, since there is other language required.

In the Federal District, the average is worse than the national. Assistant Secretary of Education, Eunice Santos, admits that the 90 high schools in the capital of the country, fewer than 10 take classes in Spanish. Although the law is 2005, the Mexico City government has never held a contest to hire a Spanish teacher to meet the goal. "We will contest next year and we are reshaping our Integrated Language Centers (ICLs)," says the secretary, referring to institutions that offer classes in Spanish, English and French to students in public schools.

Students from Central High School Gisno at Asa Norte Brasilia, do not have any access to the Language Centre. Teens also do not have Spanish teachers in the faculty. "They do not ask, already complied with the fact that public education is even worse and they only have English," says a teacher who is part of school and who asked not to be named.

Spanish is a language currently spoken by over 420 million people, being the second most spoken language in the Western world. Apart from Spain, is the official language of 20 countries, located mostly in Latin America.

According to the Ministry of Basic Education, the country has 6 thousand teachers of the discipline in high school, just over 20% of the 25 thousand that the ECM estimates are needed when adopting the law.

"The major responsibility for providing secondary education, the Constitution itself, are the states. But the MEC has specific actions to work with teacher training and support public networks, "notes Mary Eveline, general coordinator of the School of Ministry. "We close agreement with the Instituto Cervantes for two pilot projects. For now serves 40 teachers and 600 students but the idea is that the two are offered on a larger scale. "

According to Mary Eveline, there is no punishment defined by law for the state or school that does not comply with the law. "But the prosecutor is always in monitoring and questioning the compliance with the law," he says. If a student does not have Spanish class, he may require the school to the State Board of Education or Justice.
Realidade   Tue Apr 06, 2010 11:28 pm GMT
"Brazilians trade with their neighbors in Spanish . "

Brazilians do not even trade with Hispanic,thats almost the point.
Penetra   Tue Apr 06, 2010 11:34 pm GMT
So what? 6600 schools of 25 000 were offering Spanish in 2008 in Brazil. That is a good number. It was achieved in just three years after the Spanish law was passed. You can't expect the logistics necessary to offer Spanish to 60 millions of students all of a sudden in a poor country like Brazil, but things are progressing , and I would say they are progressing fast. How many schools offer Brazilian in Argentina on the other hand? five, four?.
Penetra   Tue Apr 06, 2010 11:36 pm GMT
<<Brazilians do not even trade with Hispanic,thats almost the point. >>


Brazilians do not trade with their Hispanic neighbors, that is the reason why Brazil is part of Mercosur along with Argentina, Uruguay and Chile. Bravo, you are the most stupid monkey of Amazonas.
U quê?   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:12 am GMT
"that is the reason why Brazil is part of Mercosur"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Brazil

1st. us. 14,5%
2nd china 10%
3rd. argentina 8,3%

"Brazil is part of Mercosur along with Argentina, Uruguay and Chile"

No, Brazil is part of Mercosul along with Argentina,Uruguay and PARAGUAY.
penetra   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:15 am GMT
Brazilians use Spanish to trade with the Chinese and Americans too.
Penetra   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:20 am GMT
Brazil's main trade partners in 2008 were: Mercosul and Latin America (25.9% of trade), EU (23.4%), Asia (18.9%), the United States (14.0%), and others (17.8%).[13]
U quê?   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:23 am GMT
Brazilians uses english.Americans because are heir mother tongue.And do u think chineses are interested in spanish?
The real mandatory language in Brazil. All english teachers drives nice cars and wear jacket and tie.
Spanish teachers,on the other hand, are bearded communists,immigrants and walk with torn clothes.
Penetra   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:28 am GMT
The Chinese are not interested in the Spanish language, they are VERY interested. They want to diminish the influence of USA in Latin America and the Spanish language is the key. What do you say about clothes? Stop sniffing glue please. In virtually all countries English teachers abound but Brazil needs more Spanish teachers than they have already, so they earn more money the English teachers. If you can't put facts and data on the table you should abandon this conversation that obviously I've won. Spanish is being studied more and more in Brazil and this is a fact. God is with us.
Doktor Q.   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:38 am GMT
Teaching Spanish will help the Brazilians to increase their low IQ.
U quê?   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:42 am GMT
Dont be idiot. English,basically,is the official western language in the asian countries. Ive seen many photos where u can see japanese/chinese and english languages together,at public,in asian countries.

"If you can't put facts and data on the table you should abandon this conversation that obviously I've won. Spanish is being studied more and more in Brazil and this is a fact."

Yes neither are you. I am speaking about my feelings.
I see few schools in brazil teaching spanish. And those that are teaching are almost empty.
I can say that hungarian is not being teached in brazil. Or u need some data for this too?
Penetra   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:50 am GMT
<<I can say that hungarian is not being teached in brazil. Or u need some data for this too?

>>

It seems that schools where English is taught are empty too in Brazil.
Brazileru   Wed Apr 07, 2010 12:54 am GMT
Let brazil alone moderfukers.
Brazilians dont like spanish language nor the hispanic race.
Most brazilians speak portuñol when they try to speak spanish.Those studying Spanish is because it is the easiest language in the world.Teaching Spanish will help the Brazilians to decrease their IQ. Because is the easiest and cheapest language in the world.

Go include italians in ur shitty world.
Lula da Silva   Wed Apr 07, 2010 1:01 am GMT
Brazilians love the Spanish language because it is the language they aspire to speak natively instead of lower class Portuguese. The Brazilian Parliament passed the Spanish Law in 2005 that forces all public and private schools to offer Spanish. The Brazilian Government estimates that Brazil will be a bilingual Spanish-Portuguese nation in few decades.