Posts Tagged culture
English & The Digital Gap
Jeff Atwood at “Coding Horrors” writes that it is reasonable to require programmers to speak English; most of his commentators agree.
Jeff writes that:
Consciously choosing to switch from Polish to English reminds me why I gave up Visual Basic for C#, as painful as that was. These languages do exactly the same things — and the friction of choosing the minority language was severe.
So here there is a little of that ugly American, someone who never needed to learn another language. People may be keen on their first programming language, but it is nowhere comparable to a native (human) language. Nowhere. Learning foreign language to a point were you can read technical writing takes years. Writing in a foreign language would always cripple you, unless you’re super-talented, or you got to live in an English speaking environment on a young age.
Learning a new language is not like learning a new programming language. If anything, it is comparable to mastering how to program.
And so English becomes a – or maybe the – major obstacle in closing the Digital Gap.
A couple of years ago I taught at Tech-Careers. It’s an IT training center for Ethiopian-Israelis, a group that experiences immense hardship in integrating into the Israeli society. While my students were all high-school graduates, they had but rudimental English. Basic material was available for them in Hebrew (you can find HTML, JavaScript, C# or ASP books in Hebrew), and we encouraged them to use Hebrew programming Q&A forums. But only as much is available. It was frustrating to see them struggle with English online material, and it was discouraging to imagine how English would ultimately hamper their employment opportunities.
We offered them help in improving their language skills, but in an already overloaded program, we could hardly make it a priority.
Yes, it is certainly a very difficult, almost impossible, to be work in software in Israel without a working knowledge of written English. It’s not just the learning material that’s missing. Almost all high-tech companies are geared towards export, so unless you work in-house for a traditional company (I am thinking a bank), you will have to write documents and very possibly interact with people in English.
But do realize that it comes with a price.
Add comment March 31, 2009
