Today-June 15

More than 20 per cent of ethnic minorities in Singapore believe that there is more language prejudice here today compared with five years ago, a study here has found. Language prejudice happens when people have negative attitudes towards, or implicit biases against, people who use a particular language, Dr Mathew Mathews, one of the study’s authors, said in response to TODAY’s queries. Overall, about 30 per cent of the respondents across all ethnicities felt that there has been “less” or “much less” prejudice based on language today than five years ago, while close to half of the respondents said that language prejudice has remained the same over the last five years. These findings came from two surveys, conducted in 2013 and 2018 by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), which polled 8,146 participants over the age of 18. They aimed to study Singapore’s linguistic landscape and provide empirical data on key language trends here.

Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/1-5-ethnic-minorities-surveyed-reported-greater-language-prejudice-now-5-years-ago-study