
Anyhoos, how have you with bilingual or multilingual families registered your kids and is it really significant especially when they start school?
Of course its registered somewhere - how else would the Government know the amount of Swedish-speaking people to know which county is Swedish-speaking and where you have to have bilingual services? How else would the school board know how many classes of äidinkieli and suomi vieraana kielenä teaching to organize? (Theres also a box for asiointikieli which states in which language your official documents come in, Finnish or Swedish). Go look at http://www.vaestorekisterikeskus.fi and you see a statistical breakdown of people by language - how do you expect those statistics to have been formed?I didn't realise your native tongue is registered somewhere.
You can change the entry with a letter to the maistraatti.What happens when a child forgets his/her registered native tongue?
In the UK those sort of stats are collected via the census, with no registration as such.Pursuivant wrote:Of course its registered somewhere - how else would the Government know the amount of Swedish-speaking people to know which county is Swedish-speaking and where you have to have bilingual services? How else would the school board know how many classes of äidinkieli and suomi vieraana kielenä teaching to organize? (Theres also a box for asiointikieli which states in which language your official documents come in, Finnish or Swedish). Go look at http://www.vaestorekisterikeskus.fi and you see a statistical breakdown of people by language - how do you expect those statistics to have been formed?
I like more finnish system. Did you know we have one 20 to 24 yearld old woman who speaks cree as native tongue and she lives in southern savoCory wrote:In Canada, too. Every 5 years every 5th household, or something like that, gets a Census form in the post. Kinda like being called for jury duty....t's necessary to fill it in and post it back or big-brother comes-a-knockin'!DMC wrote:In the UK those sort of stats are collected via the census, with no registration as such.
Good point. Pursuivant ought to be more open-minded. There is a big difference between my not knowing how it is done here and P's not being able to think how else to do it. There are many ways to collect statistics witout requiring everyone to register everything.raamv wrote:viewtopic.php?f=2&t=39551&start=30
Yes we know they use checques and hot water bottles as well. When have you seen people going door-to-door for census, checques or hot water bottles in Finland? In the 1970's? Finnish census is done from the registries.DMC wrote: In the UK those sort of stats are collected via the census, with no registration as such.
Modern technology always comes as a shock to primitive peoples when the come live in modern societies. I know how things were done in the 1950's. I have an outhouse at the cottage. I still don't see why I have to be open minded if I have indoor plumbing and know how to use it and you don't know to flush.DMC wrote: Pursuivant ought to be more open-minded. There is a big difference between my not knowing how it is done here and P's not being able to think how else to do it.
Thats an opinion gallup. In principle you can fill in whatever you want. Its about as valid as the Finnish corruption survey. Of course we are the "least corrupt nation"Cory wrote: In Canada, too. Every 5 years every 5th household, or something like that, gets a Census form in the post.
dont get started in this...it deserves a new topic instead of a thread...Pursuivant wrote:Thats an opinion gallup. In principle you can fill in whatever you want. Its about as valid as the Finnish corruption survey. Of course we are the "least corrupt nation"Cory wrote: In Canada, too. Every 5 years every 5th household, or something like that, gets a Census form in the post.... not.
I'm impressed! Such wit! And it only took you a week.Pursuivant wrote:Modern technology always comes as a shock to primitive peoples when the come live in modern societies. I know how things were done in the 1950's. I have an outhouse at the cottage. I still don't see why I have to be open minded if I have indoor plumbing and know how to use it and you don't know to flush.
Skill in WC usage isn't really something you should include on your CV.DMC wrote:I'm impressed! Such wit! And it only took you a week.Pursuivant wrote:Modern technology always comes as a shock to primitive peoples when the come live in modern societies. I know how things were done in the 1950's. I have an outhouse at the cottage. I still don't see why I have to be open minded if I have indoor plumbing and know how to use it and you don't know to flush.
So you have indoor plumbing and you think its worth commenting on. I'll let you into a secret: everyone does. Skill in WC usage isn't really something you should include on your CV.