Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia

The Iban language of Sarawak is an indigenous language that has an orthography and has been taught as a subject in Malaysian schools since 1968. However, no findings are available on whether Iban is used for written and formal communication. This study examined the extent of the formal use of Iban a...

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Published in:LANGUAGE DOCUMENTATION & CONSERVATION
Main Authors: Metom, Lilly; Ting, Su-Hie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UNIV HAWAII PRESS 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001390235400002
author Metom
Lilly; Ting
Su-Hie
spellingShingle Metom
Lilly; Ting
Su-Hie
Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
Linguistics
author_facet Metom
Lilly; Ting
Su-Hie
author_sort Metom
spelling Metom, Lilly; Ting, Su-Hie
Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
LANGUAGE DOCUMENTATION & CONSERVATION
English
Article
The Iban language of Sarawak is an indigenous language that has an orthography and has been taught as a subject in Malaysian schools since 1968. However, no findings are available on whether Iban is used for written and formal communication. This study examined the extent of the formal use of Iban among the Iban community. Questionnaire data from 1,204 Iban respondents showed that mastery of Iban is acquired through informal language acquisition rather than formal learning. The percentage of those learning Iban in school dropped from the parents' generation (53.90%) to the children's generation (33.39%). Over 93% of the respondents could understand and speak Iban fluently, 88.54% could read in Iban, and 82.23% could write in Iban. The radio plays a bigger role in promoting Iban use among the respondents than the television. The sources of support for the written use of Iban are formal education, printed and audio-visual materials such as selected newspapers and magazines, and community groups. However, only 23.51% of the respondents had the experience of attending meetings conducted in Iban. The findings suggest low confidence for Iban to serve formal functions of communication not because of proficiency issues but due to lack of official status.
UNIV HAWAII PRESS
1934-5275

2024
18


Linguistics

WOS:001390235400002
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001390235400002
title Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
title_short Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
title_full Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
title_fullStr Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
title_sort Formal Use of the Iban Language among the Iban Community in Sarawak, Malaysia
container_title LANGUAGE DOCUMENTATION & CONSERVATION
language English
format Article
description The Iban language of Sarawak is an indigenous language that has an orthography and has been taught as a subject in Malaysian schools since 1968. However, no findings are available on whether Iban is used for written and formal communication. This study examined the extent of the formal use of Iban among the Iban community. Questionnaire data from 1,204 Iban respondents showed that mastery of Iban is acquired through informal language acquisition rather than formal learning. The percentage of those learning Iban in school dropped from the parents' generation (53.90%) to the children's generation (33.39%). Over 93% of the respondents could understand and speak Iban fluently, 88.54% could read in Iban, and 82.23% could write in Iban. The radio plays a bigger role in promoting Iban use among the respondents than the television. The sources of support for the written use of Iban are formal education, printed and audio-visual materials such as selected newspapers and magazines, and community groups. However, only 23.51% of the respondents had the experience of attending meetings conducted in Iban. The findings suggest low confidence for Iban to serve formal functions of communication not because of proficiency issues but due to lack of official status.
publisher UNIV HAWAII PRESS
issn 1934-5275

publishDate 2024
container_volume 18
container_issue
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topic Linguistics
topic_facet Linguistics
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