Abstract:
The demand placed on English as the international language by Sri Lankans has got a
history which runs back to the days of the British colonisers. English was first
transmitted to the elite class of Sri Lankans through the medium of education. An
education in the English medium was offered to a selected group of Sri Lankans who
could afford to pay for it. Consequently, English and economic status has been two
inseparable social indicators of then Sri Lanka. The affluent in society adopted English
as their home language and enjoyed the social and economic advantages that came
with the language while the social and economic opportunities for the poor were
constrained by the indigenous languages.
Many researchers working in the area of education still point out the existence of a
similar trend in Sri Lanka. The demand placed on learning English or learning in English
has been on the increase over the past few years. The most recent phenomenon which
proves the existence of such a trend in Sri Lanka is the mushrooming of international
schools in and outside Colombo. Added to this is the accelerated demand placed on
external degrees offered by foreign universities, especially American, British and
Australian universities. The current research is focused on such a sample of students
studying for a Diploma (external), which is equivalent to the first year of a B.Sc. degree
offered by a reputed British university.
As there is a dearth of research with students in similar study programmes, the current
research has had to rely mostly on common sense understandings of such students and
on my personal experiences of teaching in such a course in constructing its hypothesis.
Five common perceptions can be observed about students enrolled in such
programmes. The students are from rich families; They are drop outs of the main stream
tertiary education, i.e. the national universities and therefore, have joined these external
programs in order to obtain a degree; they are very fluent in English; their main interest
is in obtaining a degree in the English medium and their main interest is in obtaining a
degree from a foreign university.
The current research intends to find out the accuracy of these perceptions by testing the
following hypothesis: The demand placed on external degrees is not a result of students
‘wanting a degree’ but a result of ‘wanting a degree in the English medium’. In other
words, the hypothesis implies that it is not the degree that is in demand but the language
in which it is offered.