Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment

This paper examines the teaching of Igbo literature adapted from F.C.Ogbalu’s Uremma-one of the folktales in an Igbo literature titled Nza na Obu. The literature text is a compendium of popular folktales and folksongs of Igbo people in Eastern Nigeria, and was in the Nigerian schools’ Igbo language/...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul 2019-01-01
Series:Revista Brasileira de Estudos da Presença
Subjects:
Online Access:https://seer.ufrgs.br/presenca/article/view/81831
id doaj-f72267679255448d9721da05106df4ca
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f72267679255448d9721da05106df4ca2020-11-25T02:47:17ZengUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulRevista Brasileira de Estudos da Presença2237-26602019-01-019112239219Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experimentGloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)0Imo State UniversityThis paper examines the teaching of Igbo literature adapted from F.C.Ogbalu’s Uremma-one of the folktales in an Igbo literature titled Nza na Obu. The literature text is a compendium of popular folktales and folksongs of Igbo people in Eastern Nigeria, and was in the Nigerian schools’ Igbo language/literature curriculum for decades. The paper shares a pedagogical experiment involving the teaching of the Igbo language folktale as literature and as a video film in a class of young 18 teenagers. Odum na Akwaeke is the video adaptation of Akwaeke(Uremma) folktale. The folktale was adapted into “Odum na Akwaeke,” (Amayo Uzo Philip dir., 1998)- a popular narrative video film, and became one of Nollywood (Nigerian film industry)’s most popular Igbo films at its release in 1998. The pedagogical experiment reveals that video film viewership affects the students’ appreciation of not just the literature, but also the language; and equally creates a warm learning atmosphere which enables the students to cooperate, share and contribute in the learning exercise. The research experiment buttresses the importance of interactive teaching methodology in teaching and learning indigenous knowledge. The paper concludes that faced with globalization and persistent technological invasion, scholars particularly those interested in African culture and cultural studies need to reflect on newer and innovative approaches to teaching local languages and literature in order to sustain youth interest in African culture/ cultural studies in a technological era.https://seer.ufrgs.br/presenca/article/view/81831Video film, literature, language, Igbo culture, Pedagogy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)
spellingShingle Gloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)
Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
Revista Brasileira de Estudos da Presença
Video film, literature, language, Igbo culture, Pedagogy
author_facet Gloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)
author_sort Gloria Chimeziem Ernest-Samuel (Imo State University – Owerri/Imo State, Nigeria)
title Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
title_short Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
title_full Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
title_fullStr Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
title_full_unstemmed Igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: A pedagogical e experiment
title_sort igbo language and literature in classroom discourse: a pedagogical e experiment
publisher Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
series Revista Brasileira de Estudos da Presença
issn 2237-2660
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This paper examines the teaching of Igbo literature adapted from F.C.Ogbalu’s Uremma-one of the folktales in an Igbo literature titled Nza na Obu. The literature text is a compendium of popular folktales and folksongs of Igbo people in Eastern Nigeria, and was in the Nigerian schools’ Igbo language/literature curriculum for decades. The paper shares a pedagogical experiment involving the teaching of the Igbo language folktale as literature and as a video film in a class of young 18 teenagers. Odum na Akwaeke is the video adaptation of Akwaeke(Uremma) folktale. The folktale was adapted into “Odum na Akwaeke,” (Amayo Uzo Philip dir., 1998)- a popular narrative video film, and became one of Nollywood (Nigerian film industry)’s most popular Igbo films at its release in 1998. The pedagogical experiment reveals that video film viewership affects the students’ appreciation of not just the literature, but also the language; and equally creates a warm learning atmosphere which enables the students to cooperate, share and contribute in the learning exercise. The research experiment buttresses the importance of interactive teaching methodology in teaching and learning indigenous knowledge. The paper concludes that faced with globalization and persistent technological invasion, scholars particularly those interested in African culture and cultural studies need to reflect on newer and innovative approaches to teaching local languages and literature in order to sustain youth interest in African culture/ cultural studies in a technological era.
topic Video film, literature, language, Igbo culture, Pedagogy
url https://seer.ufrgs.br/presenca/article/view/81831
work_keys_str_mv AT gloriachimeziemernestsamuelimostateuniversityowerriimostatenigeria igbolanguageandliteratureinclassroomdiscourseapedagogicaleexperiment
_version_ 1724753650348195840