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Over 400 scholarships awarded to state's budding interpreters

13 February 2023
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The state’s pool of language professionals has grown substantially over the past four years thanks to the NSW Government exceeding its election commitment to fill 400 positions through the Multicultural NSW Interpreting Scholarship Program.  

Facilitated by a number of educational institutions, including TAFE NSW, University of NSW and RMIT, the program has enabled people speaking more than 50 different languages and dialects to join the NSW Government’s interpreting ranks. 

Minister for Multiculturalism Mark Coure said the Interpreting Scholarship Program empowers people to use their language skills as a career and help their communities access government information and services.

“We have seen through the latest Census data that more and more people are speaking a language other than English at home, including new and emerging languages that weren’t prominent in communities five, ten or even fifteen years ago,” Mr Coure said. 

“We have worked with various universities and TAFE NSW so the program could evolve to train those who speak these languages and have them become qualified interpreters.

"By doing this, we have been able to bolster our interpreting ranks with a greater breadth of language capabilities and ensure we have the people available to support our state's diverse communities."

The program's most recent graduates include TAFE and university-trained interpreters speaking Amharic, Dari, Hazaragi, Kannada, Karen, Mongolian, Swahili and Tamil.

NSW Federation of Community Language Schools president Lucia Johns said the program was further evidence of the value of multi-lingual study.

“Language is one of NSW’s greatest cultural, social and business assets. So it cannot be ignored and must be fostered and developed. By teaching children languages at community language schools throughout the state we are protecting and guaranteeing our future linguistic skills,” Mrs Johns said.

“Children who learn a second language at community languages schools will have the option of developing a career in interpreting and translation which benefits all aspects of our society.”

Mr Coure added that the program had attracted a great mix of people of various ages across the state interested in using their language skills as a career, including from regional NSW. 

“More than 20 per cent of students participating in the program are from regional NSW, which shows our multicultural state isn't in one city or suburb,” Mr Coure said.

“We have also had many people from refugee backgrounds use their language skills to gain employment and support their community. This year alone, 30 per cent of scholarship participants were on refugee or special humanitarian visas.

“Everyone who completes the program and attains their certification can join our expert panel of language professionals."

Through the 2022-23 NSW Budget, $16 million was secured over two years to improve the state’s whole-of-government language service. 

“The NSW Government understands that a strong and robust language service is key to a future without barriers for diverse communities, and ensure no one is restricted in accessing information or services because of the language they speak,” Mr Coure said. 

For more information about the Multicultural NSW Interpreting Scholarship Program, visit multicultural.nsw.gov.au.  

 

Languages Spoken by Scholarship Students

Amharic

Filipino

Kurdish- Kurmanji

Thai

Arabic

Greek

Macedonian

Tibetan

Arabic/Sudanese

Hakha Chin

Malayalam

Tigrinya

Assyrian

Hazaragi

Mongolian

Tongan

Burmese

Hmong

Nepali

Turkish

Chaldean

Hungarian

Persian

Twi

Chinese Hakka

Igbo

Portuguese

Ukrainian

Chinese-Chiu Chow

Indonesian

Samoan

Urdu

Cook Islands Maori

Italian

Serbian

Uyghur

Creole

Kannada

Somali

Vietnamese

Dari

Karen

Spanish

Zomi Chin

Dinka

Khmer

Swahili

 

Ewe

Kinyarwanda

Tamil

 

Fiji Hindi

Kirundi

Telugu

 

Fijian

Krio

Temne

 

Authorised by Chris Stone, Liberal Party of Australia, NSW Division, Level 2, 131 Macquarie Street, Sydney NSW 2000.

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