Mont. Admin. r. 10.75.102 - DEFINING INDIAN LANGUAGE FLUENCY
(1)
"Fluency" is:
(a) the flow in spoken or
written language as perceived by the listener or reader, with the flow made
possible by clarity of expression, the acceptable ordering of ideas, and the
use of vocabulary and syntax appropriate to the context; or
(b) general mastery of spoken or written
language, easy and accurate, with few mistakes, and the ability to contribute
to diverse discussions.
(2) Fluency is determined by each tribe's
language and culture department via oral exam to ensure that speakers are able
to converse in a variety of contexts and purposes.
(3) Montana Indian language fluency can be
rated according to the following scale:
(a)
Beginning.
(i) No memorization.
(ii) Speaker needs help and support to
understand or say anything.
(b) Simple Basics.
(i) Very limited usage, mostly
memorized.
(ii) Speaker needs help
and support to understand or speak basic sentences.
(c) Progressing.
(i) Beginning mastery, which requires
significant effort and results in many mistakes.
(ii) Speaker understands and can say simple
sentences.
(d) Ready
Equipped.
(i) General mastery with easy and
accurate communication with few mistakes.
(ii) Speaker understands and can say simple
sentences.
(e) Fluent.
(i) General mastery with easy and accurate
communication with few mistakes.
(ii) Speaker understands and can contribute
to diverse discussions.
(f) Expert.
(i) Advanced/native mastery, with regular and
accurate use of words that have multiple meanings.
(ii) Speaker understands and can converse
about anything.
(4) Progress regarding Indian language
fluency for a tribe will be tracked according to the following scale:
(a) Level One: The tribe has fewer than 10
fluent language speakers, no culture or language department, a beginning
curriculum level, a lack of resources in support of language, no tribal
education department, and no class 7 standards have been established.
(b) Level Two: The tribe has 10 to 50
language speakers and class 7s within the tribe, a language and culture
department established, a class 7 resolution and guidance in place, developed
intermediate curriculum level, developed a tribal education department, and
tribal fluency standards are in progress.
(c) Level Three: The tribe has 50 or more
language speakers and class 7s, a language and cultures department, a tribal
education department, curriculum, fluency standards in place, and class 7
process is expanding.
Notes
AUTH: 20-9-537, MCA; IMP: 20-9-537, MCA
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.