Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Young Canadians Increasingly Bilingual, Especially In Quebec, New Brunswick

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2019 07:22 PM

    OTTAWA - Statistics Canada is reporting a jump in the number of bilingual Canadians.

     

    The federal agency reports Monday that in the 2016 census, 17.9 per cent of Canadians said they were able to conduct a conversation in both English and French, the highest percentage ever recorded.

     

    The data shows that young Canadians are more likely to be bilingual, and the phenomenon is most pronounced in Quebec.

     

    From 2006 to 2016, the rate of bilingualism among Canadian children aged five to 17 increased to 19 per cent from 16 per cent.

     

    The study looked at the cohort of young people who in 2006 were aged between five and 17. In 2006, 17 per cent of them could converse in English and French.

     

    Ten years later, when they were aged 15 to 27, the same cohort's bilingualism rate had risen to 27 per cent.

     

    For that age group in Quebec, the bilingualism rate jumped to 66 per cent in 2016 from 28 per cent a decade earlier.

     

    A significant increase was also seen among New Brunswickers in the same age bracket. In 2016, 50 per cent of them were bilingual, compared with 37 per cent in 2006.

     

    Young Quebecers were the most likely to remain bilingual once they learned the two languages. Almost all Quebec youth — 94 per cent — who were bilingual in 2006 remained bilingual 10 years later. Elsewhere in Canada, about one-third of youth who were bilingual in 2006 were no longer bilingual 10 years later.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bill 21, Free Trade Deal On Agenda As Trudeau, Legault Meet In Montreal

    MONTREAL - Quebec Premier Francois Legault says he asked Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during a meeting today to stay out of the contentious debate over the province's secularism law.

    Bill 21, Free Trade Deal On Agenda As Trudeau, Legault Meet In Montreal

    Race To Replace Scheer As Federal Conservative Leader Could Be Crowded

    OTTAWA - Moments after Andrew Scheer announced Thursday his intention to resign as Conservative party leader, speculation turned to who will replace him.

    Race To Replace Scheer As Federal Conservative Leader Could Be Crowded

    After Announcing Resignation, Scheer Misses Last Question Period Before Break

    Leona Alleslev, named by Scheer as deputy Conservative leader after the October election, attacked the Liberals for their fiscal record, warning that Canada isn't ready for a fading global economy.

    After Announcing Resignation, Scheer Misses Last Question Period Before Break

    Crown Corporation Immune From Taxation, But Still Might Have To Pay GST: Court

    Crown Corporation Immune From Taxation, But Still Might Have To Pay GST: Court
    The B.C. agency responsible for managing public-sector pension plan investments is constitutionally immune from remitting goods-and-services taxes related to those portfolios, the Supreme Court of Canada has decided.

    Crown Corporation Immune From Taxation, But Still Might Have To Pay GST: Court

    Brad Wall Not Interested In Conservative Party Leadership, Hopes Rona Ambrose Is

    Brad Wall Not Interested In Conservative Party Leadership, Hopes Rona Ambrose Is
    REGINA - Former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall says while he's not interested in running for the federal Conservative party leadership, he knows someone who should.    

    Brad Wall Not Interested In Conservative Party Leadership, Hopes Rona Ambrose Is

    Man Who Tried To Kill Edmonton Police Officer Sentenced To 18 Years

    A man convicted of striking an Edmonton police officer with a car before stabbing him multiple times outside a football game has been sentenced to 18 years in prison.

    Man Who Tried To Kill Edmonton Police Officer Sentenced To 18 Years