I am born and raised in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. I speak, read and write Amharic that is official language of Ethiopia. Growing up in Ethiopia, we were taught English as second language but we didn’t really encouraged to do a lot of writing at school. Mostly the school curriculum is designed around learning how to read and speak. I think that has a major negative impact on my writing literacy.
Being bilingual has many advantages but in a down side at times I found it hindering to my writing literacy. To a person who speaks only one language what I am about to say might not make a lot of sense. But as a bilingual person I sometimes found myself thinking in one language while I am trying to write in another language and that is not always easy task. There are some thoughts that I can beautifully describe in Amharic words but struggle to find the right combination of English words and that goes vise versa. Sometimes I think certain things can be said better in one language than the …show more content…
Gender role makes it extra difficult for women to excel in certain aspects of fields. For example society expects and encourage women to be literate in cooking and managing a household while there seems not much of expectation or encouragement to be literate in politics or aviation. In general because of gender role most women literacy is affected one way or another. As a woman I see literacy as the one and only means of reasserting our place in todays society. These days more and more women are crossing over the sociocultural lines and redefining the gender role as we know it, which I hope will help influence the next generation literacy.
Being a woman has influenced my reading, writing and speaking literacy, but the other side of a coin is that it gave me special perspective of how I view the world and what I choose for my everyday literacy. As an ethnic woman I am drawn to certain social issues and that end up dictating my literacy. The article I choose to read and social issues I want to discuss occasionally caused me feeling different in my own group of friends. Even though I don’t consider myself as such my womanly perspective have had me considered as a feminist. Regardless of how my literacy