BBC 6 minute English-Making sense of the census
Transcript of the podcast
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript
.Neil: Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil
.Sam: And I’m Sam
Neil: In recent years, many people have wanted to find out more about where they come from. Millions have tried to trace their family history and discover how their ancestors lived hundreds of years ago
Sam: The internet has made it much easier to find historical documents and records about your family history – and one of the most useful documents for doing this is the census
Neil: A census is an official count of all the people living in a country. It collects information about a country’s population and is usually carried out by the government
Sam: In Britain, a census has been carried out every ten years since 1801. In 2002, when census records from a hundred years before became available online, so many people rushed to their computers to access them that the website crashed
Neil: But before we find out more about the census and its related vocabulary it’s time for a quiz question, Sam. Someone who knows a lot about his family history is British actor, Danny Dyer. When BBC television programme, Who Do You Think You Are? researched his family history they discovered that the actor was related to someone very famous – but who was it ,A) King Edward III B) William Shakespeare, or C) Winston Churchill
Sam: Well, I know Danny Dyer usually plays tough-guy characters so maybe it’s C), war hero Winston Churchill
Neil: OK, Sam, we’ll find out later if that’s correct. Now, although the first British census took place in 1801, other censuses have a much longer history. In fact, the bible story of Mary and Joseph travelling to Bethlehem is linked to a Roman census
Sam: So, what was the original reason for counting people and what did governments hope to achieve by doing so? Here’s Dr Kathrin Levitan, author of a book on the cultural history of the census, speaking to BBC World Service programme, The Forum
Dr Kathrin Levitan
I think there were probably two most common reasons. One was in order to figure out who could fight in wars, so basically military conscription and in order to find out who could fight in wars ancient governments like the Roman Empire had to find out how many men of a certain age there were. And I would say that the other thing that censuses were most commonly used for was for purposes of taxation
Neil: According to Kathrin Levitan, ancient censuses were used to figure out – or understand, how many men were available to fight wars
Sam: The Roman Empire needed a strong army, and this depended on conscription – forcing people to become soldiers and join the army
Neil: The other main reason for taking a census was taxation – the system of taxing people a certain amount of money to be paid to the government for public services
Sam: Ancient and early modern censuses were large and difficult-to-organise projects. They often involved government officials going from house to house, asking questions about the people who lived there
Neil: But over time governments’ desire to know about, and control, its citizens gave rise to new technologies for counting people
Sam: Here’s statistician and economist Andrew Whitby explaining how this happened in the US to BBC World Service programme, The Forum
Andrew Whitby
The 1890 census of the United States was the first in which some kind of electro-mechanical process was used to count people… so instead of armies of clerks reading off census schedules and tabulating these things by hand, for the first time an individual census record would be punched onto a card… so that there were holes in this card representing different characteristics of the person and then those cards could be fed through a machine
Neil: Old-fashioned censuses were managed by clerks – office workers whose job involved keeping records
Sam: Thousands of clerks would record the information gathered in the census and tabulate it, in other words, show the information in the form of a table with rows and columns
Neil: The US census of 1890 was the first to use machines, and many censuses today are electronically updated to record new trends and shifts in populations as they happen
Sam: In fact, so much personal information is now freely available through social media and the internet that some people have questioned the need for having a census at all
.Neil: Yes, it isn’t hard to find out about someone famous, like a TV star
?Sam: Someone like Danny Dyer, you mean
Neil: Right. In my quiz question I asked Sam which historical figure TV actor, Danny Dyer, was related to
?Sam: And I said it was C) Winston Churchill. Was I right
Neil: It was a good guess, Sam, but the actual answer was A) King Edward III. And no-one was more surprised that he was related to royalty than the EastEnders actor himself
Sam: OK, Neil, let’s recap the vocabulary from this programme about the census – the official counting of a nation’s population
.Neil: To figure something out means to understand it
.Sam: The Romans used conscription to force men to join the army by law
.Neil: Taxation is the government’s system of taxing people to pay for public services
.Sam: A clerk is an office worker whose job involves keeping records
.Neil: And tabulate means show information in the form of a table with rows and columns
Sam: That’s all for our six-minute look at the census, but if we’ve whetted your appetite for more why not check out the whole episode – it’s available now on the website of BBC World Service programme, The Forum
!Neil: Bye for now
.Sam: Bye bye