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Best US colleges for linguistics and foreign language?
I really think I'm going to end up doing something with foreign language when I graduate from college (probably teaching) (by the way, I'm not even in college yet) and I want to go to a college that has both good foreign language and linguistics programs. Unfortunately, the only absolutely outstanding ones I could find were Harvard and Stanford. Harvard I really have no chance for, and while my grades are good enough for Stanford and I could PROBABLY afford tuition and fees there, visiting home on the east coast would be hard to afford after all that. There's another one that seems very good (but not quite AS good) at SUNY Stony Brook, and I'm okay with that, but I'm just wondering if anyone else has any knowledge about colleges under that category.
I understand I won't NEED linguistics courses, but I'd like to take them more as an interests class rather than a required class for a desired major. I'll probably either major in Romance Languages or Spanish specifically.
3 Answers
- ctsmrvnLv 78 years ago
First, you need to understand a few things about the area you are interested in. A person who gets a job related to "foreign language" usually doesn't have to bother with "linguistics." They're two different, separate fields. A person who studies Arabic, for example, and becomes fluent in it can get involved in many careers, including the foreign service, the military, international business, and a number of others. But no knowledge of "linguistics" is actually necessary. A person who studies "linguistics" examines the nature and structure of languages in general. Such people do "field work" (writing down obscure languages for the purpose of additional study), research into language history, teach English as a foreign language, and a number of other academic pursuits. If your plan is to live in a hut while writing down the language of a native tribe in remote central America, then linguistics is for you. If you want to spend years looking at ancient grammar books describing Nahuatl (the parent language of "Aztec") in order to find out how many modern languages are related to it, then linguistics is for you. But if you are seriously interested in learning modern languages and making use of them, then any university which has decent programs in the languages you might be interested in will be perfectly fine. If you really are interested in "linguistics," then a number of good schools are out there, not just Harvard and Stanford. The University of Michigan, The University of Chicago, and the University of California all have very respected programs. But if you want real, useful language study, investigate places closer to home where you can major in modern languages.
- ?Lv 45 years ago
you have already asked this question two times interior the previous couple of minutes, yet i assume i'm going to submit my answer returned. you would be able to desire to, possibly, get a level in classics which incorporates interpreting Latin, (historic) Greek, and the cultures of the Roman Empire and historic Greece. you would be able to additionally only get a level in Linguistics or % a language and then get a level in that language and only study the others and not inevitably get a level in them. So I recommend choosing one to 2 languages (or linguistics/classics) to get a level in, and then study different languages you want on the element. in case you will get a job in languages and that they want to be conscious of while you're fluent in those different languages (even regardless of the incontrovertible fact which you have not got a level), they're going to easily provide you a attempt to be sure what your ability point is. desire that enables.