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Arabic is fastest-growing language at U.S. colleges
Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator teaches an Arabic Language class in Phillips Hall Monday, March 22, 2010 on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City. UI is seeing huge enrollment growth in its Arabic language classes, mirroring a national trend showing the most growth in Arabic and Chinese. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)
Arabic is the fastest-growing foreign language taught at U.S. colleges and universities, a trend mirrored at the University of Iowa.
Enrollment in Arabic classes grew 127 percent nationally from 2002 to 2006, by far the largest jump of any language, according to the Modern Language Association.
At the UI, enrollment in Arabic classes tripled from their launch in fall 2006 to fall 2009 — from 34 students to 102 students. The UI in December added an Arabic minor.
“That’s fast growth,” said Roland Racevskis, chairman of the UI French and Italian department, which also houses Arabic. “Interest in languages is often influenced by the world political scene.”
Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa have fewer Arabic offerings than the UI, but the three universities participate jointly in a regents study-abroad program in Morocco for students in Arabic. Officials at Cornell College in Mount Vernon are considering adding Arabic classes.
Students often have interest in Arabic because of family background, because they are in the military or because they have career interests in linguistics, said Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator.
Arabic is the main language in 24 countries, mostly in the Middle East and North Africa.
Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator, talks with University of Iowa sophomores Asad Hashmi of Bettendorf (right) and Chris Stevens of Cedar Rapids (center) as they work on a drill during an Arabic Language class in Phillips Hall Monday, March 22, 2010 on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City. UI is seeing huge enrollment growth in its Arabic language classes, mirroring a national trend showing the most growth in Arabic and Chinese. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)
Diversity in dialects and a different alphabet written from right to left make Arabic tricky to learn, said Gazsi, a native of Hungary. The UI program offers three years, six classes total: two elementary, two intermediate and two advanced.
“It seems every fall, the numbers almost double,” Gazsi said.
http://thegazette.com/2010/03/25/arabic-is-fastest-growing-language-at-u-s-colleges
Arabic is fastest-growing language at U.S. colleges
Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator teaches an Arabic Language class in Phillips Hall Monday, March 22, 2010 on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City. UI is seeing huge enrollment growth in its Arabic language classes, mirroring a national trend showing the most growth in Arabic and Chinese. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)
Arabic is the fastest-growing foreign language taught at U.S. colleges and universities, a trend mirrored at the University of Iowa.
Enrollment in Arabic classes grew 127 percent nationally from 2002 to 2006, by far the largest jump of any language, according to the Modern Language Association.
At the UI, enrollment in Arabic classes tripled from their launch in fall 2006 to fall 2009 — from 34 students to 102 students. The UI in December added an Arabic minor.
“That’s fast growth,” said Roland Racevskis, chairman of the UI French and Italian department, which also houses Arabic. “Interest in languages is often influenced by the world political scene.”
Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa have fewer Arabic offerings than the UI, but the three universities participate jointly in a regents study-abroad program in Morocco for students in Arabic. Officials at Cornell College in Mount Vernon are considering adding Arabic classes.
Students often have interest in Arabic because of family background, because they are in the military or because they have career interests in linguistics, said Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator.
Arabic is the main language in 24 countries, mostly in the Middle East and North Africa.
Denes Gazsi, UI lecturer and Arabic program coordinator, talks with University of Iowa sophomores Asad Hashmi of Bettendorf (right) and Chris Stevens of Cedar Rapids (center) as they work on a drill during an Arabic Language class in Phillips Hall Monday, March 22, 2010 on the University of Iowa campus in Iowa City. UI is seeing huge enrollment growth in its Arabic language classes, mirroring a national trend showing the most growth in Arabic and Chinese. (Brian Ray/The Gazette)
Diversity in dialects and a different alphabet written from right to left make Arabic tricky to learn, said Gazsi, a native of Hungary. The UI program offers three years, six classes total: two elementary, two intermediate and two advanced.
“It seems every fall, the numbers almost double,” Gazsi said.
http://thegazette.com/2010/03/25/arabic-is-fastest-growing-language-at-u-s-colleges
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