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Postsecondary Course-Taking in Languages Other than English

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has prompted interest in related trends in the number of students enrolled in humanities courses. Currently, only course-taking in languages other than English (LOTE) is tracked at the national level, thanks to detailed surveys conducted by the Modern Language Association (MLA). The 2013 data reveal a modest overall decline in enrollment from the prior (2009) survey but show considerable diversity in the trends among the languages.

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Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

The Modern Language Association started conducting enrollment surveys in 1958 but did not include Latin or ancient Greek until the 1965 survey. The tabulation here only extends back to 1965 to encompass all the languages currently tabulated in the survey.

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* Data not collected prior to 1990.

Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

II-10c: Postsecondary Enrollments in Spanish Courses Compared to Those in All Other Languages (Excluding English), Selected Years, 1965鈥2013

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Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

The Modern Language Association started conducting enrollment surveys in 1958 but did not include Latin or ancient Greek until the 1965 survey. The tabulation here only extends back to 1965 to encompass all the languages currently tabulated in the survey.

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Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

The Modern Language Association started conducting enrollment surveys in 1958 but did not include Latin or ancient Greek until the 1965 survey. The tabulation here only extends back to 1965 to encompass all the languages currently tabulated in the survey.

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Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

This graph charts enrollment trends for the most commonly taken languages identified in 2006 by the George W. Bush administration as 鈥渃ritical need鈥 from a national security standpoint.

II-10f: Postsecondary Enrollments in Less Commonly Taken 鈥淐ritical Need鈥 Language Courses,* 1965鈥2013

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* As designated by the Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program of the U.S. Department of State. For a description of the program, see .
** Total of Dari, Farsi, and Tajik, per definition at CLS site: .

Source: Modern Language Association (MLA), Language Enrollment Database, , accessed 3/28/2016. For a description of the survey by which the MLA data were collected, see David Goldberg, Dennis Looney, and Natalia Lusin, (New York: Modern Language Association, Association of Departments of Foreign Languages, 2015).

This table charts enrollment trends for the most commonly taken languages identified in 2006 by the George W. Bush administration as 鈥渃ritical need鈥 from a national security standpoint.

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Endnotes

  • 1The dramatic decline in enrollments after 1965 can be at least partially attributed to a sharp drop in the proportion of postsecondary institutions with LOTE-related requirements for bachelor鈥檚 degrees. In 1965鈥1966, 88.9% of institutions reported such a requirement. By 1982鈥1983, the proportion had dropped to 47.4%. See Richard Brod and Monique Lapointe, 鈥淭he MLA Survey of Foreign Language Entrance and Degree Requirements, 1987鈥88,鈥 ADFL Bulletin 20, no. 2 (January 1989): 18 table 1.
  • 2The National Security Language Initiative (NSLI)鈥攍aunched in January 2006鈥攊s a U.S. government multiagency initiative that seeks to increase the number of advanced-level speakers of foreign languages, with an emphasis on 鈥渃ritical-need鈥 languages such as Arabic, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Persian, and Russian. The NSLI continues under the administration of President Barack Obama. The component of NSLI that focuses on the development of language proficiency in postsecondary students is the [link linkId='http://clscholarship.org/']Critical Language Scholarship Program of the U.S. Department of State[/link].