Anonymous wrote:As others have said, there is no consistent answer across schools.
Absent that, the most reliable guidance seems to be that highly selective schools (e.g. UVA) want students to take the most challenging classes available to the student across English, History, Science, Math, and Foreign Language.
For many/most students, that means four years of FL; for some, that means only two or three if they max out (generally with an AP class) earlier.
There does not seem to be any credible indication that a student who maxes out via an AP class junior year needs to start a new language senior year—again, because the issue isn’t “four years”; it’s achieving highest possible rigor (and presumably the student will take another challenging class in FL’s place senior year).
There are certainly students who don’t max out on rigor and quit FL earlier in HS who still get into highly selective schools; presumably, because of some combination of area of interest and compensatory rigor in other areas etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Ivies
They may recommend 4 years, but they do not require. There are successful applicants without the 4th year/level. It's merely one factor when considering rigor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Going back to OP's question, does the 4 year count include HS courses in middle school?
In our case, DC will be finishing language level 4 as a junior. Struggling to decide if they should move on to L5 (not doing AP given the load with other APs) or do something they want to do (like photography).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Ivies
Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Eh, I'd be hesitant to write off feedback around this issue as misinformation. There are plenty of schools whose published requirements don't match that of their typical applicant - and it's the typical applicant, particularly from own school, who is your "competition".
Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, this forum is a hot bed of misinformation.
There is no college the requires 4 years of a foreign language. Many colleges do not even recommend foreign language. Here is a site that collects this data from the common datasets:
https://www.collegetransitions.com/dataverse/foreign-language-requirements
SLACs are more likely to require foreign language (but not 4 years), and to recommend 4 years.
Anonymous wrote:There is no uniform set of admissions criteria. There might be an answer of one particular college, but there is no answer for all “colleges.”