Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares about German. If it was Russian or Chinese or Arabic he'd have interest.
False. The older approach of colleges and universities was to offer the triad of French, German, and Spanish. Spanish was required because that it was considered to be of daily use in America and even more true today with population shift. French and German were required because original research was often done in those languages -which is exactly what my DC is doing now for his DPhil research at Oxford
Colleges today like to pride themselves on creating citizens of the world who will be working with people of many countries, Hence UVA offers something like 60 languages
But if you only want a language for business use and employment then, yes, i would go with Chinese, Russian, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think OP is asking what schools have good German departments. you can google that.
They're asking how to find out what's going on in individual departments at various high (I'm assuming) colleges.
I think there is a site that has number of graduates per major. I dont know how you'd line that up with size of department beyond googling faculty
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares about German. If it was Russian or Chinese or Arabic he'd have interest.
False. The older approach of colleges and universities was to offer the triad of French, German, and Spanish. Spanish was required because that it was considered to be of daily use in America and even more true today with population shift. French and German were required because original research was often done in those languages -which is exactly what my DC is doing now for his DPhil research at Oxford
Colleges today like to pride themselves on creating citizens of the world who will be working with people of many countries, Hence UVA offers something like 60 languages
But if you only want a language for business use and employment then, yes, i would go with Chinese, Russian, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I think the OP is asking about linguistics departments, which are usually more rigorous than learning a language for fulfilling core requirements.
With that said, it depends what your kid wants to do, such as general or applied, computational/machine learning, or cognitive science. There are avenues for any language in future linguistics research in grad school but not sure how less popular European languages work other than what PPs have said about majoring in a language, which seems very limiting without a second major/minor, unless you want to go the grad school route anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Lyle Lovett majored in German at Texas A&M University, graduating in 1980 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. He also studied journalism. Not music, though.
Anonymous wrote:No one cares about German. If it was Russian or Chinese or Arabic he'd have interest.
Anonymous wrote:I think the OP is asking about linguistics departments, which are usually more rigorous than learning a language for fulfilling core requirements.
With that said, it depends what your kid wants to do, such as general or applied, computational/machine learning, or cognitive science. There are avenues for any language in future linguistics research in grad school but not sure how less popular European languages work other than what PPs have said about majoring in a language, which seems very limiting without a second major/minor, unless you want to go the grad school route anyway.