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Conference to address status of less commonly taught languages in U.S.

April 19, 2006

The ninth annual meeting of the National Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages (NCOLCTL) will explore issues surrounding heritage language learning, bilingual education, distance learning, outreach and advocacy initiatives, as well as the use of technology in teaching less commonly taught languages, including controversies and pedagogical implications in the teaching of Arabic.

The conference, whose theme is “Expanding the LCTL Capacities in the United States,” will be held Thursday-Sunday, April 27-30, at the Madison Concourse Hotel, 1 W. Dayton St.

The council, which is based at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, has as its mission to increase the number of Americans who choose to learn one or more of the less commonly taught languages as a means of enhancing cross-cultural communication among citizens of the United States. The council’s work focuses on the less commonly taught languages, which are becoming increasingly vital to the economic, social and political welfare of the United States.

The council estimates that only 9 percent of Americans who study foreign languages choose languages such as Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Yoruba, Russian, Swahili or other languages spoken by the overwhelming majority of people around the world. The low level of current enrollments, the council maintains, jeopardizes the existence of those few existing programs and restricts access to language-learning opportunities for a majority of students in the United States.

Several dozen participants will give talks in a series of parallel sessions. Featured speakers at the conference include:

Friday, April 28

9 a.m.: Gail McGinn, deputy undersecretary of defense for plans in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness. McGinn will deliver the keynote speech describing the current status of defense language transformation within the department. She will give details on the Bush administration’s National Security Language Initiative, an initiative undertaken by the Department of Defense and other federal agencies and educational organizations to expand the foreign language capacities of the United States.

1:30 p.m.: Ralph Hines, director of the International Education Programs Service (IEPS) for the U.S. Department of Education. IEPS performs planning, policy development and grant administration functions for the 14 international higher education programs authorized under Title VI of the Higher Education Act and the Fulbright-Hayes Act. These programs improve study and research in foreign languages, area studies and international affairs.

Chief sponsors of the conference are the Council and the UW–Madison Division of International Studies. Other sponsors include member programs of the International Institute; the Department of African Languages and Literature; the Department of Hebrew and Semitic Studies with the support of the Ettinger Family Foundation; the National African Language Resource Center; the UW–Madison College of Letters and Science; Center for East Asian Studies; Center for South Asia; Center for European Studies; Global Studies; South East Asian studies; Latin American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies; the Department of German; and the UW Lectures Committee.