°Ä²Ê¿ª½±

Studying Language at °Ä²Ê¿ª½±

Language study is a foundational subject of a °Ä²Ê¿ª½± liberal arts education, providing students with unique insight into other cultures and preparing them to engage more thoughtfully as global citizens. °Ä²Ê¿ª½± offers courses in eleven different languages across seven departments and programs.

Beginning Your Language Study

As a ,  each student must complete at least one language course.

Even students who enter °Ä²Ê¿ª½± conversant in more than one language can benefit from such courses, either by studying that language at an advanced level, a new language at the introductory level, or a language course that develops literacies in a heritage language.

All Liberal Arts Practices can be completed via transfer credit, pursuant to °Ä²Ê¿ª½±â€™s other transfer credit policies. However, these courses play an integral part of the guided development that takes place during a college education. As such, they cannot be exempted based on placement procedures or demonstrated proficiency. The Liberal Arts Practices cannot be fulfilled by Advanced Placement credits or other pre-matriculation credit. Neither can these requirements be fulfilled by courses taken during a winter/January intersession term, unless under exceptional circumstances and with permission of the department chair, division director, and associate dean of the faculty.

Choosing a Language

Courses offered:

  • Arabic
    (Middle Eastern Studies Department)  
  • Chinese
    (East Asian Languages and Literature Department)
  • French
    (Romance Languages and Literatures Department)
  • German
    (German Department)
  • Greek
    (Classical Studies Department) 
  • Hebrew
    (Jewish Studies Department)
  • Italian
    (Romance Languages and Literatures Department)
  • Japanese
    (East Asian Languages and Literature Department)
  • Latin
    (Classical Studies Department) 
  • Russian
    (Russian and Eurasian Studies Department)
  • Spanish
    (Romance Languages and Literatures Department)

Language Course Placement Guides

  • Incoming students will complete a language background form and may be asked to take language placement tests to help guide them toward choosing a language.
  • All other students who would like to continue studying a language for which they have previous experience can consult the placement guidelines for French, Italian, and Spanish or contact keckcenter@colgate.edu for help choosing the correct course.

Considerations

Incoming students should carefully consider which language(s) they will study. Language faculty are available to help guide you through this process, but here are a couple of items to keep in mind as you contemplate:

  • If you wish to continue a language you have already studied or that you speak, you may begin your study at a higher level.
  • Beginning a language early will make it easier to continue your study and open up opportunities for further fellowships, scholarships, and off-campus study
  • If you know your intended major, you may wish to talk to faculty in that department to find a language that will help you better understand that field.

Enriching Your Language Study

No matter where you are in your linguistic development, your study will improve as you engage more fully with the cultures that speak that language. °Ä²Ê¿ª½± has a number of resources available for you to enrich your study on campus and abroad.

Off-Campus Study

Immersion in another culture is one of the best ways to learn a language. Our language faculty lead off-campus trips through semester-long study groups, curriculum-based extended studies, and community-service experiences. Regular language-based study groups include:

  • Chinese: Shanghai, China
    Runs annually in the fall and spring semester, prerequisites: Core China and one year of Chinese (or equivalent)
  • German: Freiburg, Germany
    Runs annually in the spring, prerequisites: German 202 or director's permission
  • Italian: Venice, Italy
    Runs annually in the fall semester, prerequisites: Italian 122 (or equivalent)
  • Japanese: Kyoto, Japan
    Runs bi-annually in the fall, prerequisites: Core Japan and Japanese 121 & 122 (or equivalent)
  • Spanish: Madrid, Spain
    Runs annually in the fall, prerequisites: at least one 350-level Spanish course and SPAN 361

Fellowships, Scholarships, and Summer Study

°Ä²Ê¿ª½± students regularly receive funding to study languages off campus for semester-long programs or over the summer. If you have any questions about applying for language study funding, contact the Director of the Keck Center Cory Duclos.

Students can apply to the Language Council for funding of up to $5,000 for any summer language study. Instructions for the 2023 funding can be found here.

Career services offers funding for summer experiences that advance students in their future professional endeavors, including the study of languages in intensive summer programs. More information is available on the Career Services webpage.

US State Department: Students who are US citizens are eligible to apply for language study programs through the Critical Languages Program, the Gilman Scholarship Program, Boren Awards, and the Fulbright FLTA Program.

°Ä²Ê¿ª½± faculty maintain a list of recommended programs for summer language study here.

Many °Ä²Ê¿ª½± students have used the summer to study languages in an immersion setting through Middlebury’s Summer Language Schools. Applications open in early November. Interested students are encouraged to apply early. Application fee waivers are available. Contact the Keck Center Director Cory Duclos for more information (gduclos@colgate.edu).

Language Interns

Each year °Ä²Ê¿ª½± employs native-speaking language interns to campus who serve as a resource for students who want to build a stronger connection with the cultures and languages they study. The Language Interns offices are located in the Keck Center where they often host cultural events.

Student Organizations and Events

Students can enrich their understanding of a language and culture through participation in student clubs and groups. Many of these student organizations host cultural events or opportunities to strengthen your conversational skills throughout the semester. 

The Keck Center

The Keck Center is the hub of language study at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± and offers technological support and cultural activities. Students can also use the Keck Center to study languages that are not available in the course offerings or find opportunities for funding summer language study. Our language interns’ offices are located in the Keck Center on the terrace level of Lawrence Hall.

Information for Advisors

To fulfill the liberal arts practice in language study, all students complete at least one course at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± or through an approved off-campus or intensive summer program. Advisors should ensure that students carefully consider how their choice of language study will complement their overall study at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± and contribute to their academic experience with the Core Curriculum.

 

Advisors play an important role in helping students understand how the liberal arts practice in language study has always been an integral part of the °Ä²Ê¿ª½± curriculum. Advisors should remind students that the purpose of language study at °Ä²Ê¿ª½± is focused on equipping students with the tool they need to gain a greater understanding of another culture. 

Upper-division courses focus on literary studies, which play a vital role in developing the advanced-level linguistic skills needed to communicate abstract ideas and theoretical concepts about cultural topics outside of their immediate familiarity.

°Ä²Ê¿ª½± courses are offered for:

  • Arabic
  • Chinese
  • Classical Greek
  • French
  • German
  • Hebrew
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Latin
  • Russian
  • Spanish

Students may choose to study a new language or place into the appropriate level for a language they have already studied. Students can find advice on the correct placement level for their courses here.

Advisors or students can always contact department and program chairs or the director of the Keck Center to answer any questions about placement.

Students might also benefit from a number of resources related to language study at °Ä²Ê¿ª½±, including:

  • Tutoring services provided by language programs and the CLTR
  • Computing hardware and software for language study
  • Native-speaking language interns
  • Cultural events hosted by departments, programs, and language interns
  • Cultures and Languages Across the Curriculum courses offered in conjunction with any °Ä²Ê¿ª½± course
  • The Less Commonly Taught Languages Program for students to study languages not offered at °Ä²Ê¿ª½±
  • Fellowships and scholarships that allow students to study languages during the summer

Contact

If you have any further questions about studying languages at °Ä²Ê¿ª½±, please email keckcenter@colgate.edu