A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition
In order to enhance mobility, competitiveness, and opportunities for work, the European Union lists the ability to communicate in a foreign language and to understand another culture as an important objective in their language education policy. Knowledge of a foreign language is also an important ob...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2014-0019 |
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doaj-789e7a3ff1a14e5cabc83acb13a1dd882021-09-05T14:01:03ZengSciendoPrague Journal of English Studies2336-26852014-09-01318511110.2478/pjes-2014-0019pjes-2014-0019A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language AcquisitionLys FranziskaMay AlisonRavid JeanneIn order to enhance mobility, competitiveness, and opportunities for work, the European Union lists the ability to communicate in a foreign language and to understand another culture as an important objective in their language education policy. Knowledge of a foreign language is also an important objective for many American universities, which require students to study a foreign language as a prerequisite to graduate. Students with documented disabilities affecting the learning of a foreign language or students with poor foreign language learning skills, therefore, pose a significant challenge, since a foreign language requirement may prevent such students from graduating unless universities are willing to make special arrangements such as having students graduate without fulfilling the requirement or letting them take substitution classes. The question of what to do with such students is at the heart of this article. It describes how one mid-sized private university with a two-year language proficiency requirement has approached the problem to ensure that policies are implemented fairly. Rather than pulling students out of the foreign language classroom, the university succeeded in keeping students engaged with foreign language study through advising and mentoring across departmentshttps://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2014-0019foreign language proficiencyforeign language learning disabilitydisabilityforeign language waiverforeign language acquisitionacademic advising |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Lys Franziska May Alison Ravid Jeanne |
spellingShingle |
Lys Franziska May Alison Ravid Jeanne A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition Prague Journal of English Studies foreign language proficiency foreign language learning disability disability foreign language waiver foreign language acquisition academic advising |
author_facet |
Lys Franziska May Alison Ravid Jeanne |
author_sort |
Lys Franziska |
title |
A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition |
title_short |
A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition |
title_full |
A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition |
title_fullStr |
A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Cross-Departmental Approach to Supporting Students with a Disability Affecting Foreign Language Acquisition |
title_sort |
cross-departmental approach to supporting students with a disability affecting foreign language acquisition |
publisher |
Sciendo |
series |
Prague Journal of English Studies |
issn |
2336-2685 |
publishDate |
2014-09-01 |
description |
In order to enhance mobility, competitiveness, and opportunities for work, the European Union lists the ability to communicate in a foreign language and to understand another culture as an important objective in their language education policy. Knowledge of a foreign language is also an important objective for many American universities, which require students to study a foreign language as a prerequisite to graduate. Students with documented disabilities affecting the learning of a foreign language or students with poor foreign language learning skills, therefore, pose a significant challenge, since a foreign language requirement may prevent such students from graduating unless universities are willing to make special arrangements such as having students graduate without fulfilling the requirement or letting them take substitution classes. The question of what to do with such students is at the heart of this article. It describes how one mid-sized private university with a two-year language proficiency requirement has approached the problem to ensure that policies are implemented fairly. Rather than pulling students out of the foreign language classroom, the university succeeded in keeping students engaged with foreign language study through advising and mentoring across departments |
topic |
foreign language proficiency foreign language learning disability disability foreign language waiver foreign language acquisition academic advising |
url |
https://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2014-0019 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT lysfranziska acrossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition AT mayalison acrossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition AT ravidjeanne acrossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition AT lysfranziska crossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition AT mayalison crossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition AT ravidjeanne crossdepartmentalapproachtosupportingstudentswithadisabilityaffectingforeignlanguageacquisition |
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1717810900142915584 |