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Jocelyn Wyburd Chair of UCML & Director of the Language Centre, University of Cambridge
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Fewer ‘double’ linguists at A level, identifying themselves less as ‘linguists’? (Mis)perceptions about what language study consists of? Anxiety about having to do a 4 th year? Anxiety about living abroad? Concerns about the value of language degrees for employability? Loss of choice of programme due to departmental closures?
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Severe / unreliable grading at A level A level reform: 3 subjects instead of 4 post GCSE? ⇛Future further decline in A level take-up? with further implications on languages degrees
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All pupils entering Year 7 in 2015 to take GCSE in EBacc subjects (2020) Should drive greater take-up at A level? New GCSEs (1 st exams 2018) should prepare better for A level? New A levels should be more motivational? New A levels an opportunity to get marking schemes which do not have the same issues of unreliability? N.B. DfE teacher shortage estimate: 4,000
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Institution-Wide Language Programmes Taken as ‘free choice’ options for credit or extra curricular 2014 national survey: 64 HEI responses; total enrolments: c. 55,000; c. 39% of these are ‘non UK’ students; Numbers have doubled in a decade and are now double the number enrolled on language degrees Wide number of languages (most HEIs: 6-11 different languages offered)
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A result of campaigning/outreach for languages in general (including Routes) Impact from dissemination of reports/statements by the British Academy, British Chambers of Commerce, CBI etc Recent increased press coverage of need for language skills (e.g. BA/Guardian initiative) University internationalisation strategies and language policies and promotion of the concept of the global graduate Peer pressure: international students acquiring 3 rd /4 th /5 th language putting pressure on home students to compete
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Polarisation of ‘(functional) language skills’ vs ‘language (-based) studies’ Increased awareness of availability – driving student choice to other subjects with a language on the side Contribute to the closure of degree programmes – shift in university/senior management decisions about language provision to IWLP only
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small numbers of high level specialists large numbers with low- level skills single/joint honours degree in/with languages (language- based study) language departments language + cultural/area studies compulsory year abroad combinations of X + language(s) IWLP only (some language learning for credit/extra-curricular) language centres language only/some embedded culture? optional outward mobility
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“ Employers don’t want a graduate who has spent 3 years reading medieval French literature” [Chair of the Board of a major global company, Nov 2014] Or the direct opposite: “Employers think a Chinese studies degree is only about learning the language, without any study of contemporary China” [UCML East Asian studies representative report to plenary 2014]
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Degrees in languages are incredibly varied and multidisciplinary: ◦ Literature, film, contemporary/popular culture ◦ Society, social sciences, economics, history, business, international relations, politics ◦ Linguistics, translation studies … and develop wide and important skills ◦ High level language skills (near native) ◦ Intercultural competence and awareness ◦ (Translation, interpreting and teaching skills) ◦ International study / work experience ◦ Personal maturity and resilience ◦ Team-work, communication skills, the ability to process, summarise and analyse text etc etc etc
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Evidence from fMRI scans etc Increased grey matter Brain plasticity Cognitive processing skills in a number of different contexts including creativity, problem solving etc Not just of relevance to ‘bilinguals’ from childhood but constantly developing in all L2 learners/users (in contrast to monolinguals)
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Studying (whether via Erasmus or in non- European universities) Language Assistantships Work experience (paid/unpaid – wide variety) More than one type of experience More than one country Wide range of destinations globally Recommended site: www.thirdyearabroad.com
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… but with invaluable added extras!
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High for graduate linguists nationally – wide variety of sectors, good transferable skills ◦ Need to decide what career they want and sell their employability skills for that primarily ◦ Language and intercultural skills set them apart, but putting them centre stage can be counter-productive (unless for specialist language careers like translating, interpreting, teaching) Mixed messages from employers ◦ Damage to economy of lack of language skills, particularly SMEs and export opportunities ◦ BCC has called for compulsory languages at least to GCSE, preferably through 14-19 education ◦ High dissatisfaction from CBI members about graduate/school- leaver language skills ◦ Don’t always understand what graduates in and with languages are and can do ◦ Don’t routinely specify language skills in person specifications ◦ Rarely call for policy changes (can and do hire from abroad)
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National languages policy conference/round table Oct 2015 (Cambridge) with multiple civil servants: formal statement to come UCML writing to Ofqual re severe/unreliable grading National conference/round table Feb 2016 on reconceptualising language degrees (BA) Regular comments in the press Forthcoming Routes into Languages publication on employability (n.b. Routes finishes Jul 2016) Forthcoming Born Global report (BA) Numerous comments in press, public statements, blogs… New AHRC Open World Initiative research projects with major goal of transforming understanding and public engagement
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We need linguists – not just those with language skills on the side but those with specialist, high level competence and deep cultural knowledge We need language teachers, translators and interpreters Studying languages is inherently fascinating Language graduates are highly employable High functioning linguists have more powerful brains HE linguists need to do more to demonstrate the value of our disciplines; we also need support from school teachers and to support you
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