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Published byElaine Long Modified over 9 years ago
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Current Issues Facing Modern Languages Departments in the UK Philip Ford
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Shifts in MFL studies in schools: England, Wales, Northern Ireland 1995 GCSE French 62.6% GCSE German 23.1% GCSE Spanish 7.3% A-level French 56.5% A-level German 21.8% A-level Spanish 9.9% 2009 GCSE French 49.7% GCSE German 19.3% GCSE Spanish 17.7% A-level French 39.1% A-level German 15.7% A-level Spanish 20%
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Percentage of 16 yr-olds taking GCSE MFL 2009: 45.2% 2008: 48.0% 2007: 48.6% 2005: 60.7% 2003: 72.35 1999: 78.1%
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Numbers taking A-level MFL 1996 French22,718 German9,306 Spanish4,095 All MFL39,554 2007 French12,713 German5,631 Spanish5,502 All MFL28,419
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UK first degree and p/g enrolment 2007–8 BA French8005 Spanish5100 German3105 Italian1320 Slavonic 890 p/g 340 305 200 120 295
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UoAs entered for the RAE
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Consequences of previous RAEs Research-related courses Shift of emphasis from teaching to research Increase in externally-funded research projects
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Research-related courses Cinema Francophone literature History, politics, current affairs Gender studies and sexuality Contemporary thought and theory Popular culture (music, BD, Polars) Travel writing Visual culture
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Research-related courses: the losers Full chronological coverage Non-contemporary literature, thought and culture Breadth Linguistics (2009 AUPHF survey showed 14/27 departments had no specialist in French linguistics)
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REF changes One panel for Modern Languages (with 7 sub-panels) Outputs 65% Impact 20% Environment 15%
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Library issues Cost of Eurozone books Multiciplicity of specialisms Individual-linked courses Need for translations of texts? Digital resources Budget and new fees régime Libraries as teaching resources
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