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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
June
Nine
languages to be offered during summer African language institute
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
Released
6/19/07
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
For students of African languages who want an immersive learning experience
that also emphasizes the rich, diverse cultures of the African continent,
this summer the University of Illinois is where it’s at.
“There is no other place. It is a fact,” said Eyamba G.
Bokamba, a U. of I. professor of linguistics
and African languages who is serving as director of the national Summer
Cooperative African Language Institute. The U. of I. is the host campus
for the 2007 institute, which rotates its location every two years to
a different university with African area studies centers that have been
designated by the U.S. Department of Education as Title VI National
Resource Centers.
This year’s institute has been organized by the Center
for African Studies in cooperation with the department of linguistics.
Students enrolled in the program have the opportunity to study one of
nine African languages offered – from Akan/Twi to Zulu. Instruction
is intensive; students spend four hours per day in the classroom, Monday
through Friday, for seven weeks, using the target language for instruction
from day one onward. They also experience total immersion in the culture
associated with the language they are studying through a program of
extracurricular activities and experiences ranging from cooking classes,
potlucks and picnics to musical performances, film screenings and research
forums.
“The advantage to total immersion is that students will remember
and assimilate a language better than they do through any other methods,
which emphasize grammar and vocabulary learning,” Bokamba said.
“They are actually able to think through the language.”
In addition to Akan/Twi and Zulu, languages offered at the summer institute
are Amharic, Arabic, Bamana, Pulaar, Swahili, Wolof and Yoruba.
Among them, Arabic has become an increasingly popular choice for students,
Bokamba said.
“Because of the current political climate, demand for instruction
in Arabic is pushing the boundaries of what we are able to offer”
to students through the U. of I. linguistics department’s regular
course offerings.
“We have waiting lists,” said Bokamba, who directs the department’s
Languages Program, which focuses on instruction in “less commonly
taught” languages. Those languages include five offered at the
summer institute – Arabic, Bamana, Swahili, Wolof and Zulu –
as well as Hindi, Sanskrit and Turkish.
In regard to opportunities for intensive summer instruction in African
languages, he said, the institute is unrivaled.
“If you want to learn Arabic alone, there are other universities
to choose from,” he said. “But you won’t get this
kind of mix of African languages offered at SCALI anywhere else.”
Bokamba said enrollment in the summer institute has grown steadily since
the program began, with this year’s class of 128 students the
largest ever. It is also increasingly competitive, in terms of applicants
and teachers. The students represent a mix of backgrounds; most are
graduate students, from the U. of I. and elsewhere. Instructors, who
also must compete for teaching assignments, include faculty members
and graduate teaching assistants from Illinois; Indiana University;
Ohio University (in Athens); the universities of Florida, Georgia and
Wisconsin; and Yale University.
Part of the draw may be that “the U. of I. has a reputation as
being one of the best academic programs for learning a language like
Arabic,” he said. “We have the most comprehensive program
(in African languages) anywhere in the country.
“Most other universities with African study centers offer up to
the second year in many of the African languages regularly, and periodically
up to the advanced level on demand, while at the U. of I., most of our
languages are taught up to the advanced level.” Some, such as
Arabic and Swahili are offered up to the fifth year of instruction;
Lingala and Wolof are offered up to the fourth year, he said.
“A result of this is that our language program in African languages
enrolls over 800 students per academic year – clearly the largest
program of its kind in the nation,” Bokamba said.
In addition to instructional and cultural opportunities for enrolled
students, the summer institute includes activities open to the local
community. Among them, a weekly film series, research forum and concerts.
More information about SCALI, including an events calendar, can be found
online at http://scali.afrst.uiuc.edu.
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