Careers in Foreign Languages

Knowledge of foreign languages and cultures may be the key to a job you want or to eventual promotion in your career field. Multinational business and finance is becoming more and more the rule (over thirty per cent of American companies now have multinational connections). Advanced communications technology is bringing all parts of the world into closer contact.  Careers in public service (police, health professionals, social services professionals, teachers) increasingly require the knowledge of other languages to serve the many people of other cultures with whom they work. Even lawyers and doctors are finding it useful, if not necessary, to have experience communicating in other languages and with people of other cultures.  Consider the ability to speak, read, write and understand a foreign language as a supplementary job skill to be added to your major career area: take as many language courses as you can fit in; take advantage of the opportunities for specialized language training--(for example, Longwood offers specialized courses in the areas of business, health professions, law enforcement, arts, teaching)--after you have learned the basics, and go from there; work your way up to a minor; don't shy away from considering a second major in the language of your choice.

The following websites contain information on the kinds of careers available to those who speak a foreign language, the preparation you need for certain careers, and the kinds of abilities needed.

 

Websites with foreign language career information

What can I do with a Foreign Language degree?
(Very practical info., including strategies for now and when you graduate.  pdf. file, compiled by University of Tennessee, Knoxville)

Why Learn Another Language? brochure

Longwood University Career Center Foreign Languages Site

International Job Search Info

UNC Wilmington Foreign Language Career site  (contains lots of useful info and more links!)

Indiana University-Purdue University list of careers by field

Georgia Southern University's site (contains good info on what to do with languages)

Skidmore's site containing employment links

Rutgers site

Harding University site (good orientation to careers and languages)

CIA Foreign Language Career site

CIA Language Positions site

U.S. Department of State Career as a Foreign Service Officer

National Security Agency Foreign Language Careers

MonsterTrak Majors to Career converter  (pretty cool)

MultilingualVacancies.com

 

Associations related to various careers in foreign languages

The American Association of Language Specialists

American Translators Association

The American Literary Translator's Association

The American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages

Links to many Foreign Language Teaching Associations

Linguistic Society of America

Foreign Policy Association

Women's Foreign Policy Group

American Foreign Service Association

International Association of Political Consultants

The Society for International Development

World Affairs Council

NAFSA:  Association of International Educators

United Nations

Employment at the United Nations

Foreign Language Facts for Career Planning
(from: Eastern Kentucky University's career site http://www.humanities.eku.edu/Careers.htm)

The above-mentioned foreign languages are all taught
at Longwood University.


Why Learn Another Language?

 

           

The world is full of languages.

How far do you have to go from your front door to know that this is true? Think about how many more people and places you could really get to know, newspapers and books you could read, movies and TV programs you could understand, Web sites you could visit, with another language!

Did you know that studying a second language can improve your skills and grades in math and English and can improve entrance exam scores — SATs, ACTs, GREs, MCATs, and LSATs? Research has shown that math and verbal SAT scores climb higher with each additional year of foreign language study, which means that the longer you study a foreign language, the stronger your skills become to succeed in school. Studying a foreign language can improve your analytic and interpretive capacities. And three years of language study on your record will catch the eye of anyone reading your job or college application.

If you've already learned a language other than English at home, expanding your knowledge of its vocabulary, grammar, culture, and literature — at the same time you are learning English — will also improve your chances for success in school and in your career.

  
More and more businesses work closely with companies in other countries. They need many different kinds of workers who can communicate in different languages and understand other cultures. No matter what career you choose, if you've learned a second language, you'll have a real advantage. A technician who knows Russian or German, the head of a company who knows Japanese or Spanish, or a salesperson who knows French or Chinese can work successfully with many more people and in many more places than someone who knows only one language.

There are lots of Americans who speak languages other than English. If you've ever thought of being a nurse, a doctor, a police officer, a judge, an architect, a businessperson, a singer, a plumber, or a Web master, you will multiply your chances for success if you speak more than one language. A hotel manager or a customer-service representative who knows English and Spanish or English and Korean may look much better at promotion time than one who knows only English.

Professionals who know other languages are called on to travel and exchange information with people in other countries throughout their careers. Knowing more than one language enhances opportunities in government, business, medicine and health care, law enforcement, teaching, technology, the military, communications, industry, social service, and marketing. An employer will see you as a bridge to new clients or customers if you know a second language.

Discover new worlds! Get an insider's view of another culture and a new view of your own.

Connect with other cultures. Knowledge of other cultures will help you expand your personal horizons and become a responsible citizen. Your ability to talk to others and gather information beyond the world of English will contribute to your community and your country.

         
What can you expect? You will learn a second language in exciting new ways using technology and focusing on communication (speaking). Learning a language is not just learning grammar and vocabulary. It is learning new sounds, expressions, and ways of seeing things; it is learning how to function in another culture, how to know a new community from the inside out.

How much can you learn? Depending on how long you study, you can gain different levels of fluency. You will probably not sound like a native speaker. Don't worry; you're not expected to. To a greater or lesser degree you will, however, be understood, get where you want to go, read magazines or books for information or pleasure, and meet and talk with a whole new group of people. You can't imagine what a great experience that is. Of course, it doesn't happen overnight. Like math, English, or other subjects, language learning takes time.

Should you continue language study after high school? Yes! Don't waste your investment of time and effort; whatever you have learned is a foundation for further study. Stick with it. Use your second language on the job, seek out opportunities to use it in your community, or, in college, take more courses, study abroad at intersession or for a summer, a semester, or a year. Some programs teach languages in conjunction with engineering, business, nursing, or journalism. And you might decide to start still another language — when you study language, you learn about how to learn languages, so learning the next one is easier.

    
There's no one answer. Here are the twelve most likely to be offered in your high school or college: Spanish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Russian, Hebrew, Greek, Chinese, Arabic, and Portuguese. Swahili, American Sign Language, and Navajo — and 121 other languages — are also taught in American high schools, colleges, and universities. Whatever language you choose, learning it will make a difference in how you see the world and in how the world sees you.


This brochure, published by the Modern Language Association,
may be duplicated.  The illustrations, by Elisha Cooper,
may not be used for any other purpose.      
  

 

Longwood University Modern Language Program