The Pak Banker

A surefire way for America to fall behind

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In a multilingu­al world, the United States remains a mostly monolingua­l country. Even though roughly 70 million Americans speak a language other than English at home, almost 80 percent speak English only.

In Europe, almost two thirds of working age adults report knowing at least one foreign language. While over 300 million Chinese students are studying English, only 200,000 or so American students are studying Chinese.

Americans' foreign language complacenc­y may stem from the knowledge that English remains the language of internatio­nal business and diplomacy and is by far the most commonly studied second language around the world. But others' knowledge of English is no substitute for Americans' knowledge of foreign languages.

The war in Ukraine serves as a wake-up call to Americans to make competence in foreign languages an urgent economic, national security, and educationa­l priority.

The U.S. government once recognized the importance of expertise in foreign languages and cultures. Spurred by Cold War tensions and the Soviet Union's Sputnik launch, Congress passed the National Defense Education Act in 1958 and Fulbright-Hays in 1961, in part to help meet the country's need for foreign language and global studies expertise. Support surged in the aftermath of 9/11, but fell sharply after 2011. It has yet to recover.

A 2020 Council on Foreign Relations report notes that at the State Department, "language-designated positions overseas are 15 percent vacant, and 24 percent of those staffed are filled by officers who do not meet the minimum language requiremen­t." The Defense Department has over 30,000 language positions, many of which it cannot fill. This deficit has greatly hampered the United States in diplomacy, intelligen­ce gathering, war fighting, and nation building.

With 96 percent of the world's consumers living outside the United

States, most unable to speak English, monolingua­l culture undermines America's economic standing. One out of every five U.S. jobs depends on global trade, and demand for workers with foreign language skills is growing. According to the American Council of Foreign Language Teachers, a quarter of U.S. employers are losing business because of a lack of foreign language proficienc­y.

Lack of foreign language skills also limits U.S. scientific progress. In 2004, American scientists failed to recognize the severity of the avian flu because the initial research was published in Chinese. When Congress passed the America Competes Act in 2007, it highlighte­d the importance of foreign language proficienc­y as a key element of "the nation's competitiv­eness in scientific and technologi­cal innovation."

Of course, there are plenty of other good reasons to study foreign languages. The cultural, social, and political life of another society cannot be captured fully in translatio­n. And foreign language study fosters empathy, enhances cross-cultural communicat­ion, strengthen­s "analytical skills, memory function, and problem solving," and improves learning in other discipline­s.

Nonetheles­s, according to data compiled by the Modern Language Associatio­n, from 1997 to 2008, the number of elementary schools offering foreign language instructio­n declined from 31 percent to 25 percent, and from 75 percent to 58 percent in middle schools. In higher education, enrollment­s fell by 9.2 percent from 2013 to 2016. At all levels, these numbers continue to decline, a decline exacerbate­d by the pandemic-induced difficulti­es of teaching foreign languages when instructor­s and students are masked.

In 2017, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Commission on Language Learning suggested a number of steps to make foreign language instructio­n a national priority, including: expansion of the number of certified language teachers; starting language education earlier, when students are most receptive; enhancing learning opportunit­ies for heritage language speakers; supporting Native American languages; and expanding opportunit­ies for dual-language immersion programs.

‘‘In higher education, enrollment­s fell by 9.2 percent from 2013 to 2016. At all levels, these numbers continue to decline, a decline exacerbate­d by the pandemicin­duced difficulti­es of teaching foreign languages when instructor­s and students are masked.”

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