Categorized in | Campus News, Featured Stories, News

By Caitlin Armstrong
For the Daily Titan
Published: March 01, 2010

A full class of modern language students, one of the recent departments faceing cuts, await their instructor's lecture on the third floor of the humanities building. Photo by Nick Marley/Daily Titan Photo Editor

Students and professors alike rallied in front of the humanities building at Cal State Fullerton on Thursday, Feb. 24 in an effort to raise awareness about classes — in particular, foreign language — that are being cut from the school.

The programs that are in danger of being discontinued are master’s and bachelor’s degrees in French; master’s, bachelor’s and minors in German; and a minor in Portuguese. If these programs are done away with, majors such as International business in French, German, and Portuguese will have to be canceled as well.

This serves as a major problem for students such as Brianna Zarlinga, who hopes to be able to graduate next spring as an International business major with an emphasis and minor in German.

“I plan on finishing my studies abroad in Germany because it is the only way to get the courses that I need in order to graduate with my major,” Zarlinga said.

Many students will be facing the same problem in terms of getting the necessary classes they need in order to graduate if these courses are cut.

Grad student Judy Nguyen, who came out in support of the Department of Modern Languages and Literature, feels for the students who will be affected if these programs are discontinued.

“I sympathize with the people who are majoring in these subjects because if they cancel the classes they won’t be able to graduate, and they are who will suffer the most,” Nguyen said.

Dr. Janet Eyring, the Chair of the Department of Modern Languages, also spoke at the rally about the misfortune of these classes being cut.

“We cannot let it happen and we must not let it happen”, said Eyring, “We are the target right now. When are we going to say no, stop, that’s enough?”

French Professor Helene Domon sees the discontinuance of these programs as a “tragedy for the CSUs.”

“We are mainly fighting the discontinuance of degrees, and over the past 10 years there have been over 100 graduates in French,” Domon said.

Zarlinga argued that if the course catalog would list 101 classes in these language classes, maybe more students would sign up.

“As a student, if you are interested in taking or beginning a language course and you go to the course catalog, the only courses you see offered are either the second beginning course or intermediate courses, not the first beginning course, which is what you need. ”

Zarlinga pleaded, “Let us prove ourselves, that there is interest.”

A number of students and professors expressed their opinions through words during the rally, but there were also students who expressed their views in other ways. The Association of Chinese Students took to the stage in a colorful performance where two dragons came out from the crowd to the beat of a drum and other students and supporters contributed by putting on an Arabic dance.

Andrew Delos Reyes, a Latin American studies major, took to the stage with his guitar and sang a song in Portuguese.

“Without Portuguese,” Delos Reyes said, “there will just be Spanish.”

Unity was shown between the students, professors, and people in the crowd that came out to support the rally by chanting all together, “We are family. French, German, and Portuguese.”

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Caitlin Armstrong has written 1 posts on DailyTitan.com.


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2 Responses to “Students, professors fight foreign language class cuts”

  1. Kurt E Muller says:

    Talk about Americans being insular! With such actions administrators detract from America’s capabilities by cutting a necessary qualification for life in a global society. If you think everyone’s learning English, you’ll fall prey to a host of difficulties in multilateral environments: from thinking there is tacit agreement when participants who don’t speak English well fail to articulate an objection to failing to understand side conversations to being unable to recognize physical danger. I studied German as an undergraduate and graduate student, now speak three languages and read seven, and have worked in four world areas. In some of these areas, I used languages you would not expect (like German in Africa and Turkey).

  2. beauty salon plano says:

    Language plays a very important role in the life of human beings. We use language from the moment we wake up in the morning till we go to bed at night.


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