State Department Language Classifications

Gerald McCausland gmmst11 at PITT.EDU
Mon Jan 4 01:16:27 UTC 2010


Dear Ben:

This isn't exactly what you are asking for, but if you go to the 
following link:

http://www.govtilr.org/Publications/TESOL03ReadingFull.htm

and scroll down to "Figure 2," you'll find a version of a table that 
I've located on several different websites. It does indeed reduce the 
categories from 4 to 3, but note the position of Russian! All webpages 
with this table cite "FSI" as their source, but I've utterly failed to 
track this down to a specific page on the FSI website or to any print 
publication.

Perhaps this will at least give your search some direction.

	Jerry.

On 1/3/2010 5:41 PM, Benjamin Rifkin wrote:
> Dear Colleagues: 
> 
> 
> Years ago, the State Department and Defense Department classified languages in 4 categories, with category 1 the easiest languages to learn (Romance languages, Swahili, Scandinavian languages, Dutch), Category 4 the hardest (Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean). In this scheme, Russian was a category 3 language, with some African languages, such as Yoruba, some Southeast Asian languages (such as Thai). German was a category 2 language, with Hebrew, Hindi, and some other African languages. 
> 
> 
> Apparently the State Department and Defense Department have reduced the number of categories from 4 to 3, renaming them not by number but with the phrases "easy languages," "hard languages," and "very hard languages." My understanding is that the Romance languages remain in the "easy category", and that the languages of old category 2 have been shifted into "easy" or "hard" (I'm not sure on which principle), and that now Russian is in the "hard languages" category. 
> 
> 
> I'm writing to ask SEELANGers if any of you can help me identify a source for this change. 
> 
> 
> With thanks, 
> 
> 
> Ben Rifkin 

-- 
Gerald McCausland, PhD
Lecturer and Language Program Director
Slavic Languages and Literatures
University of Pittsburgh
gmmst11 at pitt.edu

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