My Take | Baptist University speaks the right language
It has shown some backbone by sticking to its guns to require all undergraduates pass a Mandarin test or take a mandatory course in the language
When I was at a liberal American arts college during the 1980s, all students had to pass two language tests to graduate: one in Attic or ancient Greek and one in French.
If you want to talk about practicality, our language curriculum was useless. No one speaks Attic Greek today, not even the Greeks themselves. But we were required to read some Plato and others in the original. The French requirement was more practical.
With few exceptions, most of us have forgotten whatever reading and translation skills we learned back then. But not a single one of us ever regrets the experience of learning a new language. We were young, so we had the mental agility to do something so challenging.
And learning a new language like ancient Greek with its own alphabet opens up a different mental landscape, just like you would if you learn music and maths beyond the kind of rote-learning you get in primary and secondary schools.
As far as I am concerned, any university or college that makes students learn a language, whatever it is, in addition to their mother tongue is a good thing. And if that happens to be Mandarin, the national language of the second largest economy in the world, it’s even practical. That is not brainwashing; it’s opening minds.