IN THE CLASSROOM; At UC Language Institutes, It's Live and Learn;
Santa Barbara program houses students, professors together for 6 weeks of immersion
in French or Spanish. A master's can be earned in 3 summers.
The Los Angeles Times; Los Angeles, Calif.; Jul 10, 2002; STUART SILVERSTEIN;
As interest in Spanish has surged at colleges around the country, UC Santa Barbara's Spanish institute--formally known as the Summer Institute in Hispanic Languages and Culture--is enjoying a record enrollment of 44 this summer. But the French program, the Summer Institute of French and Francophone Studies, has only 22 students. That is down from its peak enrollment of about 35 during the 1990s. A German program was scrapped in the late 1990s for lack of interest.
Arturo Giraldez is head of the summer Spanish institute at UC Santa Barbara.
Teachers and students in the program eat lunch together every weekday. Student-teacher
contact is key, in both formal and informal settings.
Fluent in Spanish, French, Russian and English, Luz Forero understands a thing
or two about learning foreign tongues.
But Forero's savoir-faire fell short when it came to finding a way to pursue
her studies on the graduate level. As a busy mother of two young children and
as the assistant director of the language laboratory at Occidental College,
how could she squeeze a master's degree program into her schedule?
The answer for Forero, as well as for dozens of others pinched for time, has
been one of the specialized summer language and culture institutes at UC Santa
Barbara. The school, with its Spanish and French institutes, is one of only
a handful of universities offering master's degree language programs for summer-only
students.
Its students--mainly high school teachers and other educators-- do their studies
without leaving American soil. The programs consist of six-week sessions taken
over three summers.
Though shorter than conventional master's degree programs, the institutes try
to make up for it with round-the-clock language immersion.
All students are expected to abide by a written pledge (sometimes called la
promesa in Spanish or declaration sur l'honneur in French) to speak only Spanish
or French whenever possible. Students must be capable Spanish or French speakers
to be admitted, but their fluency is sharpened over the three summers.
The students and their professors live as neighbors throughout the summer in
a university-owned apartment complex, and they have lunch together every weekday
in the faculty club.
Jean-Jacques Thomas, a professor from Duke University who has directed the UC
Santa Barbara French institute every summer since 1990, says the main benefit
for students is the contact they have with faculty. "They see me doing
my laundry and can come ask me a question," Thomas said.
Arturo Giraldez, director of the Spanish institute and a professor at University
of the Pacific, recalls a time when he stepped outside his apartment at 4 a.m.
and bumped into a student. He wound up answering questions about the Spanish
subjunctive in the predawn hours.
Students "try to squeeze you for all you're worth," Giraldez said
with a soft laugh. "That's the point. Without that, what's the point of
living together?"
Aside from the barbecues and cultural events scheduled by the institutes, there
isn't a lot of time for socializing.
"Every minute I can, I need to be writing as much as I can," said
Forero, 41, now in her last year at the Spanish institute and busy writing her
thesis.
The institutes, though well-respected, aren't the biggest names in their corner
of academia. The school that for years has dominated graduate and undergraduate
summer language study is Vermont's Middlebury College, which this summer is
providing about 1,250 students with instruction in eight languages.Ronald W.
Tobin, who as chairman of the French department helped launch the first summer
language institute at UC Santa Barbara in 1977, countered that his campus' institutes
maintain higher standards than Middlebury by focusing exclusively on graduate
studies.
He said some of the first professors at the Santa Barbara French institute had
left Middlebury because of concerns the undergraduate program there would "dilute
the quality" of graduate studies.
"We have never been tempted to include undergraduates here, for precisely
that reason," said Tobin, now an associate vice chancellor.
'Artificial Immersion'
At both schools, however, administrators agree that their "artificial immersion"
approaches to language learning can offer advantages over the "authentic
immersion" of living in a foreign country.
The institutes' enrollments ebb and flow with the popularity of the languages
they offer.
As interest in Spanish has surged at colleges around the country, UC Santa Barbara's
Spanish institute--formally known as the Summer Institute in Hispanic Languages
and Culture--is enjoying a record enrollment of 44 this summer. But the French
program, the Summer Institute of French and Francophone Studies, has only 22
students. That is down from its peak enrollment of about 35 during the 1990s.
A German program was scrapped in the late 1990s for lack of interest.
For the high school teachers at the institute, who normally pay their own way
to attend, earning a master's degree can have a quick payoff. Typically, they
will receive automatic raises of $2,000 or more and will increase their chances
of winning promotions.
Yet many say they are attending mostly because they want to reconnect with the
intellectual discipline that brought them into education. And some don't have
other convenient options for graduate work.
Jayne Abrate, the Carbondale, Ill.,-based executive director of the American
Assn. of Teachers of French, said the lack of part- time master's programs "has
often been a concern among French teachers who aren't near large metropolitan
areas. They would love to get a master's in French, but they can't."
Gary Hayman, a San Bernardino high school teacher with a master's in German,
came to Santa Barbara to strengthen his French. Hayman's school phased out German
a year ago and now is relying on him to teach French, a language he doesn't
know as well.
Hayman, 48, said he was "blown away" by the sophistication of the
French discussion in class when he started at the institute last week.
The students' enthusiasm for Spanish and French studies is evident in the classroom.
Antonio Cortijo, a UC Santa Barbara professor who has taught in the summer Spanish
institute for four years, said his summer classes sometimes run beyond the scheduled
time. No one interrupts to let him know.
During the regular school year, "people would have been packing up,"
he said. "With this class, they would stay here as long as I talk."
That sort of dedication, along with the pleasures of spending summer in Santa
Barbara, helps attract the visiting professors who make up the majority of the
summer faculty.
"This is like being in paradise. I can't believe they pay me to be here,"
said Mercedes F. Duran-Cogan, a researcher from Simon Fraser University near
Vancouver, Canada, who is teaching at the Spanish institute.
(Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 2002 All rights
reserved)
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution
is prohibited without permission.