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CIC ANNOUNCES NEW KECK FOUNDATION GRANT FOR TRANSFORMING LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION
For Immediate Release:
February 9, 2007 |
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WASHINGTON,
DC – The Council of Independent Colleges (CIC) announced
today that the Los Angeles-based W.M. Keck Foundation has awarded CIC
a grant of $360,000 to implement the Network for Effective Language Learning
(NELL) in cooperation with Drake University. The program is designed to
assist small and mid-sized private colleges and universities to transform
their offerings in language instruction to meet the needs of the 21st
century student. Jan Marston, founding director of the Drake University
Language Acquisition Program (DULAP), will serve as project director.
CIC President Richard Ekman explained, “There is a real crisis of
modern foreign language teaching and learning on today’s campuses.
Language study is a much less common requirement on college campuses than
it once was, few students attain fluency in a foreign language, and the
variety of languages offered in most institutions is very small. Critical
languages such as Arabic and Chinese are frequently unavailable. NELL
is a project at the heart of the international and intercultural dimension
of a liberal arts education and is a part of CIC’s recently increased
emphasis on providing services that bolster the international competencies
of its member institutions.”
Twenty-four liberal arts colleges will be selected to participate in NELL
over three years. Each year, four-person teams from eight institutions
will attend a summer meeting that will introduce them to the core features
of Drake’s Language Acquisition Program, DULAP. The program brings
together a mentorship collective that includes professional linguists
and learning specialists, experts in the target language and civilization,
and native speaker tutors. Using internet-based resources and tools, DULAP
students connect with real-life native speakers and writers while learning
to use target-language materials written by and for native speakers. DULAP
students produce an e-portfolio documenting their progress in the language,
and external examiners provide an independent evaluation of student work.
The program also emphasizes intercultural competence, and encourages all
students who study a language to use it in an intensive immersion experience
abroad.
During the summer meeting, the teams will explore ways to adapt DULAP’s
innovative teaching approach to the needs of their own campuses. After
the summer workshops, institutions will engage in ongoing support activities.
NELL consultants will visit campuses and continue to provide guidance.
In addition, institutions will take part in an online community through
a NELL website, which will become the core of a permanent alliance of
institutions developing language-learning resources together and sharing
best practices and materials.
“Drake University’s role as an innovator in the development
and application of alternative methods to enable students to acquire foreign
languages is well established,” said Drake President David Maxwell.
“We look forward to sharing what we have learned with colleges and
universities, and to learning ourselves from the successes of others.
Together, CIC and Drake will work toward reversing a serious decline in
our national capacity to understand other cultures through the functional
use of their languages.”
The first NELL workshop has been scheduled to take place July 9–13,
2007 at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. Subsequent workshops will
be offered in the summers of 2008 and 2009.
View more information
on NELL.
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The Council of Independent Colleges is
an association of more than 570 independent, liberal arts colleges and
universities and 60 higher education affiliates and organizations that
work together to strengthen college and university leadership, sustain
high-quality education, and enhance private higher education’s contributions
to society. To fulfill this mission, CIC provides its members with skills,
tools, and knowledge that address aspects of leadership, financial management
and performance, academic quality, and institutional visibility. The Council
is headquartered at One Dupont Circle in Washington, DC.
Based in Los Angeles, the W.M. Keck Foundation
was established in 1954 by the late W.M. Keck, founder of the Superior
Oil Company. The Foundation's grant making is focused primarily on pioneering
efforts in the areas of medical research, science and engineering. The
Foundation also maintains a Southern California Grant Program that provides
support in the areas of civic and community services with a special emphasis
on children and youth.
Drake University is a private institution
recognized as one of the top master's universities in the United States,
with more than 5,350 students from 45 states and 61 countries. Drake's
mission is to provide an exceptional learning environment that prepares
students for meaningful personal lives, professional accomplishments and
responsible global citizenship. Through the innovative Drake University
Language Acquisition Program, students currently are developing functional
communicative competency in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian,
Hindi, Japanese, Russian and Spanish.
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