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CCAS to alter language labs

by Elizabeth Chernow

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The University has proposed changing the existing language labs by updating technology and user-friendliness.
Media Credit: Jeff Baum
The University has proposed changing the existing language labs by updating technology and user-friendliness.

Students may see a dramatic change in the format of the language lab in coming years, officials announced this week, including new activities and more extensive support than the current lab provides.

Columbian College of Arts and Sciences officials said they are unsure when the proposed Center for Language, Learning and Teaching will open, but they have set up a task force to research the benefits of the program.

"We want to make language learning and teaching the best it can be here at GW, capitalizing on CCAS's great strengths in languages and the humanities and the international context," William Frawley, dean of CCAS, wrote in an e-mail.

Approximately 95 percent of the 2,397 foreign language students used the lab, located in Phillips Hall Room 211, this semester, said lab assistant Nikodimos Fikru. Open 80 hours per week, the 47 lab terminals log in an average of 170 students per day.

Faculty members said the lab, where students can use multimedia technology to supplement classroom work, is important in facilitating language learning.

"Language labs, in general, are crucial in language studies," said Young-Key Kim-Renaud, chair of the Department of East Asian Languages and Literatures. "It's very important for people to understand the structure of languages, but the practice part is so essential in language learning that you can't dismiss the practice environment."

But faculty members said the resources in the current lab are inadequate, citing the need for vast improvements.

"The language lab is pretty ineffective," said Richard Robin, chair of the Department of German and Slavic Languages and Literature. "We don't have the latest technology, very few people use it (from this department) and there is not much on the server. We need to create a more dynamic learning center as a magnet for language teaching."

Frawley said the proposed center should help remedy the problems.

"The center will have a wider range of activities ... and different kinds of staffing," he said. "For instance, we might want to have a faculty director of the center and have ways to allow faculty fellows from inside and outside GW to spend time in the center pursuing projects in language learning and teaching."
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