Sunday, 31 May 2015

Why Everyone Should Invest in Language Skills

Why Everyone Should Invest in Language Skills ? 


Jane Playdon, QS education writer
Language learning is a key priority under a new EU study abroad funding program for education, training and youth organizations due to be launched in January 2014. The new scheme, called Erasmus+, follows a report from the European Commission on the importance of language skills in a market where businesses increasingly operate internationally.
Speaking at the London Language Show recently, the EU commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, Androulla Vassiliou, said: “Language learning is vital in Europe... foreign language competences are needed not only by the large multinationals, but increasingly also by SMEs [small and medium enterprises] with international marketing strategies, and by public services having to deal with increasingly multicultural and multilingual citizens.”
Other prominent organizations highlighting the need for more foreign language learning include the UK’s Guardian newspaper and the British Council, which helps to create international education opportunities. In addition, the recently launched 1000 Words Challenge campaign aims to inspire everyone in the UK to learn 1,000 words of another language.

Language skills are crucial for international mobility

Language learning is at the center of the EU’s new international mobility scheme, Erasmus+, which aims to replace and combine a number of existing EU international mobility programs – including the Lifelong Learning Program (Leonardo, Comenius, Grundtvig, Erasmus), Youth in Action, and Erasmus Mundus and Tempus.
With a budget of around €15 billion (US$20.3 billion), Erasmus+ will provide grants over the next seven years for more than four million people to volunteer, work, train or study abroad. This is a 40% budget increase compared to existing programs, and a significant increase in the number of beneficiaries, which, for the period between 2007 and 2013, amounted to around 2.5 million.
As a result, more EU mobility students than ever before will be learning the five main languages under the program: English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Students who need linguistic support will have online access to it on a voluntary basis, and the EC has also made provision for the less widely spoken languages. The language levels of those participating in Erasmus+ will be assessed before and after their time abroad, to monitor the scheme’s contribution to language learning.
Dennis Abbott, a spokesman for the EU department of Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth, said: “Language skills are crucial for the quality and efficiency of this [international mobility] experience. This is why, for the first time, Erasmus+ will earmark funds for the systematic assessment of language competences before and after long-term mobility, including mobility for teachers.”

Language learning gives you a competitive edge

As well as making it easier to spend time living, working and studying in different parts of the world, language skills can also confer a considerable competitive edge in today’s job market. And this applies even to native speakers of English, used as a lingua franca across much of the world.
“English as lingua franca is a mixed blessing,” Vassiliou has commented. “Too many people believe that English is enough to get by everywhere and in any situation. In a world where knowledge of English is more or less taken for granted, job seekers who also know other languages will have a competitive edge.”
This observation is echoed by Teresa Tinsley, leader of the 1000 Words Challenge campaign. She says: “There are cases of [language skills] being used as a tie-breaker between two equally well-qualified candidates. They don’t necessarily need language skills for their job, but the employer thinks that maybe they will get something extra from someone with knowledge of another language. I think that what is coming through is not only the communication skills that employers value, but the international outlook, the cultural flexibility. It [shows] that they’re willing to start seeing things from another point of view apart from their own.”
According to the latest Education and Skills Survey from the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), “72% of businesses say they value foreign language skills” and 52% say they are “recruiting new staff with language skills”. The Languages for Jobs report, published by the European Commission, also found that “40% of recruiters in the industry sector highlighted the importance of language skills for future higher education graduates”.

Language skills are linked to intercultural skills

Another benefit of language learning, as listed on the 1000 Words Challenge site, is the relationship between language skills andintercultural skills, which “make us better adapted to living in a diverse society, more internationally minded and better at resolving cross-cultural conflict.”

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