GCR Foreign Language and Culture Requirement
The study of foreign language and culture provides a foundational undergraduate competency. Foreign language study will strengthen the development of cross-cultural awareness and intercultural communication, and provide opportunities for students to explore links between foreign language and other disciplines, and to prepare for and reflect on their study abroad experience.
All students (except native speakers*) will satisfy the GCR of Foreign Language and Culture by taking 10, 8, or 4 credits following one of the following platforms.
Platform |
Placement |
Required Credits |
Required Courses in a Foreign Language |
1 |
110 |
10 |
110+120+132** (Platform 1 can also be completed by taking 110+120+130) |
2 |
120 |
8 |
120+130 |
3 |
130 |
8 |
130 + one 200-level course (see list below) |
4 |
Beyond 130 |
4 |
One 200-level or one 300-level course (see list below) |
200-level courses = ARB 234, FR 245, GER 234, GER 240, HBW 210, IT 230, RUS 231, SP 229, 230, or SP 235.
300-level courses = FR 353, FR 357, FR 358, or SP 350
In order to ensure timely completion of the GCR of Foreign Language and Culture, students need to begin to study a language during their first year. Transfer students who enter as sophomores or higher should begin to study a foreign language immediately. For all students, unless there are extenuating circumstances, the final course to satisfy the GCR of Foreign Language and Culture should not be attempted in the fall semester of the senior year.
A student may not fulfill the foreign language requirement by auditing a course. A student may not take any of the 100-level language courses as an independent study.
*Definition of Native Speaker
A native speaker is a student who has completed his or her high school education in another language and culture. It is important to distinguish between native and heritage speakers. Native speakers are typically international students and citizens of another nation, were born abroad, and their family often still resides abroad. Students should be directed to the MLLC or the HLx center directors if they believe they fall in this category.
Students who are foreign nationals and/or native speakers and writers of a language other than English may be exempted from the foreign language requirement if they provide evidence of their proficiency. Documents serving as evidence include a high school diploma from a school where English is not the primary language, a note from a high school teacher or college faculty member from the student’s home country attesting to the student’s native-level proficiency in the language.
**Platform 1 Course Information
Any student having previously completed 130 or a level beyond 130 may not take 132 for credit. 132 may not count for the major. (sentence added 9/8/18)
SP 132 & FR 132 are intended for students completing Platform 1 and not intending to major or minor in Spanish or French. If a student is intending to major or minor in Spanish or French, s/he should take SP 130 or FR 130 instead of 132. 132 courses may be repeated for credit if topic is different.
Less commonly taught languages such as GER, IT, ARB and JS will open their 132 sections to any student that has completed 120 (freshmen and non-freshmen).
Placement Tests
Students must complete a placement test before enrolling in a language class or taking language courses abroad. On the basis of a placement test, students may be required to interview with our faculty, and will be place in one of four platforms (see above). Transfer credits are awarded pending placement test results. Placement results have an expiration date of one year-i.e., students need to retake their placement test after two or more semesters if they have not taken the language course in which they were placed, unless they have opted to satisfy their language requirement with the study of another language altogether. Regardless of an AP score, students cannot receive credit for Spanish without taking the Spanish placement exam and consulting the center director in order to be placed in the appropriate Spanish course.
Foreign Language Online Policy
Current policy at Goucher regarding online courses allows a student to take courses on an “online” basis. However, students are limited to a total maximum of 12 credits online to count towards the 120-credit graduation requirement at Goucher.
Students must successfully complete (pass) the terminal course in their platform in an on-campus course at Goucher or a regionally accredited, non-profit, public or private college or university.
Therefore, students may not fulfill the Foreign Language and Culture Requirement (FLCR) by exclusively taking online courses.
If a student wants to transfer online foreign language (FL) credits taken prior to their arrival to Goucher, they will need to take the placement exam upon their arrival, and complete one of the four platforms described above.
For permission to complete the FLCR with languages not offered locally or through an online course, students need contact the directors of the Center for the Study of Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures or Hispanic and Latinx Studies, respectively. They will need to approve the syllabus prior to a student enrolling in the FL online course. Informal skype sessions with native speakers or self-guided instruction are not the equivalent of a college FL course.