Canada's official languages are French and English.
Most of our colleges outside Quebec do not require a French proficiency exam because the classes are not taught in French. They require an English exam because they are taught in English.
Some jobs require you to speak English. Some don't. Some require you to speak Portuguese and nothing else. Sometimes a circumstance will require French. Most often it will not.
What has any of that got to do with our government's official languages? Nothing. There's no connection.
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Riddle Me This, Batman, Fratch Version
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To add to what Blaquekatt said, a lack of an official language has nothing to do with a language of instruction. A school isn't obligated to provide translators for every possible language a student may speak, so to ensure that students don't try a discrimination case when they fail a class, and claim it's because they didn't understand the teacher or something, they just say "You must be at least THIS proficient in the language of instruction to attend this school." I'd expect the same thing in a Hispanic college, or a French college.Originally posted by RecoveringKinkoid View PostOkay, so my question is this: if there is no official language in the US of A, why is a CSer being forced to take an English proficiency course to go to college?
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Originally posted by RecoveringKinkoid View PostOkay, so my question is this: if there is no official language in the US of A, why is a CSer being forced to take an English proficiency course to go to college?
My best educated* guess would be that test is needed as core classes are taught in English(american dialect)-and if a student doesn't understand English that well the student is going to be struggling and taking up a disproportionate amount of the professor's time, thus causing difficulty for the other students that require assistance.
*I saw this in high school quite a bit-ESL students monopolizing the teacher's time and the rest of us suffered horribly-as in the ESL students would spend 20-30 minutes of a class that lasted an hour asking questions every minute or two and then see the teacher after class for another 20-30 minutes-the teachers had very little time to teach-and at a college level-the professor have very limited time to assist students with questions.
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Riddle Me This, Batman, Fratch Version
Okay, so my question is this: if there is no official language in the US of A, why is a CSer being forced to take an English proficiency course to go to college?
I'm not arguing if there IS an official language or not, but feel free to do so, if you like. I just want to know why does she have to take ANY language proficiency course at all, especially in light of the "language situation" over here in the states.
I just wanted to ask the question, and didn't want to get busted by the mods for veering into Fratching.Tags: None

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