Premium
Three Weeks Equals Thirty Weeks?‐A Report on an Experimental Intensive January Language Course
Author(s) -
Wallace John A.
Publication year - 1972
Publication title -
foreign language annals
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.258
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1944-9720
pISSN - 0015-718X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1944-9720.1972.tb02552.x
Subject(s) - percentile , active listening , german , psychology , mathematics education , reading (process) , medical education , medicine , mathematics , geography , political science , statistics , communication , archaeology , law
The effectiveness of intensive language programs of such organizations as the Peace Corps and The Experiment in International Living has often been attributed to the motivation of an imminent overseas experience. Forty‐seven students from colleges and universities on the 4–1–4 calendar participated in an intensive language program in January 1971 at The Experiment's School for International Training. None were proceeding overseas at the end of the program; all returned to their regular campuses. The six‐day‐a‐week, six‐hour‐a‐day program in Spanish, French, German, and Russian was conducted by young, native‐speaking teachers with limited previous experience. Classes were small, ranging in six from four to ten members. Half were at the elementary level, half intermediate. Elementary students were tested at the end of the program using the L level Cooperative MLA tests with norms for one year of college study. Median performance was at the 52nd percentile in reading, 68th in listening, 72nd in writing, and 93rd in speaking. Intermediate students were tested at the beginning and end of the program using levels MA and MB of the MLA tests, with norms for two years college study. An average improvement of 25 percentile points was effected during the three week program, from the 57th to the 82nd percentile.