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This following summarizes the important information regarding languages and the language requirements at Arizona's universities. You will see that the excel spreadsheet chart does not include information on being a language major. If you wish to major in Spanish, for example, you would not be concerned with meeting the 4th semester proficiency requirement, as you would be taking many upper-division courses in Spanish.
On this chart, you will find a list of the university majors at NAU, ASU, and UA that require 2nd, 3rd, or 4th semester-proficiency in a foreign language. Please note that the information may have changed and you should contact an advisor at your transfer university.
The term proficiency refers to a person’s skill level in a language. A student must pass a college-level course with a grade of "C" or better to have achieved proficiency at that course level.
These requirements vary by major and by university because each university department independently makes its decision regarding language requirements.
For example, the Mathematics department at NAU decided to not have a Foreign Language requirement for their majors. ASU's Math department determined that students completing both the Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in Math and the Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in Math would need 4th semester proficiency. UA's Math department decided that students pursuing a BA in Math would need to have a 4th semester proficiency, but those students pursuing the BS would need to have only a 2nd semester proficiency level.
(Generally speaking, the BS degree at UA would then have other requirements in Math or a related field that the BA degree would not.)
According to the state organization that advises on language transfer issues (the AZ Languages Articulation Task Force) a student can show proficiency in any one of these ways:
Thus, if you wait to take your language courses at the university and need to achieve 4th semester proficiency (i.e., your major requires 4th semester proficiency), you will need to take language courses for the full 2 years at the university. They are all 4-credit courses. If you plan to take 15 credit hours per semester at the university as most students do, only 11 credit hours can be used for courses in your major and minor because 4 of the 15 are towards meeting the language requirement EACH semester. As you work on getting your general education requirements at YC, work on your language requirement too!
If you choose to take courses to meet the language proficiency requirement, you'll take 101 (first semester), 102 (second semester), 201 (third semester), and 202 (fourth semester) or any portion thereof. (A student may place into 102 and bypass 101 altogether.) Note that the language requirement is only met by taking courses in the SAME language. Further note that the conversational-track courses (i.e., 131, 132, 231, 232) do not meet the language requirement.