BlueandYellow wrote:
Why would learning another language be important if you already live in a country where most people speak one language? The reason why Spanish is deemed important to learn today is that much of the United States population is now Hispanic and Spanish speaking. If another country can speak 2 languages, why does that automatically make us obligated to know 2 languages?
Do you realize the importance of learning another language? Sure, maybe for you
personally it isn't useful. However, the fact that many people in the U.S., including many of our politicians who deal with other countries on a pretty regular basis, haven't even learned another foreign language is troubling. Do you know how much more we could trade with other countries if we bothered to learn the language of the people we are trading with? If we didn't depend on translators in political affairs and could furthermore speak the language of those we were dealing with, I imagine it would help a lot. The thought should not be "in our country, we speak our language, and in other countries we speak our language" in terms of political and business meetings. In normal business, you cater to your customer. If your customer speaks another language, you better damn well learn the language.
One reason that foreigners dislike Americans is
because they don't make an effort to speak their language. When many Americans visit another country, they don't even bother to brush up on some basic terms that they'd need to get by. In turn, many of them have to depend on the citizens themselves who actually bothered to learn English, because they clearly saw a use for it. Many foreigners find it insulting that people don't even make the effort.
Furthermore, there have been many studies that show that learning another language can help improve English language skills. Learning languages makes you look at your own language in a different way. You understand more about sentence structure, grammar, and spelling. Given that many in our school system are illiterate, it wouldn't hurt to have a foreign language system in place that could potentially improve their English skills.
While we're on that subject, many American public schools don't start teaching foreign language til 7th grade--if at all. With schools facing financial crisis, many have decided to cut foreign language even further. When you look abroad, many schools in Europe begin teaching students at very young ages, and continue their education on foreign language throughout their schooling. They start young, because studies show that the optimal time to learn a language is between birth and 7 years of age. Honestly, many students in other countries are likely fluent in another language by the time Americans here start learning one. That isn't how it should work.
Mindsets like yours are the reason America is so far behind in foreign language. People here "don't see the point." But when you're in a world as globalized as it is today, foreign language is essential. I can almost guarantee that if we continue down the road we're on, we're going to fall way behind compared to many other countries who do see the importance of foreign language.
/endrant