How many years of a foreign language do you need?

<p>DD is a junior, and is considering dropping her foreign language after year 3, and picking up another newly offered language. She would need to continue that new language next year, and would then be taking one less AP. Is this a good idea????!!!!!</p>

<p>Generally 3 is minimum for top unis, but really 4+ is the ideal option.</p>

<p>My school requires 2 years in the same language to graduate, so 2 :p</p>

<p>But yeah…for college, you want 4+.</p>

<p>Most colleges require 2 high school years of a foreign language. Three is fine if you can justify it. Four is ideal.</p>

<p>Idk, substituting a language with another language this late in the game is kind of like regressing. If she’s aiming for a top school, it might just be better to go all four years and take the other language in college.</p>

<p>Sorry to hijack the thread, but it completely relates. I’ve taken latin 1 and 2 so far in high school and took latin 3 over the summer (no grading, just talking with the teacher, going over the work, etc). I’m taking two sciences this year because AP Chem won’t be offered my senior year, and I love chem. I plan on taking Latin 4 and possible Latin 5 my senior year (they might be taught in the same class). Would this be ok for top unis such as MIT and Cornell?</p>

<p>We (Class of 2010) need 2 credits while the underclassmen and future underclassmen need 3. I took 4 since I loved French so much. </p>

<p>Why is she dropping the FL? It’d make more sense for her to complete it then go on to another FL is she like.</p>

<p>I only did 2 years of language because I hate it. (through 3 though since I started at 2) I’m only looking at public schools though.</p>

<p>My school requires two, but I agree with some of the other posters, 4+ is ideal for top universities. ^^^I think that would be ok, especially if you get up to 5:) Latin isn’t a typical language taken in high school so I think it would make you stand out more.</p>

<p>3 is plenty… no school requires 4, and I doubt that if you are a candidate for an ivy you would be rejected because you only took three years of a foreign language.</p>

<p>My school requires two credits (essentially two years) of foreign language, which is generally the minimum expected by colleges. </p>

<p>I would agree with previous posters – that 2 years is average, 3 is good, and 4+ is the best. Of course, your daughter would have five years of language with her proposed switch, so that is good. I don’t think she’ll have any problems with foreign language as far as college applications go.</p>

<p>To me though, your daughter’s plan is somewhat counterintuitive. By junior year, it feels a little late to be switching languages. By level 3, you’re just beginning to learn how to speak – before that, it’s all vocabulary and grammar (and you’re not really ready for an AP course, either). To stop and move into a new language for only two years fixes it so that she won’t achieve fluency in either, because 2 years at the high school level isn’t much and certainly won’t provide proficiency without significant self study. Even so, 2 years is definitely not AP prep and requires a sacrifice of another class. </p>

<p>My suggestion would be for her to continue with her current language until the end of high school (so she can get proficient and possibly take the AP for college credit/placement) and then pursue the other one in college. Alternatively, could she take the second language as an elective? That’s what I’m doing – currently, I’m in Spanish 5 and French 3.</p>

<p>i did two, but i can justify(dropped for AP Psych junior year, and a college class Senior year)
plus i’m not applying anywhere fantastic</p>

<p>4 years of the same language for competitive to moderate colleges.
County colleges dont really give a shat.</p>

<p>three is enough, but four if you want a BS</p>

<p>2 is the min, but I reccomend at least 3</p>

<p>2 is usually the required for colleges, but some require 3. I would reccomend to take as many years of foreign language as you can (AKA 4).</p>

<p>In my state (New York), two years for graduation, three years for the state exam, and a four years for an AP course.</p>

<p>Quick question. I started freshman year in Latin II, however, my school only goes through Latin IV/V, aka, no AP Latin and Latin IV is the same as Latin V, so what would look better, taking Latin IV/V twice or taking an extra AP Science?</p>

<p>I would do the AP Science course depending on what you want to go into. I’m in Latin IV right now and kind of regret doing it. It is AP Latin Vergil however. We did AP Latin Lit last year, but now that test is gone (boy did I hate Catullus). Sciences will probably be more beneficial, especially considering most colleges don’t give any useful credit for AP Latin.</p>

<p>I am also sorry for hijacking the thread, but I took 2 years of spanish (I hate foreign language), in high school and 2 years of latin in middle school (which I assume doesn’t count)… So my question is will this hurt me? I’m a junior now, and don’t really have schedule space for foreign language since I’m trying to take a bunch of advanced maths and sciences. I’m looking at princeton, columbia, harvard, and MIT. Would my chances me diminished due to the lack of 3-4 years of a foreign language?</p>