Middle Eastern Studies/Arabic

<p>The Ohio State guy wrote the textbook I used in my Arabic class. But it's a terrible book for what it cost.</p>

<p>for Arabic-less selective</p>

<p>George Washington
U Miami
U Southern Maine
U Minnesota
SUNY Binghamton
Ohio State
U Texas Austin
U Washington</p>

<p>near/middle eastern studies-less selective</p>

<p>U Arizona
U Arkansas
U Conn
George Washington
U Mass Amherst
U Minnesota Twin Ciries
Rutgers
Fordham
College of Wooster
Ohio State
U Toledo
Portland State (OR)
U Texas Austin
Southwest Texas State
U Utah
Goddard C
Marlboro C
Emory and Henry</p>

<p>Texas may not be that selective overall, but I thought it was quite dificult to get in from out of state because of a rather rigid quota. Perhaps I'm wrong about that.</p>

<p>Southwest Texas State and Portland State? lol</p>

<p>and BTW barrons thanks for the Wisconsin info.</p>

<p>
[quote]
i was looking on princetonreview.com as a starting point but they usually leave a lot of colleges that offer majors out for some reason...

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Have you tried the college search function at <a href="http://www.petersons.com?%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.petersons.com?&lt;/a> I don't know if you will get a more comprehensive list, but it is worth a try. You can specify the amount of selectivity you want.</p>

<p>Probably the ideal way to get proficiency would be to attend a place like American University in Cairo, but I don't know how the finances would work out.</p>