What colleges have Language Interpretation and Translation Major?

<p>What colleges have Language Interpretation and Translation Major? Please help!
Thank You So Much!</p>

<p>Check out these:
Bachelor’s Degree:
BYU (Spanish); Cal State-Long Beach (Spanish); Hunter College (Spanish); James Madison (Spanish); Montclair State (French, Spanish); Rutgers (Spanish); San Diego State (Spanish); San Francisco State (Spanish, Japanese)
Arizona (Spanish); Hawaii (Chinese, Japanese, Korean—Interdisciplinary Major through Center for Translation Studies); U Wisconsin-Milwaukee (courses—Spanish); U Nebraska-Kearney (Spanish)
Minor:
Binghamton (French, Spanish); U Texas-El Paso (Spanish); U Nebraska-Kearney (French, German, Spanish)
Certificates:
Adelphi (French, Italian, Spanish); American (French, German, Russian, Spanish); Arizona State (Spanish); James Madison (Technical Translation—French, German, Spanish, Russian); Mary Grove C. (Arabic, French, Spanish)
Bellevue College; Florida International (Spanish); NYU (Arabic, Hebrew, French, Spanish, German, Portuguese); Arizona (National Center for Interpretation); UCLA Extension (Chinese, Spanish, Korean); UC-Riverside Extension (Spanish); UCSD Extensin (Spanish); U Chicago (GrahamSchool of Professonal Studies); Denver (University College)
Illinois (Center for Translation Studies); Wake Forest (Spanish); U Texas-Arlington (Spanish; Localization & Translation: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Korean, Portuguese, and Russian); UNC-Charlotte (French, German, Spanish)
Other
U Iowa (undergrad translation courses)</p>

<p>Also check this site:
[American</a> Translators Association : Certification : List of Approved Translation and Interpreting Schools](<a href=“About the ATA Certification Exam - American Translators Association (ATA)”>About the ATA Certification Exam - American Translators Association (ATA))</p>

<p>Most programs focus on translation. Spanish is the focus of most programs, though some programs offer general studies in translation/ interpretation.Relatively few focus on interpreting. Some of the programs listed above are certificate programs offered through a university’s school of continuing studies or extension units. These may or may not be accepted for degree credit. Spanish is the most common language, though some programs offer general studies in translation/interpretatin.</p>

<p>Additional possibilities if you’re interested in literary translation would include coursework in comparative literature depts.</p>

<p>A program designed to promote high levels of proficiency in certain critical language in conjunction with a major in another field is the Language Flagship Program: [The</a> Language Flagship - * Welcome *](<a href=“http://www.thelanguageflagship.org/]The”>http://www.thelanguageflagship.org/) Ohio State has its own language flagship program in Chinese: [Home</a> | The Ohio State University MidWest US-China Flagship Program](<a href=“http://chineseflagship.osu.edu/]Home”>http://chineseflagship.osu.edu/)</p>

<p>Increasingly, many language departments offer majors with business or commercial tracks, e.g., Business French, Business German, Commercial Spanish. Some of these are joint degrees with the business school. For technical translation, some other schools, e.g., Wisconsin, offer coursework in technical Japanese and Chinese:[Certificate</a> in Japanese Professional Communication | East Asian Languages & Literature](<a href=“http://eall.wisc.edu/?q=node/245]Certificate”>http://eall.wisc.edu/?q=node/245)
International engineering programs are increasing at many universities. Such programs require language training, including internships abroad, and provide another pathway for technical use of various languages.</p>

<p>Another pathway is to obtain a BA in the language of your interest and then obtain a graduate degree in a program such as those offered by the Monterey Institute: [Monterey</a> Institute of International Studies](<a href=“Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey”>http://www.miis.edu/)</p>