What schools offer Vietnamese Language courses?

<p>I've decided this is semi-important to me (about as important as a school having opportunities for engineers to go abroad...so like a plus). Correct me if I'm wrong:</p>

<p>Do:
Cornell
Berkeley
UCLA
Harvard
Columbia
UCSD</p>

<p>Don't:
All of the Claremont Colleges
Carnegie Mellon
Olin, Babson, Wellesley
MIT
Stanford
Princeton
Rice
Cal Poly SLO
UCSB</p>

<p>Good luck on the research.
Many large state flagships will probably offer all the above with directed-study in countless languages at the very least. You may want to check Illinois or Michigan. You may also be able to cross register at nearby colleges that offer Vietnamese classes (such as Cooper Union + CUNY).</p>

<p>Michigan offers at least 5 semesters of Vietnamese. Wisconsin has a summer language program that offers 1st, 2nd, and 3rd year Vietnamese (and I’d assume they would during the school year, as well).</p>

<p>Yale has a Vietnamese language program. [Vietnamese</a> Language and Literature Program](<a href=“http://www.yale.edu/vietnamese/]Vietnamese”>Vietnamese Language and Literature)</p>

<p>Harvard has a Vietnamese language under East Asian Studies.
[Language</a> Resource Center - Languages at Harvard](<a href=“http://lrc.fas.harvard.edu/Languages_at_Harvard/eastasian.php]Language”>http://lrc.fas.harvard.edu/Languages_at_Harvard/eastasian.php)</p>

<p>Cornell
[The</a> Vietnamese Language at Cornell - Department of Asian Studies](<a href=“http://lrc.cornell.edu/asian/courses/vietnamese]The”>http://lrc.cornell.edu/asian/courses/vietnamese)</p>

<p>Michigan
[CSEAS:</a> Vietnam Studies](<a href=“umich-cseas.org”>umich-cseas.org)</p>

<p>Berkeley
[General</a> Catalog - Vietnamese](<a href=“http://sis.berkeley.edu/catalog/gcc_view_req?p_dept_cd=VIETNMS]General”>http://sis.berkeley.edu/catalog/gcc_view_req?p_dept_cd=VIETNMS)</p>

<p>UCLA
[CSEAS</a> Winter Quarter 2007](<a href=“Home .::. UCLA Center for Southeast Asian Studies”>Home .::. UCLA Center for Southeast Asian Studies)</p>

<p>UCSD
[Heritage</a> Language Program](<a href=“http://ling.ucsd.edu/Language/heritage/courses.html#vietnamese]Heritage”>http://ling.ucsd.edu/Language/heritage/courses.html#vietnamese)</p>

<p>Dartmouth doesn’t FYI (Not really sure you care, but if you’re making a list, then you can include it.) </p>

<p>And if one does attend MIT and wants to take Vietnamese, can’t one take it at Harvard? Doesn’t MIT have cross registration that allows one to do that?</p>

<p>Yupp definitely, which makes the whole language thing that much more complicated. xD Thanks everyone for your replies.</p>

<p>UC Irvine has a Vietnamese language course program.
[Humanities</a> Language Learning Program - About Us](<a href=“http://www.humanities.uci.edu/hllp/program/viet.php]Humanities”>http://www.humanities.uci.edu/hllp/program/viet.php)</p>

<p>U Wisconsin
[Welcome</a> | Languages and Cultures of Asia](<a href=“http://lca.wisc.edu/new_web/]Welcome”>http://lca.wisc.edu/new_web/)</p>

<p>Also, U Washington
<a href=“http://depts.washington.edu/asianll/lang_degs/lang_vietnamese.html[/url]”>http://depts.washington.edu/asianll/lang_degs/lang_vietnamese.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Ohio University
<a href=“Asian Studies | Ohio University”>Asian Studies | Ohio University;

<p>Northern Illinois University
<a href=“http://www.seasite.niu.edu/[/url]”>http://www.seasite.niu.edu/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>U Hawaii
<a href=“cseashawaii.com”>cseashawaii.com;

<p>UCLA. University of British Columbia.</p>

<p>Michigan offers Vietnamese. Also, they have a program through engineering called Engineering Global Leadership. You focus on an area of the world (you can choose Southeast Asia) and learn that language. You also can do study abroad, and you complete a leadership experience and take classes through Ross. Lastly, you can get your masters in 5 years.</p>

<p>The OP was accepted ED to Cornell two years ago and is presumably no longer looking for college suggestions.</p>

<p>Even if this thread were not so old, the LCTL database is far more comprehensive than any thread, which is spotty in coverage at best and usually slanted toward personal favorites.</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.carla.umn.edu/lctl/db/index.php[/url]”>http://www.carla.umn.edu/lctl/db/index.php&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Woops didn’t realize that.</p>

<p>

Duke doesn’t. :D</p>