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Old 02-02-2010, 19:50   #1
blacksmoke
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DLI vs. College major or minor

I am thinking about either majoring or minoring in Arabic. I was wondering if anyone has any experience with college language vs. SOLT or DLI training? Would a college degree in Arabic beat Q course language training plus what can be learned durring deployments? All things equal of course.
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Old 02-02-2010, 20:04   #2
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Old 02-02-2010, 20:26   #3
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I attended DLI twice while on active duty. (once for German and the other time for Vietnamese). You get totaly immerced in the DLI classes where you are speaking and learning the culture of the target language as opposed to an hour or two every other day in college classes.
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Old 02-02-2010, 20:35   #4
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Cant speak for Q course language training compared to College but DLI is an amazing program if you can find a way to get there.
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Old 02-02-2010, 21:21   #5
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DLI Russian

I took Russian at DLI -- 47 week course and 29 years later, working in Russia, no one can believe I studied it for such a short time. I have not met any non-native Russian who took the language in college to come close in fluency or speed to the DLI program. It is as stated by others on this string, as full immersion as I have seen even compared to programs "in country." They have more time off and less focus on studying for daily exams.
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Old 02-02-2010, 21:28   #6
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I am a graduate of the spanish course at DLI. I have friends who majored in spanish in college and I feel the DLI program is a lot better. You get dumped into the language and the culture. Not only can you speak/read/listing you understand on some level why things are the way they are. Another prefered thing about DLI is you have more than one teacher. You get used to different accents and tongues. Most of the students at DLI are able to identify accents/dialects in their target language.

If you have the chance DLI is the way to go.
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Old 02-02-2010, 21:59   #7
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#1 Asset Asks the question
#2 Asset
#3 guerrilla
#4 Quiet Professional
#5 Asset
#6 Asset
#7 Quiet Professional.

# 2,3,5,6 are NOGO's at this station.

My I remind you:

Special Forces Questions
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This is a forum where civilians can "ask" the Special Forces soldiers past and present "Special Forces" related questions.
Those questions are then answered by Special Forces soldiers, period.
Questions asked by the general public should NOT be answered by the "general" public.
If you do not have the title of "Quiet Professional" you may ask a question, but leave the "answers" to the QP's.
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Old 02-03-2010, 09:14   #8
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Erased.

Last edited by blacksmoke; 02-03-2010 at 17:36.
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Old 02-03-2010, 09:22   #9
Dozer523
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#8 is a NOGO too.
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Old 02-03-2010, 10:41   #10
ZonieDiver
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Quote:
So these slots are rare, or do you mean competitive? My Arabic proffesor was an instructor at DLI for one cycle. She told me that she taught in a class where students came with no working knowlege and left with fluency after 4 months. This is realy hard to believe, but if QP's are saying it is so, well then...
Thank you for your responses. The real reason I am asking this is because every time I see Afganistan or Iraq on the news, I feel like I am actualy wasting my time going to college

Quote:
#8 is a NOGO too.
Exactly, Dozer! Your question was asked and answered, blacksmoke. DLI, like most other military courses - or your college classes, for that matter, IS what one makes of it. I know guys who went to DLI for Spanish and came out with less language capability than I had with 3 years of HS Spanish. As is often the case, it is the how the person approaches the learning.

As for the highlighted portion above, if that is what you think, do something about it! Don't tell us "how you feel"! Quite honestly, I don't care HOW you feel about that. Drop out, join the army, volunteer for infantry, airborne, and Special Forces. Join the fight while it is still going on and your services can be used. Actions, not words, speak loudest.

Just my opinion...
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Old 02-03-2010, 13:07   #11
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I didn't attend DLI but I do have some experience with learning languages.

Immersion in language and culture is the operative statement here. I took Spanish for four years in high school and and 2 years of college. I had a great vocabulary and absolutely no understanding of syntax or local idiom. I worked in Mexico for 6 months and learned more than I did in 6 years of school. I am proud to say that I was questioned for 20 minutes by a Federale Lieutenant because she felt that someone born in the U.S. shouldn't speak Spanish colloquially. I was also asked by a lady from the Dominican Republic where I was from in Mexico.
I spent two years in Thailand where I was completely comfortable traveling without an interpreter after about a year, because I made myself listen to the locals.
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Old 02-03-2010, 14:35   #12
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I took Spanish for 4 years in high school because I had learned it growing up working in the 'fields' of Northern California and could get B's without studying.

I learned Thai and Tagalog fairly well because - as a Medic - I (1) needed to in dealing with the the civic action patient loads we were confronted with in those regions, (2) I was always a bit leery of exactly what any interpreter was actually saying (many stories about that issue), and (3) it gave me > credibility with the populace. Thai was hardest for me because of its multi-tonal qualities, some of my hearing issues, and my normal speaking voice.

I learned German through a formal language program similar to DLI which was in place in Bad Tolz - formal training combined with immersion.

I studied Hebrew at Indiana University because - in conjunction with my German - it allowed me to delve into Yiddish, at that time a commonly used trans-national language among a culture with a strong potential to operate as a guerrilla force throughout the former Soviet empire if the so-called 'balloon had gone up' and we had gone to war.

I agree with Mark's comments - and immersion is how I best learn languages, too.

Richard
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Old 02-03-2010, 14:44   #13
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I studied German in college for a year but have to agree with some of the others that 'immersion' is the best way to learn a foreign language. Sitting in Gasthauses and drinking beer with the natives did more for me than sitting in a college classroom. Watching television and reading newspapers works well too.
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Old 02-03-2010, 14:55   #14
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Agree that immersion is the best but i still think DLI is an excellent program if you can get to it. Its all what you make of it back in the days when a lot of SF went through there was a whole bunch of partying going on and not a lot of studying getting done Very found memories of rucksack races on the beach and all night bonfire parties but that didnt help too much on the language front.
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Old 02-03-2010, 17:51   #15
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Hey Rich- The walk on water card helped a lot in my travels, also...
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