Language Courses
FutureLearn’s online language courses are perfect for any language learner, whether you’re a complete beginner or someone who wants to improve their vocabulary and skills for a specific use or context. We have courses from the world’s top universities and well-known educators to help you expand your horizons and career prospects.
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- Find your course. Berlitz offers a range of language and culture courses for adults, kids and teens, businesses, and more. Choose from the options below to find your ideal course and start progressing.
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Statewide Course Numbering System
Courses in this catalog are identified by prefixes and numbers that were assigned by Florida’s Statewide Course Numbering System (SCNS). This numbering system is used by all public postsecondary institutions in Florida and 27 participating non-public institutions. The major purpose of this system is to facilitate the transfer of courses between participating institutions. Students and administrators can use the online SCNS to obtain course descriptions and specific information about course transfer between participating Florida institutions.
More Info
Each participating institution controls the title, credit and content of its own courses and recommends the first digit of the course number to indicate the level at which students normally take the course. Course prefixes and the last three digits of the course numbers are assigned by members of faculty discipline committees appointed for that purpose by the Florida Department of Education in Tallahassee. Individuals nominated to serve on these committees are selected to maintain a representative balance as to type of institution and discipline field or specialization.
The course prefix and each digit in the course number have a meaning in the SCNS. The listing of prefixes and associated numbers is referred to as the SCNS taxonomy. Descriptions of the content of courses are referred to as statewide course profiles.
Example of Course Identifier
Prefix | Level Code (1st digit) | Century Digit (2nd digit) | Decade Digit (3rd digit) | Unit Digit (4th digit) | Lab Code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ENC | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
English Composition | Lower (Freshman) Level at this institution | Freshman Composition | Freshman Composition Skills | Freshman Composition Skills 1 | No laboratory component in this course |
General Rule for Course Equivalencies
Equivalent courses at different institutions are identified by the same prefixes and the same last three digits of the course number and are guaranteed to be transferable between participating institutions that offer the course, with a few exceptions, as listed below in Exceptions to the General Rule for Equivalency.
For example, a freshman composition skills course is offered by 59 different postsecondary institutions. Each institution uses ENC_101 to identify its freshman composition skills course. The level code is the first digit and represents the year in which students normally take the course at a specific institution. In the SCNS taxonomy, ENC means English Composition, the century digit 1 represents Freshman Composition, the decade digit 0 represents Freshman Composition Skills and the unit digit 1 represents Freshman Composition Skills 1.
In the sciences and certain other areas, a C or L after the course number is known as a lab indicator. The C represents a combined lecture and laboratory course that meets in the same place at the same time. The L represents a laboratory course or the laboratory part of a course that has the same prefix and course number but meets at a different time or place.
Transfer of any successfully completed course from one participating institution to another is guaranteed in cases where the course to be transferred is equivalent to one offered by the receiving institution. Equivalencies are established by the same prefix and last three digits and comparable faculty credentials at both institutions. For example, ENC 1101 is offered at a community college. The same course is offered at a state university as ENC 2101. A student who has successfully completed ENC 1101 at the community college is guaranteed to receive transfer credit for ENC 2101 at the state university if the student transfers. The student cannot be required to take ENC 2101 again since ENC 1101 is equivalent to ENC 2101.
Transfer credit must be awarded for successfully completed equivalent courses and used by the receiving institution to determine satisfaction of requirements by transfer students on the same basis as credit awarded to the native students. It is the prerogative of the receiving institution, however, to offer transfer credit for courses successfully completed that have not been designated as equivalent.
Credit generated at institutions on the quarter-term system may not transfer the equivalent number of credits to institutions on the semester-term system. For example, 4.0 quarter hours often transfers as 2.67 semester hours.
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About the Course Prefix
The course prefix is a three-letter designator for a major division of an academic discipline, subject matter area or subcategory of knowledge. The prefix is not intended to identify the department in which a course is offered. Rather, the content of a course determines the assigned prefix to identify the course.
Authority for Acceptance of Equivalent Courses
Section 1007.24(7), Florida Statutes, states: Any student who transfers among postsecondary institutions that are fully accredited by a regional or national accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department of Education and that participate in the statewide course numbering system shall be awarded credit by the receiving institution for courses satisfactorily completed by the student at the previous institutions.
Credit shall be awarded if the courses are judged by the appropriate statewide course numbering system faculty committees representing school districts, public postsecondary educational institutions and participating non-public postsecondary educational institutions to be academically equivalent to courses offered at the receiving institution, including equivalency of faculty credentials, regardless of the public or non-public control of the previous institution.
The Department of Education shall ensure that credits to be accepted by a receiving institution are generated in courses for which the faculty possess credentials that are comparable to those required by the accrediting association of the receiving institution. The award of credit may be limited to courses that are entered in the statewide course numbering system. Credits awarded pursuant to this subsection shall satisfy institutional requirements on the same basis as credits awarded to native students.
Exceptions to the General Rule for Equivalency
Since the initial implementation of the SCNS, specific disciplines or types of courses have been excepted from the guarantee of transfer for equivalent courses. These include courses that must be evaluated individually or courses in which the student must be evaluated for mastery of skill and technique. The following courses are exceptions to the general rule for course equivalencies and may not transfer. Transferability is at the discretion of the receiving institution.
- Courses not offered by the receiving institution
- For courses at non-regionally accredited institutions, courses offered prior to the established transfer date of the course in question
- Courses in the _900-999 series are not automatically transferable, and must be evaluated individually. These include such courses as Special Topics, Internships, Apprenticeships, Practica, Study Abroad, Theses and Dissertations.
- College preparatory and vocational preparatory courses
- Graduate courses
- Internships, apprenticeships, practica, clinical experiences and study abroad courses with numbers other than those ranging from 900-999.
- Applied courses in the performing arts (Art, Dance, Interior Design, Music and Theatre) and skills courses in Criminal Justice (academy certificate courses) are not guaranteed as transferable. These courses need evidence of achievement (e.g., portfolio, audition, interview, etc.).
Courses at Non-regionally Accredited Institutions
The SCNS makes available on its home page (in the Latest News box) a report entitled Courses at Non-regionally Accredited Institutions that contains a comprehensive listing of all non-public institution courses in the SCNS inventory, as well as each course’s transfer level and transfer effective date. This report is updated monthly.
More Info
Questions about the SCNS and appeals regarding course credit transfer decisions should be directed to the Office of Admissions in 201 Criser Hall or,
The Florida Department of Education
Office of Articulation
1401 Turlington Building
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400
Special reports and technical information may be requested by calling the SCNS office at 850-245-0427 or visiting scns.fldoe.org.
Rec. 11/09/12; Office of Articulation, Florida Department of Education
Any answer to the question posed in the title of this post will inevitably be loaded with presumptions, bias, personality preference, anecdotal or confused sources of evidence, guesses with no actual experience, irrelevant criteria and many other things that lead it to give an impossible or misleading real answer, because simply, there is just no one best way to learn a language.
I could give you my opinion on the best sources of information to find out about your target language, but that wouldn't mean much to so many people because of my particular preferences, goals and past experiences, so this is why I thought it best to get an overall view first from many people about what the best language learning course/book/material is.
To do this, I asked 267 people a detailed list of questions, and rather than focus on one final answer, I want to show you how the answer in a particular context changes everything.
Of course, I tried to be as scientific as possible, but since those polled are restricted to readers of this blog (or the How to learn any language forum) and are thus a small segment of language learners in general, it can't be perfect. Having said that, the results are absolutely worth considering…
The deal-breaker: asking the right people the question
If I simply asked the question “What is the best language learning course”, the most popular answer could actually be worthless. Think about this for a second: if you ask the general population a question about what is best, in many situations most of them are simply not experienced enough in the matter to give you a useful answer.
For example, if you polled everyone on which girl's shoes look the nicest, then perhaps most guys answering the question (like myself) would be simply too shoe-stupid to even have an opinion that matters. Their answers would taint the useful result. You are better asking the fashion-aware such a question.
Language Courses In Du
This may sound offensive, but frankly I don't care what not-yet-successful language learners tell me the best course is. Their opinion is based on extrapolation of potential, how much fun it is (nice, but sometimes irrelevant in terms of actual results), how much progress they feel they are making (which is grossly exaggerated in many courses), and use of the language in the wrong context compared to how they may wish to use it (too much reading, not enough speaking for example – leaving them ill-prepared in all conversations with natives).
But I still absolutely wanted to hear from them because they sometimes have much more experience than successful language learners in what definitely doesn't work. The results were interesting!
The separation:
One of the first questions I asked was What is your experience in learning languages? The results were as follows:
To attempt to define fluency for the purposes of this question, I said it means “you could confidently live and/or have lived entirely through the language at some time.” It may not be perfect, as I defined fluency in more detail somewhere else, but it separated people sufficiently.
Responses | Percentage | |
I have already successfully learned a foreign language to *fluency* independently as an adult using books/courses. | 39 | 15% |
I have already successfully learned a foreign language to *fluency* in an academic environment, or by living abroad/with natives. | 41 | 15% |
I am learning a foreign language now and hope to speak it well very soon/some day. | 106 | 40% |
Other | 81 | 30% |
As expected, most people reading a blog about learning languages, and a forum about it too, are in the process of speaking their first foreign language.
“Other”, when explained, were actually answers already stated but rephrased to sound nicer. Sometimes giving people an extra choice is a bad idea! Their answers are not covered in the data below.
Anyway the almost even divide between successful (the 39 + 41 learners) versus the not-yet-successful (106 learners) made the results based on those answers quite interesting and definitely worth analysing!
What makes a successful learner?
Now just the first two groups (reached fluency independently and in an academic/immersion environment) got asked Why were you successful in learning your foreign language to fluency?
Here is a chart of the results:
Response | Votes |
My school did a good job & teacher(s) were very helpful | 35 |
I worked very hard and studied much more than other students | 31 |
I might just have a natural talent for languages as I picked it up no problem | 14 |
I had a stay abroad or spent a lot of time with natives that hugely influenced my learning experience | 54 |
Other | 34 |
This was a selection-box, (not either-or) so they could pick more than one answer. It's clear that time with natives is the big winner here, but there is no doubt that an academic background was very helpful to many successful learners (keep in mind a lot of readers of this blog are Europeans who learned English to fluency in school for example).
I was happy to read this as it shows that some academic institutions are moving in the right direction. I don't rule them out as useless, but I think the traditional learning approach is way inferior to a more improved version. Of course, answers B & C show that progress depended on a good student rather than a good system in many cases.
Answers in “Other” included more flowery rephrasing of what I had already said (!), as well as several answers saying that they were active in seeking out conversation even if they didn't have constant access to natives. Others said they got as much exposure as possible (through TV, radio, magazines etc.)
The next question I asked this group was Have you ever studied a foreign language independently?
This was to scope the usefulness of the courses question coming next. Only 4% replied to say that they have only learned in an academic situation and have never invested their own time/money into separate courses. As well as confirming the usefulness of the next information, this also tells me that even those who were happy with their academic background still had to work on their own.
Letting your school do all of the work for you and simply following their directions and nothing else is clearly not a practical path to fluency.
Choices of successful learners
Now for the moment you've all been waiting for… Which of the following courses/materials have you used and found to be beneficial?
Answerers could pick more than one. I asked the exact same question of both successful and not-yet-successful learners. As I was totally expecting, this does not point to one dramatic winner, but there are some that do come out ahead for successful learners:
Most beneficial Resource: | Votes |
Websites (busuu/LingQ etc.) | 23 |
Book/course specific to my target language | 41 |
TV/radio/podcasts/reading | 67 |
“Other” was a place to write the specific course for specific languages, and I didn't find anything consistent enough to merit a mention, since learners are covering such a wide range of languages.
The clear winner here is not actually a course at all, it's native material. TV/radio/podcasts/reading win over everything else by far.
Other than that we have Busuu & LingQ and other websites which I didn't separate because these are language-learning tools rather than courses (Busuu is useful for meeting people online, and the free version of LingQ is very useful for “input” to practise reading & listening – neither actually have a course that gets you anywhere beyond the basics), and I have covered these in detail before.
Then Teach yourself, Assimil and Pimsleurcome out as the clear winners as courses.
I have experience in using these myself and can agree to them being ahead of the rest.
Although it got less votes, Michel Thomas was more voiced in comments as being useful. I have also had good experience with “Colloquial” (such as in Portuguese) but it seems to be slightly less mainstream.
If you are curious, the answers to the same question for the not-yet-successful learners were slightly different. Teach yourself came out on top of the courses and the same number of people voted for the websites and tv/radio/podcasts/reading. As I said, these results were the least interesting to me as they only discuss potential and I prefer to look at information based on actual results.
The most unhelpful courses
Here are the successful (1st group) and not-yet-successful (2nd group) learners' answers to the question Which of the following courses/materials have you used and found to be unhelpful?
The obvious loser is Rosetta Stone. This was accompanied with mountains of comments and “colourful” language about why it doesn't work.
It will waste your time in terms of reaching fluency, although the comments I received that were praising it (as expected, almost entirely restricted to the “not-yet-succssful” learners) say how enjoyable it is to use. I recommend that these people buy a fun computer game if they want to mouse-click their way to enjoyment.
The runner up loser is Pimsleur. You can read the thorough and honest Pimsleur approach review here.
After that come the websites – which I still say are useful, but are simply not complete enough to help people learn what they need to reach fluency in my experience.
What is also interesting is when you compare these two side-by-side as I have placed them. From this, you can make two observations:
- As I mentioned at the beginning, I had approximately the same number of successful & not-yet-successful learners in this poll. And yet the numbers of votes per course are much higher (double!) for not-yet-successful learners (see the indication below the bars). This is because they selected more options (this was a check-box question) – this indicates to me that unsuccessful learners don't stick with one programme consistently enough and may own several (since I said in the question that they have used them, rather than simply being familiar with them). More courses does not equal more success. Use what you have and use it well, rather than spending more money (or downloading more courses) and feeling that is getting you closer to your target.
- Not one single successful learner found TV/radio/podcasts/reading to be unhelpful. That big gap in the chart is a pretty clear reinforcement of how useful exposure to non-course native-material can be. Not-yet-successful learners have tried this, but clearly they are doing too many things at once to get any real benefit from any one in particular, including native-material exposure.
Conclusions
I had asked other questions in this survey, but the results from those are just minor interesting points I will raise at another time, or they simply contain no useful information from a statistical perspective. However, I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who took part! This information is really interesting and I thoroughly enjoyed reading all of your accompanying comments!
What is clear from the answers here is that there may not be a “best” course, but there are certainly bad ones. I will investigate the topgood results (no point in beating a dead horse and dwelling too much on the bad ones…) and analyse what they are good for and what they are not good for, and hopefully that will bring people who are wondering which one to invest in, one step closer to a decision!
However, I want to make this absolutely clear: It isn't about the course!! I am discussing the topic because it's on so many people's minds, and some courses are indeed slightly better than others for particular situations, but buying the “perfect” course means nothing if you don't put the work in, and get out of your shell to practise with human beings, or at least get as much active exposure as you can.
Do you think you will follow in the footsteps of successful learners before you? Can you stay focused on the course you have and even abandon it as soon as possible to expose yourself to actual native content and even meet up with natives? Do you agree with these results, or would you draw different conclusions based on the information? Let me know in the comments!
Oh and don't forget to share all these pretty bar graphs with your friends on Facebook!