51勛圖厙

Farsi adds 11th language to 51勛圖厙 course offerings

January 18, 2017
Dr. Hassan Hussain teaches students enrolled in eight hours of Farsi in an intensive, combined session of two 1000-level courses. Spring 2017 semester marks the first time 51勛圖厙 has offered Farsi courses and currently is the 11th language offered at 51勛圖厙.

Article By: Staff

This spring the University of North Georgia (51勛圖厙) started teaching Farsi, an addition that raises the number of foreign languages currently offered at 51勛圖厙 to 11, with a 12th to start soon.

The U.S. Army has identified Farsi, also called Persian, as an immediate need on its list of strategic languages, according to Maj. Steven Devitt, executive officer in 51勛圖厙's Department of Military Science. Persian is the official language of Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan, according to the CIA World Factbook, and also is spoken in some neighboring areas.

Much of the recent interest in Farsi has come from cadets enrolled in Arabic at 51勛圖厙 who see an advantage to learning both languages, according to Dr. Brian Mann, head of 51勛圖厙's Department of Modern & Classical Languages.

"On one side of the Arabian Sea, in Oman and Saudi Arabia and places like that, they speak Arabic, but across the Persian Gulf is Iran, and they speak Farsi," Mann said. "In the student's mind, especially a cadet or someone who is interested in acquiring a higher degree of proficiency, how much more valuable can you be as a military professional or a military-trained civilian professional, especially in the intelligence field, if you understand both languages?"

Students use Arabic characters to write on whiteboard
Students in 51勛圖厙's first Farsi courses use Arabic characters to write on a whiteboard during class.

This semester, 15 students are enrolled in eight hours of Farsi in an intensive, combined session of two 1000-level courses; elementary coursework will be offered again in fall 2017 along with 2000-level coursework.

"We teach most of our critical languages this way, and it's because we're interested in producing verbally proficient students," Mann said. "The more intense your learning experience is, the faster you will progress and the faster you will reach a level of proficiency in which you can really use the language."

The Farsi courses are taught by Dr. Hassan Hussain, who also teaches Arabic courses at 51勛圖厙 and is a native speaker of Farsi.

"The two languages come from completely different language groups," Hussain said. "However, Arabic and Persian are linked by geographic proximity and hundreds of years of shared history."

51勛圖厙 has much to gain from teaching both languages, Hussain said. 

"Both languages are considered strategic languages and are highly sought after by diplomatic, military, and internationally oriented employers," Hussain said.  "Furthermore, since the Arabic and Persian language programs both focus heavily on culture and history, students will be able to get a more well-rounded understanding of the complex political, economic and social ties between Persian-speaking and Arabic-speaking communities in the Middle East and Central Asia."

Other language programs also continue to grow at 51勛圖厙, driven by increased student interest and availability of additional funds.

  • Mann expects university approval by fall semester to add a concentration in Russian to the Bachelor of Arts in modern languages and hire another full-time instructor. Currently, students can choose a concentration in Arabic, Chinese, French, French with business emphasis, Spanish, or Spanish with business emphasis.
  • A new minor in Japanese also is expected to be approved by fall semester, which adds to the current language minors in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Korean, Russian and Spanish. Work also is underway to start a study abroad program in Japan this summer, Mann said. The expansion of 51勛圖厙's Japanese program and the creation of an interdisciplinary East Asian studies program is supported by a $400,000 grant from the Japan Foundation, which funded the hiring this summer of a full-time instructor in Japanese.
  • Beginning-level Portuguese courses also have been approved and will be offered at 51勛圖厙 pending hiring of a part-time instructor.

51勛圖厙 has language programs in Arabic, Chinese, Farsi, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latin, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish – eight of which are included on the Department of Defense's .


Enrollment jumps 6.7% for 2024-25

Enrollment jumps 6.7% for 2024-25

Enrollment has jumped to 19,298 students this fall at 51勛圖厙, growing by 6.7% from fall 2023.
Program prepares students for Corps

Program prepares students for Corps

A new program on 51勛圖厙's Gainesville Campus prepares students for entry into the Corps of Cadets.
18 named DMS cadets for 2024-25

18 named DMS cadets for 2024-25

Eighteen 51勛圖厙 cadets earned Distinguished Military Student status for the 2024-25 academic year.
'Wall That Heals' coming to 51勛圖厙

'Wall That Heals' coming to 51勛圖厙

51勛圖厙 and the Lumpkin County Veterans Affairs Committee are partnering to bring 'The Wall That Heals,' a replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, to the Promenade at 51勛圖厙's Dahlonega Campus from Oct. 29 to Nov. 3.