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PredictorX1 t1_j9doakg wrote

I'm curious as to the retention of foreign language skills for graduating seniors in New York.

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LakeCowPig t1_j9dzmec wrote

The answer is 0

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endertricity t1_j9e15p8 wrote

I took 7 years of French in NYC public schools and speak it well enough to vacation alone in France and talk to family there who barely speak any English. It’s rare but it happens

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LivingGhost371 t1_j9f8w8l wrote

If it's like my experience taking four years of French in high school, no one, not the teachers, not the parents, and not the students, were under the delusion that we'd be sitting down in a French cafe having in-depth conversations with the locals, or even that we'd find it useful in general. You could pass the class and check if off on your college application if you could write down that "bathroom" = "la salle des bain" on a test with being nowhere actually fluent.

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FoldyHole t1_j9fmj99 wrote

I learned more Spanish working construction in Texas than I did in 4 years of classes.

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The_Noremac42 t1_j9ep1ek wrote

I live in Texas, and my high-school required two years of foreign language classes. It was a small school, so the only one offered was Spanish. I retained maybe ten words after that first summer, and the only reason I passed the second year was because of google translate.

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icedrift t1_j9equiv wrote

Personally my comprehension is still decent and speaking is horrible. If you don't use it you lose it BUT after taking 7 years of Spanish classes I'm confident I could pick up a romance language pretty quickly if I had to.

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