Full Scholarship Program for High School Students Promotes Study of Strategic Languages Abroad
New York (December 22, 2008) – The National Security Language Initiative for Youth (NSLI-Y) program is offering 550 full scholarships to U.S. high school students to study abroad and learn languages that most students do not have opportunities to learn, but are rapidly becoming critical to know. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, Youth Programs Division, NSLI-Y is designed to increase American citizens’ capacity to engage foreign governments and peoples through the critical languages of Arabic, Chinese, Farsi, Hindi, Korean, Russian, and Turkish.
The program is administered by a team of organizations including AFS-USA, American Councils for International Education, Concordia Language Villages, and iEARN-USA. Together, they will award U.S. government funding in the form of full scholarships to 550 U.S. high school and just-graduated students (ages 15–18) to participate in summer (6-8 weeks), one-semester, and full-year language programs in countries where these languages are widely spoken.
“Recent years have demonstrated how important it is that Americans learn languages of countries that will be prominent in the 21st century,” noted Lisa Choate, Vice President of the American Councils for International Education. “Students in this scholarship program will be well-positioned for careers in a wide range of fields.”