Redwolf wrote:
An interesting side note, from the U.S. perspective: When I was in school, we were strongly encouraged to study a foreign language or two. It was considered essential if you wanted to do much traveling, or if you hoped to have a diplomatic or international business career. French was strongly suggested at my high school as a language that, with English, would stand you in good stead in most of Europe. As the 70s progressed, Japanese also came to be emphasized as a good language for people who wanted to go into business.
The only problem was that, in most cases (including my own), Americans had no chance to use the language they began to acquire in high school (the major exception being people who had studied Spanish and who lived in states bordering Mexico). Foreign travel was just too expensive for most of us, and the jobs we ended up doing didn't put us in contact, for the most part, with people who didn't speak English (and, of course, there was no internet). Language is definitely one of those things that you lose if you don't use it. My French was once at about the same level as my Irish and, thanks to having taken years of both French and Latin, I could follow a great deal of spoken Spanish. But after around 30 years, with virtually no chance to use it, my French is pretty much gone (I actually use Latin more than I ever used French, because we often sing in Latin in church, but I'm far from being a Latin scholar).
I think Americans often get unfairly portrayed as "not being willing to learn languages," when the truth is more usually much more complicated than that.
Redwolf
I agree that Americans get a bad rap. Obviously, not all of us are blind to the world outside. But you gotta admit, a whole hell of a lot of us are, and frighteningly so.
I grew up in the US and went through all 12 years of public education in 3 different states (NY, FL, TX). I graduated in 2003. I can say that in our day, there was little to no importance placed on learning a foreign language. First off, it wasn't even an option until high school (why????), and even then, foreign language courses were electives, so you didn't even have to take one then.
Some states require a year or two for college-track individuals, but then for most students it just becomes another "useless" hurdle you have to jump over to get your diploma and get the hell out of high school.
My cousins and friends all went through 2-3 years of Spanish in high school, they live in Texas (so no excuse for not practising) and none of them can actually speak it.
I'm a bit of a language geek, so I relayed my two years of high school French into a life abroad and near-native fluency, but that is obviously the exception. The reality is that the vast majority of American anglophones are monolingual, and that's not going to change any time soon as far as I can tell.