Admission
List of Foreign Languages
Course sequences that fulfill the Foreign Language requirement may be offered in the languages listed below. Students should consult the departmental course descriptions for specific courses. Students interested in less frequently taught languages must confer directly with the appropriate department; availability of multiple semesters in these languages cannot be guaranteed.
Please note that the Foreign Language requirement for students in the College differs from the World Languages and Cultures requirement for the campus-wide General Education curriculum. Fulfillment of the CASE Foreign Language requirement for B.A. and B.F.A. degrees will, in most cases, also fulfill the campus-wide General Education World Languages and Cultures requirement.
For information on the College's Foreign Language requirement, please see Foreign Language Requirement. For information on the campus-wide General Education's World Languages and Cultures requirement, please see gened.iub.edu.
- Akan (Linguistics)
- American Sign Language (Speech and Hearing Sciences)
- Arabic (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures)
- Azerbaijani (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Bamana (Linguistics)
- Bengali (India Studies)
- Chinese—Mandarin (East Asian Languages and Cultures)
- Croatian (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Czech (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Dutch (Germanic Studies)
- Estonian (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Finnish (Central Eurasian Studies)
- French (French and Italian)
- German (Germanic Studies)
- Greek—Classical (Classical Studies) or Modern (West European Studies)
- Haitian Creole (Latin American and Caribbean Studies)
- Hausa (Linguistics)
- Hebrew (Biblical, Modern) (Jewish Studies)
- Hindi (India Studies)
- Hungarian (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Italian (French and Italian)
- Japanese (East Asian Languages and Cultures)
- Kazakh (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Korean (East Asian Languages and Cultures)
- Lakota (Sioux) (Anthropology)
- Latin—Classical (Classical Studies)
- Mongolian (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Norwegian (Germanic Studies)
- Pashto (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Persian (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Polish (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Portuguese (Spanish and Portuguese)
- Quechua (Latin American and Caribbean Studies)
- Romanian (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Russian (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Sanskrit (India Studies)
- Serbian (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
- Spanish (Spanish and Portuguese)
- Swahili (Linguistics)
- Tajik (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Tibetan (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Turkish (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Turkmen (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Urdu (India Studies)
- Uyghur (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Uzbek (Central Eurasian Studies)
- Wolof (Linguistics)
- Yiddish (Germanic Studies)
- Zulu (Linguistics)