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Salford plan to axe Italian gets tongue-lashing

Students and academics have condemned the University of Salford鈥檚 plans to shut down its Italian department, warning of damage to British graduate skills in a globalised economy.

Published on
May 16, 2012
Last updated
May 11, 2015

The proposal to close the department 鈥 which the university said could lead to the loss of up to four jobs 鈥 is currently subject to a 90-day consultation period, which closes on 25 June.

A Salford spokesman said the university had 鈥渇ound it difficult to support the expense of teaching the current programme鈥, which has around 70 undergraduate and postgraduate students.

In a letter published in tomorrow鈥檚 issue of 探花视频, concern over the move is voiced by academic signatories led by Charles Burdett, chair of the Society for Italian Studies and reader in modern Italian studies at the University of Bristol, and John Dickie, professor of Italian at University College London.

An online petition to save the subject has attracted more than 1,300 signatures, they say.

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The signatories write that the proposal 鈥渙ccurs at a time when鈥 great deal of public attention has centred on the need for British graduates to develop their language skills in an increasingly globalised economy鈥.

They add that the closure plan 鈥渋s even more saddening because Salford openly acknowledges the undeniable quality of its Italian teaching and research鈥.

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In a letter published in the Salford student newspaper, students in the Italian department say that 鈥渁s a university which is part of the EU Translation Network, it seems vastly counter-productive to go forward into the 2012-13 academic year offering only three European languages鈥.

They add that Italian 鈥渋s not studied in many other UK higher educational institutions鈥 and that to remove it 鈥渨ould render the university just like any other in this country, offering the standard and banal range of French, Spanish and German as available European languages, thus lessening interest in the university as a place of study for European languages鈥.

The Salford spokesman said: 鈥淲e are committed to providing a wide range of courses which meet the needs of employers and demand from applicants.

鈥淲e review all of our courses continually, and are currently proposing to narrow the range while maintaining the quality of language courses we offer, as we have found it difficult to support the expense of teaching the current programme.

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鈥淲e will, however, continue our strong tradition of teaching major world languages and of translation studies.鈥

john.morgan@tsleducation.com

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