The Shocking Statistics: A Steep Plunge in Foreign Language Enrollments
Recent data paints a stark picture of the foreign language enrollment decline sweeping U.S. colleges and universities. According to the freshly released ACTA report, Ivory Tower of Babel: Rebuilding Language Learning in Higher Education for a More Secure and Competitive America, enrollments in foreign languages have plummeted 59% from 1965 to 2016, with an additional 17% drop between 2016 and 2021. This means fewer students are gaining proficiency in languages essential for global communication, dropping from over 1.4 million course registrations in 2016 to about 1.18 million in 2021, per the Modern Language Association (MLA) survey—the largest decline in the census's history.
Today, only 11% of institutions mandate intermediate-level foreign language study, the threshold for true communicative competence and cultural immersion. This crisis isn't isolated; overall college enrollments fell 8% in the same period, but language courses declined twice as fast, signaling a deliberate shift away from humanities.
Historical Trends: From Boom to Historic Lows
Foreign language study has deep roots in American higher education, dating back to colonial colleges where Latin and Greek were staples for a liberal arts education. Enrollments peaked in 2009 at 1.67 million, but have since cratered 29.3% by 2021, returning to 1998 levels. The ratio of language course enrollments to total postsecondary students hit a historic low of 6.5 per 100 in 2021, down from 16.5 in 1965.
Two-year colleges have been hit hardest, with a 24.2% drop (44.3% since 2009), compared to 14.7% at four-year institutions. Public colleges saw steeper declines than private ones, exacerbating access issues for underserved students. Between 2016 and 2021, 961 fewer programs were offered, with introductory courses vanishing fastest.
Languages Most Affected: Spanish, French, and German Lead the Losses
Spanish remains dominant at 584,453 enrollments (49.4% of total), but fell 18%. French dropped 23.1% to 135,088, German a devastating 33.6% to 53,543—once the third most popular. Italian (-20.4%), Arabic (-27.4%), and Latin (-21.5%) also suffered, while less commonly taught languages (LCTLs) declined 6.8% overall.
- Institutions offering German: down 172
- French: down 164
- Chinese: down 105
Twenty Indigenous languages disappeared from offerings.
Unpacking the Causes: Budgets, STEM Shift, and More
Financial pressures top the list, with language departments first on the chopping block amid humanities cuts post-2009 recession. The STEM boom diverts students to "practical" majors, while weakened general education standards eliminate requirements—only 11% now demand intermediate proficiency. K-12 pipeline issues mean fewer prepared students enter college.
Recent federal Title VI cuts in 2025-2026 have suspended programs at Harvard, UW-Madison, threatening less common languages.
Read the full ACTA report for deeper analysis.Campus Closures: Real-World Program Eliminations
Hundreds of programs have vanished. West Virginia University axed all foreign language majors; University of Connecticut eyes cuts. Federal funding freezes exacerbated 2025 losses, with FLAS fellowships halted, impacting 50+ students at some schools.
| Institution | Programs Cut | Year |
|---|---|---|
| West Virginia U. | All foreign languages | 2023 |
| Harvard | FLAS language study | 2025-26 |
| UW-Madison | Multiple LCTLs | 2025 |
These cuts hit two-year colleges hardest, limiting transfer pathways.
National Security Risks: A Multilingual Shortfall
The ACTA report warns of dire consequences: 15% vacancy in language-designated diplomatic posts, 24% underqualified. Multilingual workers earn premiums, yet shortages plague intel, military, business. With 80% monolingual Americans vs. Europe's 25%, U.S. global edge erodes.
Check ACTA's language requirement toolAI's Double-Edged Sword in Language Education
AI translators like ChatGPT tempt students to skip classes, accelerating decline. Yet, tools can personalize vocab drills, freeing time for advanced cultural study. Experts urge integration: AI for basics, humans for nuance.
Success Stories: Korean and ASL Buck the Trend
Korean surged 38.3% to 19,270, fueled by K-pop; ASL stable at 107,899 due to interpreter demand. Institutions with strong support, career ties thrive. Link languages to business or faculty positions in interdisciplinary fields.
Voices from the Trenches: Faculty, Admins, Students
MLA's Paula Krebs: Declines from job-training rhetoric. ACTA's Veronica Bryant: "Language knowledge strengthens careers... yet colleges dismantle programs." Students seek practical value; admins cite budgets.
Check Rate My Professor for standout language instructors.
Solutions Roadmap: Reviving Language Study
ACTA recommends intermediate requirements, consortia via their grad map. Integrate with STEM/business; boost K-12 pipeline; leverage Title VI wisely despite cuts.
- Reinstate gen ed mandates
- Hybrid AI-human models
- Career-focused certificates
- Inter-institutional sharing
Explore higher ed career advice for language pros.
Future Outlook and Call to Action
Without intervention, gaps widen amid global tensions. Trustees: audit requirements via What Will They Learn? Students, faculty: advocate. AcademicJobs.com connects you to higher ed jobs, university jobs, professor jobs, and career advice. Revive languages for a competitive America.






