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ON THE COVER:
Diane Goldberg describes three language immersion programs and finds out how they are designed to maximize the learning experience.

The November 2002 issue offers:

WORLD LANGUAGES: Language academies are sometimes regarded as ineffectual institutions operated by elitist cliques who are out of touch with the real words on the street. Is this reputation justified? Ben Ward investigates.

BILINGUALISM: Steven Donahue talks to Francois Thibaut of The Language Workshop for Children in Manhattan about unlocking the secrets to successfully raising a multilingual child.

HERITAGE LANGUAGES: Michael Greto
reports on the rapid growth of interest in Italian as a second language in the U.S.

SPECIAL REPORT: Kevin Revolinski experiences oral tradition firsthand during his conversation with a Maya Daykeeper in Guatemala.

DIALECTS: Thomas E. Murray describes the factors that have placed St. Louis at the center of a rich and changing mixture of dialect features.

CONFERENCE REPORT: Brian Kluepfel reports from "Translation and the Reproduction of Culture" conference, held last month at The University of California, Irvine.

ELECTRONIC EDUCATION: Barry Bakin continues his look at lessons for the one-computer classroom.

ITALY: Adrian Bridgwater spent a year in Rome discovering the delights of the Italian language and a pizza or two.

LANGUAGE TRAVEL: Learning a new language can be very rewarding. Studying a language while surrounded by native speakers is probably the best experience of all, explains Mark Franks



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