foreign language a good soft? Forum
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foreign language a good soft?
I read somewhere on here that knowing a foreign language is a good soft? Does anyone agree, have any evidence for this. I just know Swedish, a language that is only known by about 11 million people, so I don't think it would help me. Thoughts/Suggestions are very welcome.
Thanks!
Thanks!
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- Raskolnikoff
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
uhm.. diversity, ability to communicate with clients that speak it.nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- Helmholtz
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
lolRaskolnikoff wrote:ability to communicate with clients that speak it.
- capitalacq
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
it doesn't hurt... and it won't really matterdajja15 wrote:I read somewhere on here that knowing a foreign language is a good soft? Does anyone agree, have any evidence for this. I just know Swedish, a language that is only known by about 11 million people, so I don't think it would help me. Thoughts/Suggestions are very welcome.
Thanks!
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
just because I read it on a couple different posts, i didn't think so I was just wondering.
- Helmholtz
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
All else equal, a foreign language would get you accepted over somebody else.
- You Gotta Have Faith
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
When interviewing/visiting one of the schools I applied to last year, they actually asked about it, as it was on the resume, and thought it was cool (I had translated for an event at one point).dajja15 wrote:I read somewhere on here that knowing a foreign language is a good soft? Does anyone agree, have any evidence for this. I just know Swedish, a language that is only known by about 11 million people, so I don't think it would help me. Thoughts/Suggestions are very welcome.
Thanks!
So I think it is a unique soft. It won't get you numbers, but definitely make a note of it. Also, an off-beat language, such as Swedish, is sometimes considered even more unique.
- nematoad
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
if your planning on doing international law hell yeah it does, no question. but even just the diversity factor will give you some brownie points. but i'd imagine knowing only one (other than anglais) won't set you apart. you have to know 2 even 3 to really get a big boost.
- Helmholtz
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
Have you ever read Anna Ivey's account of when she worked in international law? I think she dealt with German corporations although she never left the states once to conduct business. Every single one of the people she had to interact with who was from Germany could speak fluent English. Everyone. This is how it is. Even if OP gets to conduct corporate business with Swedish firms while headquartered in the US (which is probably a huge longshot anyway) the chance that any fluency might come in handy or would help find OP find a job is about nil.nematoad wrote:if your planning on doing international law hell yeah it does, no question. but even just the diversity factor will give you some brownie points. but i'd imagine knowing only one (other than anglais) won't set you apart. you have to know 2 even 3 to really get a big boost.
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
Too bad Swedes usually know English better than most Americans.Raskolnikoff wrote:uhm.. diversity, ability to communicate with clients that speak it.nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- Raskolnikoff
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
Doesn't mean that had she spoken fluent German, it would not have been a big plus. It is a client-serving business.Helmholtz wrote:Have you ever read Anna Ivey's account of when she worked in international law? I think she dealt with German corporations although she never left the states once to conduct business. Every single one of the people she had to interact with who was from Germany could speak fluent English. Everyone.
- You Gotta Have Faith
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
I more or less agree that in practice it might not likely make much difference at all unless you really hone in on working in that particular country, etc.Helmholtz wrote:Have you ever read Anna Ivey's account of when she worked in international law? I think she dealt with German corporations although she never left the states once to conduct business. Every single one of the people she had to interact with who was from Germany could speak fluent English. Everyone. This is how it is. Even if OP gets to conduct corporate business with Swedish firms while headquartered in the US (which is probably a huge longshot anyway) the chance that any fluency might come in handy or would help find OP find a job is about nil.nematoad wrote:if your planning on doing international law hell yeah it does, no question. but even just the diversity factor will give you some brownie points. but i'd imagine knowing only one (other than anglais) won't set you apart. you have to know 2 even 3 to really get a big boost.
But I think from the strict standpoint of applying to schools, it will be viewed as a plus. It doesn't up the OP's numbers or anything like that. But it's something. It would be more unique to talk about the diversity experiences that brought OP to actually knowing that language.
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- Helmholtz
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
She knew German but never got the chance to speak it because all of the clients preferred speaking in English.Raskolnikoff wrote:Doesn't mean that had she spoken fluent German, it would not have been a big plus. It is a client-serving business.Helmholtz wrote:Have you ever read Anna Ivey's account of when she worked in international law? I think she dealt with German corporations although she never left the states once to conduct business. Every single one of the people she had to interact with who was from Germany could speak fluent English. Everyone.
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
I would be dramatically more effective in my job if I could speak Spanish. If I were hiring a person for my job, I would not accept anyone not fluent in Spanish. If I were hiring anyone for public interest law in a city, I would only consider people fluent in Spanish.Raskolnikoff wrote:uhm.. diversity, ability to communicate with clients that speak it.nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- You Gotta Have Faith
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
You'd be surprised. Among the well-traveled and educated, certainly they are very fluent. And indeed, almost everyone speaks a reasonable amount of English. But not as much as one might think.Desert Fox wrote:Too bad Swedes usually know English better than most Americans.Raskolnikoff wrote:uhm.. diversity, ability to communicate with clients that speak it.nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- nematoad
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
never read it, but, i guess i can't argue with her account.Helmholtz wrote:Have you ever read Anna Ivey's account of when she worked in international law? I think she dealt with German corporations although she never left the states once to conduct business. Every single one of the people she had to interact with who was from Germany could speak fluent English. Everyone. This is how it is. Even if OP gets to conduct corporate business with Swedish firms while headquartered in the US (which is probably a huge longshot anyway) the chance that any fluency might come in handy or would help find OP find a job is about nil.nematoad wrote:if your planning on doing international law hell yeah it does, no question. but even just the diversity factor will give you some brownie points. but i'd imagine knowing only one (other than anglais) won't set you apart. you have to know 2 even 3 to really get a big boost.
however, knowing the native tongue of who you're doing business with is more than just a communication tool, it's a great sign of respect and can make interaction more fluid and conducive to the business at hand.
with europe, i agree, everyone and their mother knows english. i dont think the same can be said for the middle east or asia, both of which are coming more into the scope of intl relations.
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
For Swedes its like 9/10. Many grad programs are taught exclusively in English in Sweden. They are also completely free.You Gotta Have Faith wrote:You'd be surprised. Among the well-traveled and educated, certainly they are very fluent. And indeed, almost everyone speaks a reasonable amount of English. But not as much as one might think.Desert Fox wrote:Too bad Swedes usually know English better than most Americans.Raskolnikoff wrote:uhm.. diversity, ability to communicate with clients that speak it.nycparalegal wrote:I'm curious why would this be a good soft?
- General Tso
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
I think a foreign language is a soft that will keep you on par with your competition, but it's not anything that will blow an admissions person away. Nobody on the adcom is going to scream "HOLD ON NOW FELLAS WE GOTTA SWEDISH SPEAKER HERE!!"
- UFMatt
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
It's probably a much bigger benefit when job hunting. For law admissions, not so much.
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Re: foreign language a good soft?
thanks everyone for their replies, helped a lot. I'm a engineering/physics major so I am going into patent law (hopefully), so I don't think Swedish will help on the job, ha.
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