College of Languages and Cultures
“The College of Languages and Cultures consists of seven majors: Korean Language and Literature, Cultural Anthropology, Culture Contents, Chinese Studies, Japanese Studies, English Language and Culture, and French Studies.
These seven majors are all focused on their respective language and culture.
The fact that the colleges features such a variety of languages and cultures from around the world, including Korea, China, Japan, England, America, and France, is an indicator of the university’s commitment toward international culture and diversity.
However, the college does not pursue pure academics on language and culture in the traditional sense.
Among the seven majors, the curriculum of the Department of Cultural Anthropology puts culture at the forefront, and it has a practical curriculum focused on media anthropology planning and production practice, cultural industry theory and planning practice, and archaeological science seminars. As for the Department of Culture Contents, since it covers the breadth of the culture, it features industry-linked and practical courses on planning cultural content, managing cultural content, practical writing for multimedia, and the basics of photography/filming.
In the case of the Chinese Department, it goes beyond the old Chinese literature department and offers a curriculum that covers the Chinese commerce, Chinese politics, modern Chinese economy, as well as the investment environment and market in China.
The Department of Japanese Studies offers a curriculum that looks at the Japanese language in multimedia, cooperation between the Japanese economy and East Asia, Japan and the international community, Japanese companies and craftsmanship, etc. to promote a broader understanding of Japanese studies in general.
Meanwhile, the Department of French Studies has a local semester program at the University of Paris 8, a summer holiday program led by French professors, and DELF test preparation classes. In particular, the program offers a practical, field-oriented curriculum that includes French, French urban cultural management, French-speaking regional studies, and French-speaking cultural seminars.
The Department of Korean Language and Literature and the Department of English Language and Culture, which have traditionally led the language and culture education in Korean universities, also have more comprehensive programs similar to those available at other departments.
The Department of Korean Language and Literature teaches theories and practical skills related to popular literature or popular culture, and goes beyond traditional creative methods such as writing poetry and novels to creating scenarios for fairy tales, movies, advertisements, dramas, and games.
The Department of English Language and Culture has a practical curriculum aimed at developing each student's various capabilities in both language and culture, including the basics of interpretation, practical English writing, language capacity building, inter-cultural communication, understanding American pop culture, and translation practice.
More importantly, in keeping with the trends of the times, the College of Languages and Cultures is creating new courses such as coding, AI, data science, and blockchain either independently or in collaboration (code-sharing) with the College of Computing.
Also, the college is developing and operating new educational platforms and methods using IC-PBL, IAB, Telepresence, and YouTube.
The educational goal of the college, which highlights the importance of communication with society, is to deliver ‘practical education’ that combines technology, marketing, trade, and politics on the university’s existing foundation for language and cultural studies to establish an identity that is unique to the college.
The goal, ultimately, would be to create a college that is focused on creating value for primarily for students.”