Interpreter Preparation Program, A.A.
Colorado Community College System
Key Information
Campus location
Denver, USA
Languages
English
Study format
On-Campus
Duration
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Pace
Full time
Tuition fees
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Application deadline
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Earliest start date
Sep 2023
Scholarships
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Introduction
FRCC has an exciting new AA degree with a general associate degree with an American Sign Language and Deaf culture foundation. Students who complete this AA degree will obtain the required general education coursework and will have the opportunity to complete levels 1-6 of ASL and instruction in Deaf Culture, ASL discourse analysis, and an introduction to interpreting.
Students are required to begin the AA with demonstrated ASL 122 (ASL 2) competency. In the state of Colorado, obtaining this AA degree will allow students to transfer to any public four-year college with the general education requirements met by this degree as they move on to pursue a Bachelor’s degree.
Suppose a student is interested in becoming an ASL-English interpreter. In that case, this AA degree will transfer to UNC as the foundation for their BA in ASL-English interpreting, with the recent 2019 articulation agreement between the two colleges.
As the national interpreting professional organization, the Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf requires a four-year degree for national certification. FRCC decided to develop a two-year language and culture foundation AA degree to prepare future interpreters best. An articulation with UNC is now in place to support the interpreting field’s best practices for training interpreters within a Bachelor of Arts context.
For students intrigued by ASL and Deaf Culture who are unsure what they would like to pursue in college, this AA degree is a perfect foundation that will transfer to a four-year college to fulfil the general education requirements as the student pursues their desired major.
Some students may find that this general AA prepares them to work directly with Deaf individuals in supportive roles such as school paraprofessional, child care provider, health and human services provider, recreation instructor, etc. Knowing American Sign Language and understanding Deaf culture allows students to have unique supportive skills for direct communication (but not interpreting) in their work.
This AA degree does not prepare a student to become an interpreter upon graduation. For a student interested in becoming an interpreter, they will need to transfer to a four-year interpreting program. The FRCC-UNC articulation is an excellent way to continue to learn the skills of interpreting.
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