Career and study advisors and HEIs

Supporting language proficiency during higher education studies

To ensure students have the necessary skills for working life after graduation, their language proficiency must be developed at various stages of their studies.
Four people collaborating at a table with notebooks and a plant, next to a window with natural light.

Before studies begin

New students are offered orientation material for learning and studying Finnish and Swedish before their studies begin.

Higher education community and structures to support learning

The atmosphere and operating culture of a higher education institution are important in helping international students learn the national languages of Finland.

Support for students in English-language degree programmes

The English-language degree programmes face two key challenges:
1) How to enable the study of the national languages as part of the degree programme
2) How the student can use their developing Finnish/Swedish language proficiency during their studies

How to tackle these challenges:

Support for students and advanced students in Finnish (B2 language proficiency level)

For those studying in a Finnish-language degree programme, the challenge is how to further develop their language proficiency. Even if the student is able to manage in Finnish in their studies, they still need support to progress from simply managing to achieving the nuance and precise expression required for expert tasks. 

These methods can be used to support the development of language proficiency:

After graduation

Graduates of English-language degree programmes often find it difficult to find employment in Finland. One way to make the transition easier is to offer language studies even after graduation. A very good time to supplement language studies is while seeking employment. 

On the other hand, it is often difficult for employers to organise suitably targeted language teaching so that they can recruit an international expert whose language proficiency is only just developing. Sometimes even sector-specific language teaching provided by higher education institutions can be a decisive factor in an employer’s recruiting decision.

The opportunity offered to alumni to supplement their language studies can also be seen as a competitive advantage: the higher education institution wants to take care of its alumni and support them at the beginning of their career.

Read how Metropolia University of Applied Sciences offers its alumni free studies

Language PSP helps to encourage learning Finnish and Swedish

Kati Järvinen from the University of Helsinki considers Language PSP of the Kielibuusti (Language Boost) project a good way to bring up language skills with international experts.

Kati Järvinen

The only way to learn Finnish is by speaking it

Hitomi Tabuchi and Massiel of the MONIKA – Multicultural Women’s Association describe why Finnish is the only language spoken in their workplace.

Monika-Naiset employees

Tomy: Speaking Finnish in professional life requires courage

Teacher Tomy Cherian tells how language skills can develop alongside work in a bilingual workplace.

Tomy Cherian

Aleksei: A bold plunge into a Finnish-language work environment helps in learning the language

Aleksei Anisimov, who works in the IT sector, describes the things that have helped and supported him in learning Finnish. 

Aleksei Anisimov

©2024 Johanna Komppa, Inkeri Lehtimaja ja Milka Toikko

 

Korkeakouluopiskelijan kielituettu polku, syyskuu 2024, jonka tekijät ovat Johanna Komppa, Inkeri Lehtimaja ja Milka Toikko, on lisensoitu Creative Commons Nimeä 4.0 Kansainvälinen -lisenssillä. Materiaali on saatavilla osoitteessa kielibuusti.fi.

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