WASHINGTON — From April 18-28, American Councils for International Education hosted Idris Rai, PhD, the newly appointed vice-chan
Category: Africa and the Middle East
Teachers of Critical Languages Program (TCLP)
Teachers from China, Egypt, Morocco, and Taiwan spend an academic year teaching Arabic or Mandarin in a U.S. K-12 school.
The Teachers of Critical Languages Program (TCLP) is a multi-layered cross-cultural program sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs at the U.S. Department of State.
American Councils recruits and places English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers from China, Egypt, Morocco, and Taiwan within American secondary schools where they teach their native language and culture. Through TCLP, each party involved is positively impacted: American students develop appreciation for and fluency with the critical languages of Mandarin and Arabic, exchange teachers improve their English which intensifies the depth of their home school's EFL curriculum, American and exchange teachers develop partnerships and share both resources and teaching methods, and all students and teachers form a deeper understanding of others' cultures.
American Councils designs and implements an extended two-week orientation that prepares exchange teachers for classroom teaching and life in America, coordinates a three-day professional development workshop for foreign language teachers, provides monthly stipends and medical insurance, and, in addition to ongoing program monitoring and support, visits hosted teachers at their U.S. communities throughout the year. TCLP, administered by American Councils for International Education, is a program of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State.
Funded byU.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
Program FundingFully funded
EligibilityEnglish teachers from China, Egypt and Morocco; U.S. elementary and secondary-level schools interested in starting or strengthening programs in Mandarin or Arabic.
- Programs
Exceptional high school students from countries around the world spend a year as an exchange student in the U.S., attending high school and living with an American host family.
- Programs
U.S. high school students spend a summer or academic year immersed in a critical world language and culture.
- ProgramsThe Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) Program provides fully funded immersive summer programs for U.S. undergraduate and graduate students to learn languages of strategic importance to the United States’ national security, economic prosperity, and engagement with the world.
- Africa and the Middle EastWhile American Councils has worked with local partners in Senegal since 2007, AC Senegal officially opened its doors in Dakar in 2015. The capital city of Dakar is located on the Atlantic Coast and is home to nearly 3 million residents in the metropolitan area.