Schools Berkeley Mathematics Graduate School

AI Thread Summary
Berkeley's Mathematics Ph.D. program requires students to learn two of three languages: French, German, or Russian. While some programs may only require a few semesters of language study or translation of math journals, Berkeley mandates language exams. However, fluency is not necessary; students need only be able to translate academic papers using a dictionary. This requirement has prompted some students to actively learn the languages, leading to unique experiences, such as studying abroad. For detailed requirements, the Grad Student Handbook is recommended as a resource.
JasonJo
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I was looking on Berkeley's Mathematics Grad School requirements for Ph.D students, and they require you learn 2 of 3 languages: French, German and Russian. anyone go to Berkeley and can confirm this??
 
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From what I have seen, many Math Ph.D programs in the US seem to require at least 1 of: French, German, Russian.

I believe Berkeley actually requires you to take language exams. However, some schools just require you to have taken 3 or 4 semesters of the foreign language, and others want you to translate a few pages of some math journal from whatever language to English.
 
do you take the language exams/courses in grad school or in undergrad?
 
JasonJo said:
I was looking on Berkeley's Mathematics Grad School requirements for Ph.D students, and they require you learn 2 of 3 languages: French, German and Russian. anyone go to Berkeley and can confirm this??
It is true...sort of. You don't have to be fluent in the languages. You essentially only have to be able to translate a foreign paper into English while using a dictionary. That's the "test". It's not anywhere near as bad as it sounds.

Of course that doesn't mean you should avoid actually learning a language well. When I saw that requirement a couple years back, I started learning German. Now I'm studying here in Berlin. Funny where math takes you.
 
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