The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers majors in Polish and Russian. These majors provide students with the opportunity to study the languages, literatures, and cultures of Russia and Eastern Europe, including Poland, Ukraine, Slovakia, and Serbia. During the Fall and Spring Terms, the department offers language courses in Russian, Polish, Serbian, Slovak, and Ukrainian. Students with any prior experience with Russian or Ukrainian (such as from having spent any time at all in the former Soviet Union or from having parents who are able to speak or understand any Russian or Ukrainian at all) are required to consult with the instructor before being admitted to any language course in the department. Summer Term intensive courses in Polish, Hungarian, Slovak, Serbian, Russian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Romanian, and Ukrainian are offered. The Summer Institute, available in June, July, and the first part of August, covers an entire year of study on the first-, second, and third-year levels. For prospective majors, the institute affords the opportunity to make rapid progress through the language in order to qualify for advanced courses or study-abroad opportunities. Deserving of special mention is the department's program in Slovak language, literature, and culture - the only such program in the United States, and one that additionally offers the opportunity for several students each year to study in Slovakia. Students in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures include those whose primary interest is languages or literature, who wish to enhance their career opportunities in a special way, who have an interest in the politics and culture of Russia and Eastern Europe, and who have a desire to explore their ethnic heritage. Many Russian majors continue their studies in graduate school, or go on to careers in law, engineering, business, and government. Students of Polish, Slovak, Serbian, Ukrainian, and Russian find knowledge of those languages valuable in working in local Western Pennsylvania institutions, politics, business, health-related professions, and media because of the large population of those ethnicities in this region, which traces its roots to the various Slavic nations of Eastern Europe. Students are advised to begin language study early to gain as complete a command of the language as possible. For more information on the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures and its programs, see http://www.pitt.edu/~slavic/.
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