Interagency Language Roundtable

Interagency Language Roundtable
Agency overview
Formed 1955
Employees 10 Officers
Agency executive
  • Dr. Scott McGinnis, ILR Coordinator & Chief, Steering Committee
Website www.govtilr.org/

The Interagency Language Roundtable (ILR) is an unfunded organization comprising various agencies of the United States Federal Government with the purpose of coordinating and sharing information on foreign language activities at the federal level.

The ILR's primary function is to act as an avenue for the varying participating federal agencies to keep abreast of modern methods and technology regarding the teaching of language, the use of language, and any other language related issues.

Membership

The ILR membership consists of a large number of people with professional interest in language with regards to the teaching, learning, or use of language in a professional context. About 60% of the membership are federal employees.[1]

Regularly Attending Entities
Government Agencies and Offices Academic Organizations, Proprietary Institutions and Other NGOs

Committees

Aside from general membership, the ILR has three standing special interests committees:

Committees are chaired by federal employees from five different agencies.

Additionally, the ILR hosts the ILR Special Interest Group (SIG) on the Center for Advanced Study of Language (CASL). CASL SIG meetings, unlike ILR plenary meetings, are not open to general membership, allowing only federal representatives in attendance.

Joining the ILR

Any interested person may attend unrestricted ILR plenary meetings and events, requiring only two days advance registration via the ILR home page. To become an ILR member, a person must first join their mailing list. Joining a specific committee requires only notifying a co-chair of the committee involved, and regularly attending meetings. Further details are listed on the ILR website. Membership is free.

Meetings

Plenary meetings are held monthly between September and June. Lectures and demonstrations on linguistic general interest topics are featured at every plenary meeting. Prior to each plenary meeting, each committee meets to discuss specific topics of interest. Some committee meetings are not open to general membership, due to coverage of certain topics of federal interest. These meetings' attendance restrictions are announced in advance.

Most plenary meetings boast between 75 and 100 attendees.

Officers

All officers of the ILR are volunteers who hold full-time federal positions elsewhere.

Current Officers[2]
Office Officer
ILR Coordinator and Chair of the Steering Committee Scott McGinnis
Co-chair, Testing Committee Christina Hoffman
Co-chair, Testing Committee Inna Sabia
Co-chair, Training Committee Doug Gilzow
Co-chair, Training Committee John Samaha
Co-chair, Translation and Interpretation Committee Maria Brau
Co-chair, Translation and Interpretation Committee Teresa Salazar
Co-chair, Culture Committee Allison Greene-Sands
Co-chair, Culture Committee Ewa Zeoli
Co-chair, UARC SIG Marsha Kaplan
Co-chair, UARC SIG Stephanie Stauffer
Webmaster Dr. Bogdan B. Sagatov

The Foreign Service Institute, the National Cryptologic School, and the Defense Language Institute lend additional minor clerical assistance.

Formation

The origins of the ILR can be traced back to 1955, when the Foreign Service Institute's Howard Sollenberger, the CIA's Clyde Sargent, and James Frith of the Air Force Language Program, conversed regarding the need for communication and coordination between federal agencies in training, policies, and practices of foreign languages.

Subsequent meetings included attendance by members of the local academic community as well as Charles Ferguson, Director of the Center for Applied Linguistics.

The ILR was formally institutionalized in 1973, after a study conducted by the General Accounting Office demonstrated the value of the organization.

Contributions to the Field of Linguistics

Since the 1950s, the ILR has made a number of contributions to the field of linguistics, both for American and foreign linguists, including, but not limited to:[3]

See also

References

External links

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