|

"...in
language study, as in life, if a person is the same today as he was
yesterday, it would be an act of mercy to pronounce him dead, and to
place him in a coffin rather than in a classroom."
-John A.
Rassias, A Philosophy of Language Instruction, 1967.
Director of Language
Programs for Peace Corps at Dartmouth from 1964 to
1968, in French and other languages spoken in Cameroon, Chad, Gabon,
Guinea, Côte d'Ivoire, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Togo, Burkina
Faso
(formerly Upper Volta).
Formally addressed Peace Corps Language Coordinators conferences and
conducted workshops in various States, as well as in Canada, Cameroon,
Guinea, Côte d'Ivoire, Nigeria, Senegal, Sweden, Togo, Burkina
Faso (Upper Volta), and in Micronesia (Saipan), from 1964 to 1977.
Directed the first pilot operation for in-country training for the
Peace Corps in the Ivory Coast in 1966.
Endowed Chair: William R. Kenan Professor, 1977
Palmes Académiques from the
French Government for "originality in instruction and the success of
the enterprise," 1978
Special demonstrations of
teaching techniques to visiting scholars from the Peoples' Republic of
China, 1973 and 1981.
Directed pilot program in Spanish for New York City Transit Police,
1978-79. Citation: "To a great teacher, enthusiast and humanist whose
concern for cultural understanding led to the New York City Transit
Police-Dartmouth College Language Program," conferred by Chief Stanley
Garelik, 1979.
Appointed to President Carter's Commission on Foreign Language and
International Studies, September 1978. Participated in Commission
meetings and public hearings nationally. Member of the special
writing team to draft the final report of the Commission at Aspen,
Colorado, July 1979 and issued in November 1979, entitled: Strength Through Wisdom: A Critique of
U.S. Capability. A Report to the President from the President's
Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies.
Certificate of Merit from New York City Transit Police Hispanic
Society, Inc., for "nurturing unique
understanding of the Hispanic Community within and through a
'Rassified' Humanism of language...." 1982.
Completed an 11-hour series of televised courses ("Contact French") in
France for the CBS/FOX company in 1982. The series is being distributed
by the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Trained all City of Baltimore's high school foreign language teachers
in the Method, 1984-85. Honorary Citizenship of the City of Baltimore
and Mayorâs citation "for contributions to the civic
welfare...[and] as an earnest expression of appreciation...for the
splendid quality of public service rendered," conferred by Mayor Donald
Schaeffer.
Directed pilot program for Federal Law Enforcement agents in Spanish in
Glynco, Georgia, 1983-84-85. Program running in full force to present
with hundreds of agents trained through the Rassias methodology.
Certificate of Appreciation issued in 1985 for "...professional
contributions, personal interest, and dedication in [the]
implementation of the Law Enforcement Spanish Training Program of the
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center," conferred by Director Charles
T. Reinkovich.
Special demonstrations of teaching techniques to visiting scholars from
the Peoples' Republic of China, 1973 and 1981, and to Bulgarian
delegations visiting United States, 1985.
Publisher and Executive Editor of THE RAM's HORN, publication of the
Rassias Foundation.
Delivered lectures and conducted Methodology workshops in Hong Kong and
Tokyo (1986), and to Greek teachers of English and Greek in Athens and
Thessaloniki, Greece, under auspices of the United States Information
Services. (March, 1988) Returned to Athens, Greece, on invitation
of Hellenic Centre, to offer additional lecture-workshops to language
teachers. (May, 1988)
The Italo Ponterotto memorial Award "In recognition of Teaching
Excellence...and for His Innovative Contributions to the Development of
Foreign Language Pedagogy Which Have Brought Him International Renown,"
presented by the Modern Language Department, Iona College, 1989.
Directed special program in
English for
Russian Environmentalists at Dartmouth 1987-1992. Workshop for teachers
of language and culture in Thailand, 1990.
Workshop for teachers of language and culture in Hong Kong, 1993.
Personnel from International Schools in Hong Kong and Chinese
University.
Appointed to the Modern Language Association Commission on Professional
Service, 1993-1995. The Commission produced a written document on the
state of professional service. Published by the Modern Language
Association, 1996.
Awarded grant from Corporate and University Relations, CITIBANK, for
seminar in Francophone literature and teaching methodologies for
Historically Black Colleges and Universities. (Summer 1998)
In October 1996, the United States Peace Corps honored Professor
Rassias "In recognition of your
pioneering efforts to develop the Peace Corps Language Program.
Your labor has facilitated President Kennedy's dream of men and women
serving overseas, promoting world peace and friendship. Peace
Corps is better because of your grand contribution."
(1996) N.B. To date, Peace Corps has conveyed that
more than 165,000 volunteers have been trained through the language
programs.
Robert A. Fish Award 1997 (Dartmouth College Award granted by the
Office of the Dean of the Faculty)
Workshops in Crete, Greece, and Turkey, culminating in a special
international workshop in Ankara, sponsored by the U.S. Embassies in
Sofia, Ankara, and Athens. In addition to sharing methodology
with the 70 people in attendance, its purpose was to see whether
citizens of the three countries (Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey) could
work in harmony. The experience was successful and was widely
publicized. (1998)
In 1998, he was named Chair of the Archbishop's Commission on the Study
of Greek language and Hellenic Culture in the Greek Orthodox
communities in the United States. The Commission issued its report (The Future of the Greek Language
and Culture in the United States: Survival in the Diaspora) in
May 1999.
In 1999, Professor Rassias won a statewide award for
teaching and was named the New Hampshire Professor of the year by the
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education.
Reunion and racapitulation of Peace Corps programs in Burkina Faso
(Upper Volta), which occurred at Dartmouth College in 1967 and
1969. Washington, D.C. (2001)
|