Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The American Literary Translators Association (ALTA) was co-founded by Rainer Schulte and A. Leslie Willson in 1978 at The University of Texas at Dallas. [1] ALTA's own scholarly journal, Translation Review, was also founded in 1978 and has been published regularly ever since.
This is a list of notable translator and interpreter organizations (professional associations, not commercial translation agencies) around the world. Most of them are International Federation of Translators members as well.
Westwood College was a private for-profit college owned by Alta Colleges Inc. with 15 campus locations in five states and online learning options. Westwood was nationally accredited by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools (ACICS). [1] Since its inception in 1986, Westwood graduated more than 37,000 students.
Schools are listed by country and by state or province. Within each geographic division, primary and secondary schools are listed first; colleges and universities are listed second. Any of the thousands of commercial or unaccredited ventures that offer online courses should be listed elsewhere, under their relevant categories.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The full report is free to ATA members. An Executive Summary is available at no cost to non-members. The ATA Compass is a free e-publication for buyers of translation and interpreting services. Translation: Getting it Right; Interpreting: Getting it Right; ATA Scholarly Monograph Series—Published annually by John Benjamins.
LanguageLine Solutions is an American company headquartered in Monterey, California. It provides on-demand and onsite language interpretation and document translation services worldwide for law enforcement, healthcare organizations, legal courts, schools, and businesses in over 240 languages. [1] LanguageLine claims to have more than 28,000 ...
There are many interpreter-training programs in the U.S. The Collegiate Commission on Interpreter Education is the body that accredits Interpreter Preparation Programs. A list of accredited programs can be found on the CCIE web site. [37] Some countries have more than one national association due to regional or language differences. [38]