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King Sejong Institute to create new strategy to meet surging interest in Korean language

Speakers and panelists at the King Sejong Institute Innovation Forum pose for a photo at the Science and Technology Convention Center in southern Seoul, Monday. Courtesy of King Sejong Institute Foundation

Since establishing its first outpost in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia in 2007, the King Sejong Institute has been a leading force in overseeing the education of Korean language abroad for nearly two decades.

With 248 branches in 85 countries, it served over 200,000 students through both in-person and online classes last year.

Global interest in the Korean language continues to soar, fueled by the sustained popularity of the country’s cultural exports. This year, Korean has achieved official recognition as a secondary foreign language in schools in Paraguay and São Paulo, Brazil, adding to the tally of 23 nations that have incorporated it into their educational curricula.

Against this ever-changing backdrop, the King Sejong Institute Foundation (KSIF) hosted a forum on Monday to explore the current challenges it faces and chart a course for the future.

The event at the Science and Technology Convention Center in southern Seoul began with a talk session featuring five international speakers, each of whom had learned Korean at their local King Sejong Institute branches.

“While double majoring in history and political science at university, I had the chance to take a course on the history of the Joseon Dynasty and the creation of ‘Hangeul,’” said Jade Nuzzolo from France.

“That’s what sparked my interest in Korean. I initially tried learning it on my own and then took a language course 카지노사이트 offered at my college, but it was a slow process. Eventually, I discovered the King Sejong Institute, and for three years, I enrolled in speaking classes there, which helped me naturally master the intonation and vocabulary,” she noted, adding that her dream is to work at the Embassy of France in Seoul as a diplomat.

Another speaker, Deviakina Olga, whose journey with the Korean language began in Russia in 2016, shared her ambition to open a speech therapy and language rehabilitation center in Korea to assist foreign residents and multicultural families in their transition and settlement process.

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