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Linguistics at The City College of New York

Linguistics at The City College of New York

If you plan to study linguistics, take a look at what The City College of New York has to offer and decide if the program is a good match for you. Get started with the following essential facts.

CCNY is located in New York, New York and approximately 15,227 students attend the school each year.

Want to know more about the career opportunities in this field? Check out the Careers in Linguistics section at the bottom of this page.

CCNY Linguistics Degrees Available

  • Master’s Degree in Linguistics

CCNY Linguistics Rankings

Linguistics Student Demographics at CCNY

Take a look at the following statistics related to the make-up of the linguistics majors at The City College of New York.

CCNY Linguistics Master’s Program

78% Women
67% Racial-Ethnic Minorities*
For the most recent academic year available, 22% of linguistics master's degrees went to men and 78% went to women.

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In the linguistics master's program at this school, racial-ethnic minorities make up 67% of degree recipients. That is 31% better than the national average.*

The following table and chart show the race/ethnicity for students who recently graduated from The City College of New York with a master's in linguistics.

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Race/Ethnicity Number of Students
Asian 2
Black or African American 1
Hispanic or Latino 3
White 3
International Students 0
Other Races/Ethnicities 0

Careers That Linguistics Grads May Go Into

A degree in linguistics can lead to the following careers. Since job numbers and average salaries can vary by geographic location, we have only included the numbers for NY, the home state for The City College of New York.

Occupation Jobs in NY Average Salary in NY
Interpreters and Translators 3,300 $68,940
Foreign Language and Literature Professors 3,130 $87,670

References

*The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students, international students, and students whose race/ethnicity was unknown. This number is then divided by the total number of students at the school to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.

More about our data sources and methodologies.

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