
All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, or veteran status, or any other protected class. GDIT is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Vaccination requirements will depend on the status of the federal contractor mandate and customer site requirements. To protect the health and safety of its employees and to comply with customer requirements, however, GDIT may require employees in certain positions to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Lingüística histórica del español / The Routledge Handbook of Spanish Historical Linguistics ofrece una síntesis actualizada de los diversos campos que componen la lingüística histórica del español. GDIT does not have a vaccination mandate applicable to all employees. Offering the technology transformations, strategy, and mission services needed to get the job done. On the ground, beside our clients, in the lab, and everywhere in between. We ensure today is safe and tomorrow is smarter. Shifting the ways clients invest in, integrate, and innovate technology solutions. Bringing the expertise needed to understand and advance critical missions. The people supporting some of the most complex government, defense, and intelligence projects across the country. Citizenship and SECRET clearance required.Bachelor's Degree required experience may be substituted in lieu of degree.Select candidates will be language-tested.Ability to work nonstandard hours and in on-call status for periods of time may be required. Demonstrates knowledge of online social media and different technologies, and documents activities, notes, informative papers, or whitepapers written in English.


Demonstrates reading and writing expertise in the assigned language and incorporates custom social media solutions to comprehend online environments and communicate trends effectively. Examines current media statements or postings to support trend analysis and identifies key communicators. Reads, analyzes, and drafts communications regarding regional and ideological discussions in specified foreign language media environments. Develops and maintains expertise with designated regional issues and draws upon publicly available online information resources. To answer your question, they are looking for people who are open and dedicated to learning whatever they need you to.The Spanish Linguist serves as a natively fluent (Spanish with dialects from either Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay) specialist supporting a social media program in Tampa, FL. The language, and then at the next training base they will teach you the more Cryptologic/ analytic things.

They start out by teaching you study techniques and then from the ground up in everything required to be a linguist. The great thing about being a linguist in the military is the idea that you can come in completely unknowledgable about anything linguistic wise. They do offer chines and Korean though but at the end of the day they are going to choose for you. The air force let's you fill out a language preference sheet when you join but Japanese isn't an option unfortunately because they are typically looking for more high priority languages. It's something I am having to teach myself though. I am also studying Japanese funny enough. If you were serious about it you could make it happen. I was by no means a great physical specimen before joining myself either. I would say despite your physical ability the air force is the easiest military boot camp to get through by far. That's why they send you to DLI to learn a language from scratch. That's awesome, so in order to study at DLI you do need to be a member of the military but you can join with absolutely no language ability at all which is the beauty of it. There are other resources which work about the same that we use on the job too It's Monday-Friday, if memory serves: 0800- 1500Īs far is in class at DLI I used a lot of Google translate and SpanishDict to help in class with words and conjugations. It was like 8+ hours a day between spanish lessons, homework, and immersion I was nowhere near conversationally fluent of course but it helped me hit the ground running when I got to DLI for sure!Īs far as FSI I had no idea what that was prior to joining but I whole heartedly believe DLI is the best, albeit rigorous and extreme, language school to learn a language to fluency in a short amount of time. I had actually always wanted to speak Spanish, being Hispanic and in the US where you are exposed to it everywhere, So for the summer prior to joining I had taught myself to a decent level prior to joining for about 3 months.

Otherwise about 1-2 hours after class every day
#SPANISH LINGUIST FREE#
For me personally I would spend like 6 hours every Sunday and knock out my homework for the entire week ahead so I had free time after class. The civilian professors control what homework they give you so that is a factor. This is VERY language dependent and also more so than that, teacher dependent.
