Translation and Interpreting · Pennsylvania
Translation and Interpreting colleges in Pennsylvania
Translation and Interpreting program coverage in Pennsylvania is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Translation and Interpreting prepares you to carry meaning accurately between languages, in writing and in speech, for legal, medical, business, and conference settings.
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What you'll study in a Translation and Interpreting program
- Consecutive interpreting using note taking systems and memory techniques
- Simultaneous interpreting and booth practice for conference and meeting settings
- Sight translation and one and two way interpretation between language pairs
- General, literary, business, and technical translation across document types
- Terminology research, glossary building, and managing specialized vocabulary
- Computer assisted translation tools, translation memory, and localization workflows
- Professional ethics, confidentiality, impartiality, and codes of conduct for the field
- Advanced grammar, register, and idiom in your working foreign languages
- Specialized domain language for legal, medical, and community interpreting settings
Where a Translation and Interpreting degree can lead
- Interpreter and Translator
- Medical Interpreter
- Court Interpreter
- Localization Specialist
- Conference Interpreter
- Postsecondary Foreign Language Instructor
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 interpreters and translators median $59,440).
Translation and Interpreting trains you to move meaning faithfully between two or more languages, both in writing and in live speech. Building on intensive study of one or more foreign languages, coursework covers general and literary translation, business and technical translation, and the distinct modes of interpreting: consecutive interpreting, where you render a speaker's message after they pause, and simultaneous interpreting, where you speak almost in step with the source. You practice one and two way interpretation, sight translation, note taking systems, terminology management, computer assisted translation tools and translation memory, glossary building, localization, and the ethics of confidentiality and impartiality. Where a Modern Languages degree centers on reading, analyzing, and writing about literature and culture, this field focuses on the applied craft of transferring a complete and accurate message between languages for a client or audience, often under time pressure and in regulated settings.
Most students enter through a bachelor's degree in interpreting, translation, or a specific language, and some add a master's or graduate certificate to specialize in conference, court, or medical work. There is no single national license; instead, several paths use certification to signal competence, including state and federal court interpreter exams, medical interpreter certification offered through national boards, and credentials from professional associations for translators. Rules vary by state, language pair, and setting, so confirm what your target work requires before you commit. Graduates work in hospitals, courts and law firms, government agencies, schools, language service companies, and as freelancers serving many clients. A program is preparation, not a guaranteed job, and demand varies by language pair, specialization, certification, employer, and region.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of interpreters and translators, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $59,440 and projects employment to grow about 1.7% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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