Learn Quechua
Quechua Language Program at CU Boulder

Starting in Spring 2021, the Latin American and Latinx Studies Center has been able to offer a Quechua language program available to undergraduate and graduate students enrolled at CU-Boulder. This is the first time a Latin American Indigenous language will fulfill the  at our University. Âé¶¹ÒùÔº must complete the third semester of Quechua (Intermediate Level) in order to satisfy the MAPS and CORE Requirements. Our Quechua Language Program is funded through a U.S. Department of Education Title VI Grant.
Why study Quechua?
- Quechua is one of the most vibrant and important languages of the Americas. With around 7-8 million speakers in the Americas, most of them concentrated in the Andean region in South America, the Quechua language and culture holds important information about how non-Western cultures are organized;
- Although it is widely spoken, Quechua is considered an endangered language. Âé¶¹ÒùÔº who study it can be part of language preservation, or the effort to save languages that are in danger of being lost;
- Learning Quechua can improve students' career prospects in fields such as art, engineering, international development and more;
- Learning an Indigenous language can give you an alternate perspective for viewing the world;
- Quechua is a living language, with many speakers in the United States and opportunities for community engagement. Alumni of Quechua programs at other U.S.-based institutions have gone on to start Quechua language podcasts, consult for the United Nations and collaborate on film productions.Â