Berlitz Corporationis alanguage educationand leadership training company which is based inPrinceton, New Jersey.The company was founded in 1878 byMaximilian BerlitzinProvidence, Rhode Islandin the United States. Berlitz Corporation is owned by Berlitz Holdings, a company established through a 100% investment by ILSC Holdings LP (which owns ILSC Education Group, a company engaged in language education businesses such as study abroad), with more than 547 company-owned and franchised locations in more than 70 countries.[1]
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Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Leadership training, language servicesFranchising |
Founded | Providence, Rhode Island July 1878 |
Founder | Maximilian Berlitz |
Headquarters | |
Number of locations | 500+ |
Area served | 70 countries |
Key people | Curtis Uehlein (CEO) |
Parent | ILSC Holdings LP |
Website | berlitz |
History
editBerlitz started in 1878, whenMaximilian Berlitzwas in need of an assistantFrenchinstructor; he employed a Frenchman by the name of Nicholas Joly, only soon to discover that Joly barely spoke English. However, due to illness, Berlitz asked Joly to take over his classes, and teach by pointing at objects, repeating the French word for them, and acting out verbs. Upon his return, Berlitz realized that this improvised, immersive approach of teaching a foreign language by using that language itself without translations turned out far more effective than traditional techniques of that time.
The first Berlitz language school opened inProvidence, Rhode Island,in July 1878. A decade later, Berlitz moved toBoston, Massachusetts,and opened additional schools. Soon after, he opened schools in New York and New Jersey. In 1886, he moved the headquarters and his personal residence to New York City. In 1895, a children's language learning book was published by Maximilian Berlitz.[3]By 1914, there were about 200 Berlitz schools; 63 Berlitz schools in Germany, and 27 in Britain.[4]
Growth
editBy the time of the start of World War I in 1914, there were over 200 Berlitz Schools worldwide. Maximilian Berlitz died in 1921. His son-in-law and associate, Victor Harrison-Berlitz, assumed leadership of the business. Harrison died in 1932, and control passed briefly to his son, Victor Harrison-Berlitz Jr. The control of the company was thereafter passed to Jacques Strumpen-Darrie. Jacques' son Robert succeeded his father as president in 1953.[5]
In the 1950s, Berlitz opened its first Latin American language center in Mexico, followed by locations in Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, and Peru. In 1966, Berlitz reached Asia, starting with a language center in Tokyo. Today there are more than 90 Berlitz centers in Asia.[6]
Macmillan, Inc. ownership era
editIn 1966, Berlitz became a subsidiary of Macmillan, Inc. Robert Strumpen-Darrie continued as president until his retirement in 1970, Raphael Alberola became CEO for about 4 or 5 years and then Elio Boccitto led the company through most of the 1980s. In November 1988,Maxwell Communication Corporationtook over Macmillan, and just a year later, Berlitz was made public.[6]
On August 19, 1992, Berlitz International Inc. announced it had signed a definitive agreement to sell a 67 percent stake to theFukutake PublishingCompany, with the merger to be completed by the end of the year.[7]On January 28, 1993, Berlitz International Inc. announced a court order disengaging the language services company from the bankrupt Maxwell Communication Corporation had cleared the way for Berlitz's pending merger, while shareholders approved the merger at a stockholder meeting in New York held on the same day, with merger to be closed on February 8, 1993.[8]
Benesse Corporation ownership era
editIn 2001, Berlitz became a wholly owned subsidiary of theBenesse Corporation.[9]In 2002, Berlitz publishing was sold toLangenscheidt.[10]Today, Berlitz Publishing is owned by APA Publications, led by René Frey, the sale of Berlitz Publishing andInsight Guidesby Langenscheidt having occurred in early 2014.[11][12][13]
On November 1, 2010, Berlitz International, Inc. announced its renaming from Berlitz International, Inc. to Berlitz Corporation, effective in the same day.[14]
In February 2022, all shares of Berlitz Corporation held by Benesse Holdings were transferred to Berlitz Holdings, a company established through a 100% investment by ILSC Holdings LP (which owns ILSC Education Group, a company engaged in language education businesses such as study abroad).[15]At the same time, the Board of Directors of Benesse Holdings transferred all shares of Berlitz Japan (15.75% of all shares held by Benesse) to Berlitz.
Subsidiaries
edit- Berlitz Japan, Inc. (ベルリッツ・ジャパン kabushiki gaisha ):Berlitz's first branch in Japan, established inAkasakain 1966.[16]
- ELS Educational Services, Inc.:In 1988, Berlitz International, Inc. acquired Language Institute for English (L.I.F.E.), which later became ELS Language Centers.[17]
- Second Language Testing, Inc.:Specializes in the development of second language proficiency tests and the translation and adaptation of standardized achievement tests to students' native languages and cultures. In 2011-03-07, Berlitz Corporation announced the acquisition of Second Language Testing, Inc. (SLTI).[18]
- Telelangue SA:In 2011-08-11, Berlitz Corporation announced the acquisition of Telelangue SA.[19]
Former subsidiaries
edit- Phoenix Associates Co., Ltd. (フェニックス アソシエイツ kabushiki gaisha ):In 2009, Berlitz acquired Phoenix Associates Co., Ltd. On 2012-10-31, Berlitz Corporation announced merging Phoenix Associates Co., Ltd. intoBerlitz Japan, Inc.,effective 2013-01-01.[20][21]
- Berlitz Publishing(Apa Publications (UK) Ltd): Berlitz's publishing brand, owned by Langenscheidt 2002-2014, then sold and led by René Frey.
Maximilian D. Berlitz
editMaximilian Berlitzwas born in Germany in 1852, the son of a family of teachers and mathematicians. He emigrated to the United States in 1870, settling in Westerly, Rhode Island. In 1877 Berlitz moved to Providence, Rhode Island where he was an instructor of languages at the Bryant and Stratton National Business College, later to become Warner's Polytechnic Business College after an ownership change.[22]
The Berlitz Method
edit"The Berlitz Method" uses thedirect methodand focuses on using language as a tool for communication. The direct method, as opposed to the traditionalgrammar translationmethod, advocates teaching through the target language only, the rationale being that students will be able to work out grammatical rules from the input language provided, without necessarily being able to explain the rules overtly. Today, there are a variety of derivative methods and theories that found their beginnings in the natural and communicative elements that were pioneered by Berlitz.[23]
Financial results
editThis article needs to beupdated.(June 2022) |
For the fiscal years 2004 to 2010 (in millions of US dollars):
- 2004: 395.2
- 2005: 423.4
- 2006: 464.9
- 2007: 529.7
- 2008: 607.9
- 2009: 527.3
- 2010: 563.4
The total number of language lessons given during the year 2011 was 6,506 thousand. The number of language centers was 563 as of December 31, 2011.[24]As of early 2013, 75% of its revenue was from English language lessons.[25]
Unions
editIn Japan, Berlitz teachers are represented by several unions. In the Kansai region they are represented by theGeneral Union,[26]and in the Kanto region they are represented by Begunto, the Berlitz Tokyo General Union,[27]part of Tozen,[28]and the Berlitz Union at NUGW[29]which belongs to theNational Trade Union Council.
In Germany, teachers and office staff are represented by GEW. In November 2010, management attempted for the first time to claw back the employee gains of the past 30 years in order to substantially reduce the conditions guaranteed in the collective bargaining agreement, threatening to lay off up to half of the contract teachers if the givebacks were not agreed to.[30]
Industrial action
editWhile the situation at Berlitz is different from country to country, in Japan there has been substantialindustrial action,including the2007–2008 Berlitz Japan strikeorganised by Begunto, which grew into the longest and largest sustained strike among language teachers in Japan.[31]Berlitz filed suit against the union for damages it says it suffered during the strike, but the claim was rejected by theTokyo District Courton February 27, 2012.[32]Within a week Berlitz appealed the ruling to the high court,[33]with the first court date being on May 28, 2012. The final hearing was held on December 27, 2012, when an agreement was struck between Berlitz and the union. Berlitz withdrew their high court lawsuit and new rules for collective bargaining were also established. They will again be conducted in English, after the language was changed to Japanese previously. Berlitz also promised to disclose more financial information to the union. The company also agreed to pay a base-up raise to current union members plus a lump sum bonus to the union.[34]
In 2010, employees of Berlitz language centers in Germany experienced a major labor conflict, as management planned to lay off nearly 70 contract teachers in order to economize with a staff of freelancers.[30]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^"About Berlitz".Berlitz Languages. Archived fromthe originalon 11 August 2013.Retrieved20 August2013.
- ^"First Berlitz Language School", Picasa Web Album[1];retrieved February 21, 2010.
- ^The School Journal.1895. p. 547.Retrieved31 October2019.
- ^A.P.R. Howatt; H.G. Widdowson (3 June 2004).A History of ELT, Second Edition.OUP Oxford. pp. 382–.ISBN978-0-19-442185-0.
- ^"Berlitz 120 Years of Excellence: 1878–1998", Berlitz International, Inc., 1998;ISBN2-8315-6194-9,pp. 27-30
- ^abBerlitz UAE Website – The World of BerlitzArchived2017-06-03 at theWayback Machine,akkad.org; accessed January 7, 2015.
- ^Gilpin, Kenneth N. (August 20, 1992)."COMPANY NEWS; Fukutake Signs Accord To Buy 67% of Berlitz"– via NYTimes.
- ^"COMPANY NEWS; BERLITZ'S PLANNED MERGER WITH FUKUTAKE ADVANCES".Associated Press. January 29, 1993 – via NYTimes.
- ^Benesse Corporation Website"History – About us – Benesse Corporation"Archived2014-06-01 at theWayback Machine;retrieved September 2, 2010.
- ^"Langenscheidt Agrees to Buy Berlitz Publishing".PublishersWeekly.Retrieved2018-01-10.
- ^"Shelf Awareness for Wednesday, October 4, 2017".Retrieved2018-01-10.
- ^"René Frey MBA - CEO, APA GROUP"(PDF).Retrieved2023-04-21.
- ^"The Millennial Traveller: From content veteran to tech startup, how Insight Guides is reimagining its role in travel - WIT".Retrieved2023-04-21.
- ^"Berlitz International Inc. Announces Corporate Name Change".2010-11-01. Archived fromthe originalon 2011-07-07.
- ^"Bertlitz Corporation, ELS and the ILSC Education Group join Language Education Holdings".ILSC.January 1, 1900.RetrievedJune 16,2022.
- ^"About Us - History".Berlitz Japan, Inc.Archived fromthe originalon 2012-07-20.
- ^"Berlitz Story".January 2, 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 2010-01-02.
- ^"Berlitz Corporation Acquires Second Language Testing, Inc".Archived fromthe originalon 2011-08-16.
- ^"Berlitz Corporation Acquires Telelangue Expanding its e-learning, Web- and Phone-based Learning Services".Archived fromthe originalon 2011-08-16.
- ^"Berlitz Corporation announces merger of subsidiaries"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2012-12-30.
- ^"Tử hội xã の xác nhập に quan するお biết らせ"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2012-12-30.
- ^Rose, Emily C. (November 14, 2013),"Maximilian D. Berlitz",Immigrant Entrepreneurship: German-American Business Biographies, 1720 to the Present,German Historical Institute,retrieved2019-11-28
- ^"Find better language courses: Impartial reviews of 70 self-study programs".globe1234.Retrieved2013-08-23.
- ^Benesse Corporation Review of Fiscal 2009 ResultsArchived2011-04-20 at theWayback Machine;retrieved July 7, 2012.
- ^"Linguists online"– via The Economist.
- ^Berlitz General Union website;retrieved June 17, 2014.
- ^"Berlitz".Berlitz General Union Tokyo.August 6, 2014.Retrieved2021-09-29.
- ^"Workplaces".Đông ゼン•Tozen.2005-12-18.Retrieved2021-09-29.
- ^"Begunto NUGW at Berlitz Japan".Begunto NUGW at Berlitz Japan.Retrieved2021-09-29.
- ^abPeter Dietz, "GEW: Berlitz will Lehrer feuern",Frankfurter Rundschau,December 7, 2010.
- ^The Japan Times"Berlitz launches legal blitz against striking instructors",japantimes.co.jp, February 17, 2009.
- ^Hongo, Jun,"Berlitz loses suit over union teacher strikes",The Japan Times,February 28, 2012, p. 1.
- ^McCrostie, James,"Berlitz court ruling unequivocal on basic right to strike",The Japan Times,March 6, 2012, p. 14.
- ^Berlitz union wins raise, bonus in suit settlement,japantimes.co.jp, January 1, 2012; accessed January 7, 2015.
External links
edit- Second Language Testing, Inc. Homepage
- Corporations: The Language Merchants,June. 21, 1963, TIME