Education
Lado received his Bachelor of Arts from Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida and his Master of Arts from the University of Texas at Austin. He received his doctorate from the University of Michigan.
Lado received his Bachelor of Arts from Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida and his Master of Arts from the University of Texas at Austin. He received his doctorate from the University of Michigan.
He returned to the United States at the age of 21 and began to learn English as an adult. This allowed him to develop an understanding and sensitivity to the challenges confronting immigrants and speakers of other languages learning English as a second language. He later became a of English and the Director of the University of Michigan"s English Language Institute.
After several years at the University of Michigan, he joined the staff of Georgetown University in Washington, District of Columbia At Georgetown, served as dean of the Institute of Languages (later renamed the Faculty of Languages and Linguistics) for 13 years.
Doctor Lado obtained a Ford-Fulbright Foundation grant to establish English departments at five universities in Spain and has cooperated with universities in Latin America. He traveled extensively throughout the world lecturing on linguistics and has received worldwide recognition and honors including honorary doctorates from Georgetown and Sophia University in Tokyo, Japan.
He later founded and served as president of the, a successful language instruction institution based on an academically rigorous English education program for speakers of other languages. The school has three campuses in the Washington Metropolitan Area (Washington, District of Columbia, Arlington, Virginia and Silver Spring, Maryland).
He also received the medal of honor from the Daughters of the American Revolution of the District of Columbia.
He was one of the co-founders of Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), a professional association with a mission of teaching English to foreign students. The Robert Lado Memorial Award for Outstanding Student Paper award is named after him. Lado is considered one of the founders of modern contrastive linguistics, which, as a subdiscipline of applied linguistics, served the purpose of improving language teaching materials.
His most influential book is Linguistics across cultures: Applied linguistics for language teachers, in which he states that "in the comparison between native and foreign language lies the key to ease or difficulty in foreign language learning." The book outlines methods for comparing two systems of sound, grammar, vocabulary, writing, and culture.
Lado and Charles C. Fries were both associated with the strong version of the contrastive hypothesis, the belief that difficulties in learning a language can be predicted on the basis of a systematic comparison of the system of the learner’s first language (its grammar, phonology, and lexicon) with the system of a second language.
During his life, he was member of the Spanish Catholic Center in Washington.