In 1964 John Rassias became a consultant for
Peace Corps language education programs throughout the world. He also served as Director of the first pilot program of languages for the Peace Corps in Africa and as Director of Language Programs at Dartmouth. This work initiated his development of the Rassias teaching method. From 1965 to 2015 Rassias was William R. Kenan Professor of French and Italian at
Dartmouth College, where the Rassias Center uses his method. At Dartmouth, he was the founder and director of Dartmouth’s Language Study Abroad (LSA) program, through which Dartmouth students may complete their language requirement in a foreign country. Rassias "put the teacher in the role of the performer, acting out words and expressions in imaginary real-life settings and inculcating vocabulary and grammar through rapid-fire drills that gave students no time to think in English." He believed that every class was to be treated like the first class, and for this reason gained appreciation from his students. In 1978 Rassias was appointed to
President Jimmy Carter's Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies. In 1994, Rassias was appointed to the Commission of the Modern Language Association of America on the study of service in the profession. He was also elected to the Division of the Teaching of Literature of the
Modern Language Association in 1995, which he chaired in 1998. In addition, Rassias served as a member of the Advisory Committee on Foreign Languages to the Connecticut State Board of Education. In 1998, Rassias was appointed as head of a commission focused on preserving the Greek language among Americans of Greek heritage by the Archbishop of the
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. In 2006, Rassias participated in the creation of a March 2007 pilot program for Intensive English (IE) education outside of
Mexico City. This pilot program was called the Inter-American Partnership for Education (IAPE). Between 2007 and 2020 IAPE worked with thousands of Mexican teachers. ==The Rassias Method==