
The Power of Words: CAS Launches Linguistics Minor
Amelia Tseng talks about Linguistics as key to understanding humanity
WLC is committed to creating a dynamic intellectual community of faculty and students dedicated to the study of language and culture, literature, linguistics, teaching, and translation.
The department is home to the Center for Language Exploration, Acquisition and Research (CLEAR), graduate and certificate programs in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), a Linguistics Minor, and 12 language and culture programs:
Our faculty work with students from departments and programs across the university helping them develop translingual and transcultural fluency necessary for their professional engagement with local, national, and international communities. Our graduate program in TESOL prepares educators of English as an additional language for the multilingual world.
We foster a learning environment that encourages the acquisition of language in tandem with the development of social and cultural awareness. Students have the opportunity to work with diverse and multilingual faculty who are experts in critical language pedagogy, linguistics, translation, and literature, as well as a wide range of theoretical and critical approaches as they relate to studies of culture, colonialism, race and ethnicity, gender, sexuality, migration, and human rights, among other areas. WLC plays a major role in supporting AU’s mission to create an inclusive campus community that allows students to learn, engage with others, and become global citizens — see AU Core Courses in WLC.
BA Foreign Language and Communication Media
Many areas of business, industry, and government service consider a language background a career must. Recent graduates of the department have been employed in a variety of fields including translation, education, governmental and non-governmental organizations. Here are just a few examples of what recent WLC graduates are doing:
TESOL alumni Debora Amidani and Carlye Stevens are incorporating a digital storytelling project by Polina Vinogradova into their adult English language classes at DC’s Family Place Public Charter School.
Isabel Rivero-Vila’s film Afrykas et le Bôite Magique won Best Documentary Feature at the Cannes Independent Film Festival and Best Indigenous Film at The African Film Festival; it was an official selection at the Toronto International Nollywood Film Festival.
Naomi S. Baron’s book How We Read Now: Strategic Choices for Print, Screen, and Audio (Oxford University Press, 2021) was selected as a finalist for the 2022 PROSE Awards.
Ranieri Moore Cavaceppi wrote “Hospitaller Aesthetics: The Self-Fashioning of a Supranational Military Religious Order.”