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  • Language and Social Justice talk: Linguistic Inequality in Higher Education, Dr. Walt Wolfram

Language and Social Justice talk: Linguistic Inequality in Higher Education, Dr. Walt Wolfram

Date & Time

Friday, March 04, 2022, 3:00 p.m.-4:30 p.m.

Category

Lecture

Location

Alexander Library, Room 403

169 College Ave New Brunswick, NJ, 08901

Contact

Carly Dickerson

Information

Sponsored by Rutgers Language & Social Justice Initiative

Linguistic Inequality in Higher Education, Dr. Walt Wolfram

Linguistic Inequality in Higher Education: Solving the Problem We Created Notwithstanding the avowed commitment of higher education to equality and inclusion, the issue of language has been excluded from or erased in diversity programs at most universities.

This presentation empirically documents the basis of linguistic prejudice and discrimination in higher education through an extensive series of student and faculty interviews in a large metropolitan university. Based on the conclusions, we developed an innovative, campus-infusion model for language diversity targeting students, faculty, and staff at the university.

Activities include integrated classroom materials, videos highlighting linguistic diversity on campus, formal and informal workshops for diverse campus populations, the establishment of a university-ratified Linguistic Diversity Student Ambassadors program, and other activities and resources that have led to the creation of a national model for authentically including language in the diversity canon in higher education.

Walt Wolfram is William C. Friday Distinguished University Professor at North Carolina State University, where he also directs the Language and Life Project at North Carolina State University. He has pioneered research on social and ethnic dialects since the 1960s and published 23 books and over 300 articles. Wolfram’s current focus is on the application of sociolinguistic information to the public, including the production of 14 television documentaries (three Emmy Awards), the construction of museum exhibits, and the development of innovative formal and informal materials related to language diversity. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the North Carolina Award (the highest award given to a citizen of North Carolina), Caldwell Humanities Laureate from the NC Humanities Council, the Board of Governor’s Holshouser Award for Excellence in Public Service, and is a fellow of the prestigious American Academy of Arts & Sciences.

REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.

View the flyer here.