Annual Department Newsletter

Chair’s Message

Dear Students, Colleagues, Alumni, and Friends,

As we look forward to the new year, I’m very happy to share our inaugural 2024 Newsletter showcasing some of the many ways our students and faculty have excelled and earned accolades over the past year, as well as what we’ve all been up to this summer.

I have completed my first three-year term as Department Chair, and will begin a second three-year term January 1st, 2025. Cynthia Gordon will be our Interim Chair for Fall, 2024. While I have served in most of the Department’s service roles over the past 26 years, the position of Chair has been one of the most rewarding to date for me. The role primarily involves facilitating conditions for faculty and students to succeed. As this Newsletter shows, our faculty and our students are amazing, and we had a banner year.

As we look ahead, I am delighted to welcome new faculty, students and postdocs and confident that we will continue to build on our successes and make the coming year equally rewarding for our community.

Warm regards,

Alison Mackey, Ph.D.
Chair, Department of Linguistics
Georgetown University


Faculty Welcomes and Transitions

Prof. Cynthia Gordon Promoted to Full Professor

We are delighted to congratulate Prof. Cynthia Gordon of the Sociolinguistics concentration, who has been promoted to full Professor. This prestigious achievement is a testament to her outstanding contributions to the field and her dedication to student success. We are proud to have her as a member of our faculty and excited to see her continued impact on our community and beyond.

Prof. Ethan Gotlieb Wilcox to Join Computational Linguistics

We are very pleased to welcome Prof. Ethan Gotlieb Wilcox who will be joining the department this Fall as an Assistant Professor in the Computational Linguistics concentration. Prof. Wilcox’s research, specializing in computational and psycholinguistics, utilizes computational modeling technology to understand how language processing and learning happen in the human brain. Prof. Wilcox received his Ph.D. in 2022 from Harvard University and was a postdoctoral fellow at the ETH in Zürich, Switzerland.

Dr. Jungyoon Koh Joining Sociolinguistics as an Assistant Teaching Professor

We are glad to share the news that Dr. Jungyoon Koh will be joining the department as an Assistant Teaching Professor for the 2024–2025 academic year. She earned her Ph.D. from Georgetown University in May 2024, completing a Dissertation called, “Interaction with and about conversational user interfaces: An interactional sociolinguistic approach.”

Dr. Brandon Waldon Joined Computational Linguistics as a Postdoc

We are very happy that Dr. Brandon Waldon has joined Georgetown as a Postdoctoral researcher. He specializes in formal and computational semantics/pragmatics as applied to legal language interpretation. Dr. Waldon is also affiliated with the Department of Computer Science and the Massive Data Institute. He will continue with us through the next academic year as a Fritz Family Fellow, working with Prof. Nathan Schneider in the Department of Linguistics and Prof. Kevin Tobia at the Georgetown University Law Center.

Dr. Jessica Kotfila Joined as Director of Georgetown’s Interdisciplinary Program in Cognitive Science

We are pleased to also welcome Dr. Jessica Kotfila, who will join us in September for a year as the Director of Georgetown University’s Interdisciplinary Program in Cognitive Science, which we are bringing under the department’s umbrella. Dr. Kotfila’s expertise and leadership will be invaluable as we work with her and cognitive science faculty across Georgetown to update and integrate this long standing program.

Departures

Dr. Matt Hewett Will Transition to an Assistant Professor Post at UPenn in Spring 2025

We are sad to have to say goodbye to Dr. Matt Hewett, our Postdoctoral Fellow in the Theoretical Linguistics concentration. He will be leaving Georgetown in December 2024 for an exciting new opportunity—joining the Department of Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania on the tenure track. Hurray and congratulations to Dr. Hewett!

Farewell and Thank You to Dr. Laura Tan

We were also sorry to have to say goodbye this year to Dr. Laura Tan who left us in July. As a postdoctoral fellow, Laura assisted the Assessment and Evaluation Language Resource Center (AELRC) with their 3-year project, “Understanding Language Outcomes for Foreign Language & Area Studies Program.” She also  taught LING 5242: Survey Methods in Language Research. We appreciated all her contributions and wish her the very best in her future endeavors.

Prof. Alison Mackey Completes 10-year Term as Editor-in-Chief of the Annual Review of Applied Linguistics

This year Prof. Alison Mackey completes a ten-year term as Editor-in-Chief of the influential international journal the Annual Review of Applied Linguistics (published by Cambridge). Under her editorship, the journal’s rank steadily rose (even reaching 1/181 in the Linguistics category of the Journal Citation Reports © Clarivate Analytics for 2017). Amongst many changes she introduced during her tenure, was the introduction of open materials via uploading to IRIS (Instrument Repository for Research into Second Languages) or any other permanent online repository as part of the Center for Open Science initiative’s Transparency and Openness Promotion (TOP) guidelines.

Alison on Windermere in the English Lake District

Alison on Windermere in the English Lake District

Faculty Honors and Awards

Prof. Lourdes Ortega received an Honorary Doctorate from Hellenic American University this summer. The Degree of Doctor of Humane Letters Honoris Causa was in recognition of her “inspiring research” and “impactful work” on multilingualism. Hellenic American University is a private university in Greece. She attended the 2024 graduation ceremony in Athens, where she gave the commencement speech and was hooded. Prof. Ortega also recently finished her term as President of the American Association for Applied Linguistics (AAAL) this March of 2024. She is serving on AAAL’s Executive Committee as Past President until March 2025.

Prof. Michael Obiri-Yeboah was the recipient of a Georgetown University Curriculum Enrichment Grant in the Fall of 2023 and the Spring of 2024. The grant from Center for New Design in Learning and Scholarship to support classroom improvement towards teaching and learning In the Fall of 2023, that grant was utilized in LING 4402: Language Endangerment & Document Linguistics and in LING 5104: Field Methods in the Spring of 2024. 
Prof. Michael Obiri-Yeboah was also elected Executive Member on the Executive Committee of the Association of Contemporary African Linguistics. His term will last until 2027.

Prof. Zeldes at a paper-making workshop this summer

Prof. Zeldes at a paper-making workshop this summer

Prof. Amir Zeldes received a $350,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in support of his project Coptic Scriptorium, a website devoted to Coptic language and literature, together with Caroline T. Schroeder, a professor of women’s and gender studies at the University of Oklahoma. Prof. Zeldes and his team published the first computationally annotated data in Bohairic Coptic. Prof. Zeldes also recently hosted a virtual workshop with Dr. Caroline Schroeder (University of Oklahoma) on how to run linguistics searches in Coptic data. You can watch that webinar here

Prof. Heidi Getz and Prof. Marissa Fond were both nominated for the 18th Annual College Honors Faculty Award this year. For this award, students nominate faculty whom they feel have shaped their experience at Georgetown in a meaningful way. Prof. Fond previously received this award in 2023.

Research and Scholarly Contributions

Special Talks and Lectures

Prof. Cynthia Gordon gave a virtual talk March 28, 2024 based on her chapter “Positioning Theory and Goffman” in The Routledge International handbook of Positioning Theory as part of the Positioning Theory Virtual Series, Spring 2024, hosted by the Institut for Kommunikation og Psykologi, Aalborg Universitet (Department of Communication and Psychology, Aalborg University) in Denmark. 
You can watch the lecture here.

Prof. Paul Portner was an invited speaker at the MECORE workshop in Konstanz (June 18–20, Titled: “Two approaches to mood: Operator or agreement?”) and at ZAS in Berlin (June 27–29, Titled: “Comments on Meyer’s paper: ‘Conversational principles and overconfidence’”). He also gave an invited talk at McGill University in Montreal on March 15th (Titled: “Social relations and scalar implicature”) and was a co-author on two presentations with Ph.D. Candidate, Xiang Li (Theoretical concentration), one at the WCCFL conference in UC Santa Cruz and one at the Tu+8 conference at Harvard. He was also an invited speaker of a talk co-authored with Prof. Raffaella Zanuttini (Yale) and Miok Pak (GWU) at the Brussels Conference on Generalitze Linguistics (Titled: “Embeddability and performativity in markers of speaker-addressee relation”).

Prof. Amir Zeldes participated in a panel discussion in November 2023 on the topic of Generative AI. The panel was organized and moderated by Prof. Grace Hui Yang (Department of Computer Science).

Visiting Positions and International Collaborations

Prof. Ruth Kramer recently returned from a month in Paris, where she was invited to be a visiting professor at the Laboratoire de Linguistique Formelle at Université Paris Cité. During her time there, Prof. Kramer offered a course on grammatical gender and delivered several talks on her ongoing research projects. For more details on Prof. Kramer’s course, please visit the Laboratoire de Linguistique Formelle’s announcement.

Prof. Michael Obiri-Yeboah joined African Linguistics School’s 2024 faculty. The African Linguistics School (ALS) is a two-week institute which brings the latest work in core areas of linguistics to students from African universities. Prof. Obiri-Yeboah was invited to teach Introduction to Phonology to graduate and undergraduate students who are interested in linguistics. This year, participants were selected from a number of African countries as well as US institutions. The faculty members are from the US, Europe and some former ALS alumni in Africa. The program ran from July 22 to August 2, 2024.

Prof. Marissa Fond Hosted Visiting Researcher, Dr. Rose Hendricks

During 2023-2024, Prof. Marissa Fond hosted Dr. Rose Hendricks—-a cognitive scientist, independent researcher, and Research Director at the Association of Science and Technology Centers, which is a non-profit, global organization supporting science and technology centers and museums—as a Visiting Researcher. Together they collaborated to offer Georgetown undergraduate research assistantships (via the LING 3930: Research-based Undergraduate Linguistics Experience [RULE] course) on a project titled, “Thinking with metaphor for climate action.”

Centers and Initiatives News

Assessment and Evaluation Language Resource Center (AELRC)

The Assessment and Evaluation Language Resource Center (AELRC), led by PI Prof. Meg Montee and Co-PI Prof. Alison Mackey, provides leadership, scholarship, and outreach in the practices of foreign language (FL) assessment and program evaluation to foreign language teachers, program administrators, and researchers in diverse educational settings. The AELRC currently holds two multi-year grants, with a 4-year total of $687,000 in funding. Some highlights of AELRC summer projects include:

Summer Evaluation Institute

The Assessment and Evaluation Language Resource Center (AELRC) hosted 15 language teachers from the DC area and beyond for a one-day institute on the basics of language program evaluation. This institute, conducted in collaboration with partners at the Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL), helped educators plan for and know how to conduct evaluations of their own language programs.

AELRC Logo is two cherry blossom images overlapping, one pink and one dark blue, with the acronym and full center name.

Researching Language Programs in the US

This summer the AELRC conducted virtual focus groups with 30+ students, instructors, and administrators across the U.S. as part of a multi-year research study, K-16 Language Program Articulation, to understand how to improve and expand language study in the U.S. as students transition from K-12 into post-secondary education.

A male teacher giving a high-5 to a young boy sitting at a desk in a classroom.

Understanding Language Outcomes for Foreign Language & Area Studies Programs

With three years of funding totaling more than $300,000 from the U.S. Department of Education’s International Research and Studies Program, we are researching outcomes in language learning programs funded by the U.S. Department of Education through their well-known and popular Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) program. This summer we are designing and piloting survey instruments and conducting quantitative analyses of more than 10 years of outcomes data in more than than 150 different languages.

FLAS logo is the acronym spelled out with blue and grey letters with a map of the world.

Georgetown STARTALK, an NSA-funded Initiative and Multi-Year Project

Department faculty hold two grants from the National Security Agency (NSA) to support summer programs for K–16 teachers of critical languages (Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Persian and Russian). Together, these two grants total nearly $440,000 in external funding and support more than 50 language teachers through intensive, high-quality training in research-based principles of language teaching and learning.

An image with the STARTALK logo (a colorful star) and Georgetown University crest

STARTALK-TBLT: Task-based Training for Critical Language Teachers is an online and in-person program about Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT) theory and practice. This program is led by Prof. Lara Bryfonski (PI) and Prof. Alison Mackey (Co-PI), co-instructed by Applied Linguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Caitlyn Pineault, and supported by graduate and undergraduate student staff, including Evelyn Díaz-Iturriaga, Nidhi Somineni, and Alison Manna. This program, first launched in 2023, includes a week-long, in-person instructional camp on best practices in TBLT.

An image with the STARTALK logo (a colorful star) and Georgetown University crest

STARTALK-TECH: Technology-based tools for Critical Language Teachers is an interactive online program that focuses on the integration and use of technology-based instructional tools for language classrooms. This program was led by Prof. Meg Montee (Project Director) and Prof. Alison Mackey (Co-Project Director). It was co-instructed by Applied Linguistics Concentration M.S. student Gatanna Andrade, and supported by student staff, including Shannon Victoria King and Camryn Hayes.

Looking ahead to Summer 2025

The AELRC team was just awarded a new STARTALK grant totalling $137k for a summer 2025 program for college students learning Chinese. This innovative program (Georgetown STARTALK-TBLT-C; details forthcoming), led by Prof. Lara Bryfonski, Prof. Alison Mackey, and Prof. Meg Montee, will use a fully task-based approach to teaching Chinese (and are working with Dr. Di Qi in the Department of East Asian Studies).

Initiative for Multilingual Studies (IMS)

Georgetown’s Initiative for Multilingual Studies (IMS) is committed to advancing multilingualism in education in the U.S. and across the globe. It supports its members in the design, funding, conduct, and communication of research that fosters multilingualism as part of the solution to high-quality education for all, such as the multilingualism in Urdu and Arabic project.

Dr. Hina Ashraf’s Research on Multilingualism in Urdu and Arabic, and Urdu-English Dual Immersion Education

Dr. Hina Ashraf carries out research on multilingualism in Urdu and Arabic as part of the Initiative for Multilingual Studies (IMS). She also supports the curriculum and research for the Project ELEECT grant at Georgetown’s Graduate School’s Master of Arts in Educational Transformation (MAET). Dr. Ashraf is investigating the first and only Urdu-English dual immersion school in the country with a three-year grant funded by the U.S. Department of Education’s International Research and Studies Program, for which she is the PI.

Notable Publications, Presentations, and Projects

Professor Lara Bryfonski and Professor Alison Mackey Published a Book Designed for Language Teachers of All Levels

The front of the book, including the title and authors in a rainbow coloring.

Prof. Lara Bryfonski and Prof. Alison Mackey published a 2024 user-friendly book designed for language teachers of all levels and languages called, The Art and Science of Language Teaching, Cambridge University Press. This practical guide bridges the gap between linguistics research and classroom practice for language teachers providing clear summaries of key second language acquisition research, debunking common misconceptions, and offering ready-to-use student activities. With authentic teaching scenarios and online resources, it’s perfect for educators of all languages and levels.

Professor Cynthia Gordon Was Featured in Immigrant Food Interview

A screenshot from the Youtube video, where Prof. Cynthia Gordon is wearing a red button-down shirt and her host is a white woman with blonde hair and a black blouse.

Prof. Cynthia Gordon was recently interviewed by the popular DC gastro-advocacy restaurant Immigrant Food, discussing how immigration to America has morphed and shifted cultural foods and the dining experience. Check out her interview for the “What is American Food?” issue of the #ThinkTable.

Professor Jen Nycz Launched the Corpora of Mobile Speakers (CorMS)

Prof. Jen Nycz launched the Corpora of Mobile Speakers (CorMS) on June 25, 2024 with two corpora drawn from her NSF project, the New Yorkers in Toronto Corpus and the Torontonians in New York Corpus. She gave a multimedia presentation about the CorMS at the ICLaVE in Vienna (July 8th–11th).

Prof. Nycz posing giving a presentation, titled "Mobile People, Mobile Vowels"

Prof. Nycz in Brazil

Prof. Nycz during an August presentation (August 9, Titled: “Mobile people, mobile vowels: What accent changes can tell us about the linguistic system, and how to study them”) at the University of São Paulo a few days ago! ​​This week, she’s teaching a sociophonetics course to undergrads and grad students at the University of Campinas.

Professor Deborah Tannen Delivered the Annual Life of Learning Lecture at the Spring Faculty Convocation

Prof. Deborah Tannen delivered the annual Life Long Learning lecture at Georgetown University’s Spring faculty convocation in March, where she received a standing ovation. You can watch the lecture here. President De Gioia’s introduction of Prof. Tannen starts at 40:28.

Dr. Brandon Waldon and Dr. Nathan Schneider contributed to a U.S. Supreme Court brief

Prof. Nathan Schneider, Prof. Kevin Tobia (GU Law Center), and Prof. Brandon Waldon, along with and other colleagues, were amici in a brief to the U.S. Supreme Court regarding the case Garland v. VanDerStok,  a federal court case brought by several plaintiffs from the firearms parts industry challenging the 2021 Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms regulatory revisions of the Gun Control Act definitions of firearm, firearm frame and receiver. The Court will hear the case in its upcoming term. The brief offers a linguistic analysis of the term “firearm” in federal law, bolstered by corpus and survey evidence.

Collaborative and Outreach Activities

This Summer, in a first for the Department of Linguistics, Prof. Elizabeth Zsiga is teaching on the Bachelor of Liberal Arts BLA degree program run by the GU Prisons and Justice Initiative. She is teaching a section of our popular gateway class, “Introduction to Linguistics.”

Prof. Alex Johnston served on the Executive Committee of the 3rd Linguistics Career Launch (LCL) 2024 (#LCL2024), a 2-week online career bootcamp and conference designed by the Linguistics Beyond Academia Special Interest Group of the Linguistic Society of America (LSA). The LCL aims to help linguists transition from academia to jobs in business, government, nonprofit, and tech. The 2024 program ran weekdays from 8am to 4pm PDT from July 15–26. LCL2024 featured interactive sessions on Gather.town and Zoom, including: 14 career panels, 7 career management sessions, 4 office hours, 2 career mixers, 2 mini-classes, and 1 career expo.

Prof. Alex Johnston presented 7 hours of content, including 5 career management sessions for linguists and one presentation geared towards faculty about the state of tenure-line employment opportunities. In addition, College of Arts & Sciences Vice Dean for Undergraduate Education, Prof. Sue Lorenson, moderated a panel titled, “Higher Ed careers: More than tenure.”

LCL logo, which is a yellow person grabbing a red and blue rocket.

For more LCL details and future events: 

Keep an eye out this fall semester for all the recorded sessions from LCL2024 to be released on the LCL YouTube channel.

Spotlight on a New Class

Prof. Heidi Getz offered a new undergraduate course this past spring, LING 2370: Nature, Nurture, & Language. The course examines how human language is shaped by “nature” (the biological and genetic characteristics of human beings) as well as by “nurture” (the cultural and social contexts in which humans develop, learn, and use language). 23 enthusiastic students learned how spoken and signed languages are similar and different; how brand-new languages are structured; and how human language compares to animal communication systems.

Student Activities & Awards

Outstanding Leader in a Graduate Student Organization Award

General Linguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Kris Cook served as the President of the Graduate Linguistics Student Association (GLSA) from 2022–2024 and won the 2024 Outstanding Leader in a Graduate Student Organization Award. This honor is for a graduate student who has made outstanding contributions to the campus community through their leadership, programming endeavors, individual skills, volunteer activities, service, and attitude in support of student activities as a leader of a student organization.

Kris Cook is a white woman with brown hair and green eyes. She is wearing a beige sweater and pearl earrings.

Awards of the College of Arts & Sciences

Calvin Engstrom Received the Francis P. Dinneen Award for Distinction in Linguistics

Calvin Engstrom (graduated Spring 2024) received the Francis P. Dinneen Award for Distinction in Linguistics, which was established as a tribute to the memory of the Reverend Francis P. Dinneen, S.J., Professor of Linguistics. The award is given to an outstanding graduating senior majoring in Linguistics.

Calvin standing in front of Poulton Hall

Awards of Georgetown College

Aryaman Arora Received the Computer Science Award

Aryaman Arora, a Linguistics and Computer Science double major and Spring 2024 graduate, received the Computer Science Award. This award is presented to a senior pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science who has demonstrated outstanding potential and promise in the field. The recipient is selected by the faculty based on academic and scientific achievement, excellence in written and oral communication, community service, and strength of moral and personal character.

Aryaman Arorar

Fulbright Recipient

Travis Richardson Awarded Fulbright Research Award in Aotearoa (New Zealand)

Sociolinguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Travis Richardson has been awarded a Fulbright in Whanganui-a-Tara, Aotearoa (Wellington, New Zealand). Through extensive ethnography of public and institutional spaces and interviews with both Māori and non-Indigenous learner-speakers, he aims to ascertain how te reo Māori speakers construct identities, authenticate certain speakers and not others, and position themselves vis-à-vis political and epistemic stances of biculturality and Aotearoa’s colonial history. He aims to determine how speakers navigate decisions on which language(s) may be used when, where, and by whom. All of this leads to his dissertation on how colonial histories—especially the concepts of Indigenous “shame” and colonizer “guilt”—impact the overall trajectories of language revitalization efforts across the globe, with specific focus on how te reo Māori’s revitalization might inform revitalization efforts of the Indigenous languages of the United States.

Travis Richardson is a white man with short, dark brown hair. He is wearing square glasses and wearing a black suit.

NobleReach Scholar

Caroline Gish, Selected for Inaugural Cohort of NobleReach Scholars Program

We are proud to announce that Caroline Gish, a 2024 graduate of our Computational Linguistics MS program, has been selected as part of the inaugural cohort of NobleReach Scholars. This program places early-career professionals in critical roles across federal agencies and leading tech companies, focusing on areas such as artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, biotechnology, business process innovation, and materials manufacturing. Each of the 19 scholars was selected from among hundreds of candidates from 90 universities nationwide, rigorously evaluated, and matched to the unique needs of their assigned mission-driven industry partners. During her one- to two-year fellowship, Caroline will work on projects with significant societal impact, benefiting from hands-on experience, multidisciplinary programming, and mentorship from industry leaders. We extend our heartfelt congratulations to Caroline and look forward to following her accomplishments in this exciting new role!

caroline gish is a white owman with long light brown hair with pink highlights. She is wearing a pink shirt with gold necklaces and large hoop earrings.

Royden B. Davis Fellowship Recipients

Undergraduate Michelle Zhang Awarded Royden B. Davis Fellowship

Undergraduate student Michelle Zhang, a rising junior studying Linguistics and Philosophy, received a $5,000 Royden B. Davis Research Fellowship to conduct her study, “Ebola Health Workers’ Linguistic Strategies in Outreach.” Under the mentorship of Erin Fell, Ph.D., Ms. Zhang compiled a multimedium database to comprehensively document interactions between health workers and patients during the 2013–2016 Ebola epidemics in West Africa. She is also coordinating with The Bellevue Hospital in NYC to conduct retrospective interviews from health workers who managed infectious disease communication. This data will provide a comprehensive view of healthcare workers’ linguistic strategies to address misinformation and conspiracy theories surrounding the epidemic.

Michelle Zhang is an Asian woman with long black hair. She is wearing a black shirt and a pearl necklace.

Student Conference Paper Awards

Applied Linguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Saurav Goswami was awarded the 2024 Graduate Student Award for his paper presentation at the 2024 American Association for Applied Linguistics (AAAL) Conference in Houston, titled, The intertextual construction of ‘thirdness’ in India’s Supreme Court judgment on trans rights” on Saturday, March 16, 2024.

Saurav is an Asian man wearing a blue suit and posing with his award.

Applied Linguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Caitlyn Pineault was awarded the 2024 National Federation of Modern Languages Teachers Associations’ (NFMLTA/ MLJ) Graduate Student Award for her paper presentation, “Advancing researcher-practitioner dialogues: Investigating K-12 world language teachers’ perceptions of second language acquisition research” at the 2024 American Association for Applied Linguistics (AAAL) Conference in Houston on Saturday, March 16, 2024.`

Caitlyn posing with her award in front of a monitor displaying her presentation.

Sociolinguistics Concentration Ph.D. Candidate Hannah Fedder Williams received the Best Student Paper Award at the 2023 National Communication Association (NCA) Conference. Hannah presented her paper, “‘That big bad policeman’: Police and civilian identities constructed in dialogue and narrative types” at the 2023 NCA on Friday, November 17, 2023.

Hannah at a podium, giving her presentation with a monitor displaying her slides.

Where this year’s crop of Georgetown Linguistics Ph.D. Graduates Are Getting Jobs

Talal is a Middle Eastern man with a short beard.

Dr. Talal Alharbi (Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “A sociolinguistic study of subject-verb word order variation in Najdi Arabic”) is an Assistant Professor at Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz University whose research interests include syntactic and phonological variation in Saudi Arabia, discourse analysis, and digital ethnography.

Dr. Hana Altalhi (Graduated May 2024, Dissertation, supported by the Saudi Arabian Cultural Mission: “Exploring variation and change in Huthail Arabic: The case of the first-person pronoun”) is a Sociolinguist working on language variation and change in varieties of Arabic.

Minnie is a black woman with braid pulled back into a ponytail and black squared glasses. She is listening with a laptop in front of her.

Dr. Minnie Annan(Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “‘When I was coming up, it was called the Chocolate City’: Phonological variation, narrative discourse, and identity construction among Speakers of African American Language in Washington, DC”) is the Vice President of Impact & Innovation for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington.

Bertille is a white woman with dark hair in a bun. She is wearing large black glasses, a pearl necklace and a blue and white patterned shirt.

Dr. Bertille Baron (Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “Multiple conditioning and variation in phonological alternations: The case of vowel hiatus in Ikpana”) is working as a Digital Product Owner at 4indata, an AI software editor that offers several patented API packages whose objective is semantic analysis of textual and image content for competitive intelligence, automatic generation of textual content to increase visibility in search engines, and product deduplication.

Helen is wearing a blue shirt

Dr. Helen Dominic (Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “Brokering relationships and language: The emotional labor of immigrant family interpreters”) is working as a Researcher at the Georgetown Center for Child and Human Development.

Erin as a white woman with brown hair and large glasses. She is wearing a dark beige shirt and blazer.

Dr. Erin Fell (Graduated May 2024, Dissertation: “Independent reading in the exploratory Spanish classroom: Who Is missing from the picture of “typical” second language reading development?”) is the Founder of LANGuistics, a company dedicated to providing research-driven instructional coaching services, curated guides, and accessible resources for second language educators, including her blog, “LANGuistics: Where language teaching meets linguistics research.”

Luke is a man with brown hair wearing a light blue collared shirt.

Dr. Luke Gessler (Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “Low-resource monolingual transformer language models”) accepted an Assistant Professor position in the Linguistics Dept. at Indiana University. He will start in the fall, transitioning from a postdoc at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Junhyoon is an Asian woman with long black hair and wearing a black shirt.

Dr. Jungyoon Koh (Graduated May 2024, Dissertation: “Interaction with and about conversational user interfaces: An Interactional sociolinguistic approach”) accepted an Assistant Teaching Professor position in the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University for the 2024–2025 academic year.

Jessica is a white woman with short blonde hair, wearing a black shirt.

Dr. Jessica Kotfila (Graduated December 2023, Dissertation: “The acquisition of word order: From strings to sentences”) is the Director of Georgetown University’s Interdisciplinary Program in Cognitive Science.

Janet is an Asian woman with short black hair, wearing a tan sweater.

Dr. Yang Janet Liu (Graduated May 2024, Dissertation: “Generalizability and genre effects in discourse understanding and parsing in rhetorical structure theory”) accepted an Assistant Professor position in the Linguistics Dept. at the University of Pittsburgh. She will start in Fall 2025, and will first complete a Postdoc at the MaiNLP research lab at the Center for Information and Language Processing at LMU Munich.

Alexandra is a white woman with brown hair, wearing a black suit.

Dr. Alexandra Slome (Expected graduation August 2024, Dissertation: “Discursive construction of defendant and victim identity in courtroom opening statement narratives”) accepted a position at Taylor Trial Consulting as an Associate Trial Consultant.

Malik is wearing a white shirt

Dr. Malik Stevenson (Expected graduation August 2024, Dissertation: “Real eyes, realize, real lies: Black perspectives on Dual Language Immersion and its role in gentrifying communities”) is an Adjunct Lecturer in the Department of Literature at American University and an Instructor for the English Language Training Academy. His research explores intersections between bilingual education and gentrification in the DC metro area.

Seyma is a woman with curly black hair, wearing a white blazer and black top.

Dr. Şeyma Toker Bradshaw (Graduated August 2023, Dissertation: “Pedagogizing and investigating emotion, identity, and agency in a critical practicum for pre-service L2 teachers”) is now a Senior UX Researcher at Bixal.

Zhuosi in front of a poster presentation

Dr. Zhuosi Luo (Graduated May 2024, Dissertation: “Causality, modality and contextual argument interpretation: Lessons from Teochew”) accepted an Assistant Professor and Researcher position at the National Research Center for Foreign Language Education at Beijing Foreign Studies University.

Explore our Ph.D. alumni employment placement for previous years.

Upcoming Events

Save the Date for GURT 2025!

The 76th annual Georgetown University Roundtable (GURT) conference will be held from February 28 to March 2, 2025 and the theme is Language and Food


Prof. Cynthia Gordon is the organizer. The call for papers, announcement of the plenary speakers, and more information will be coming in early September.

GURT temporary logo

24-25 Department Talks and Events

Be sure to check out the exciting lineup of talks and events happening in our department this semester. From guest speakers to workshops and social gatherings, there’s something for everyone. Stay engaged and make the most of these opportunities to connect, learn, and grow! look

View the Full List of Events

Recent Publications

Ashraf, Hina.

Bryfonski, Lara.

Gordon, Cynthia.

Koh, Jungyoon.

Kramer, Ruth.

Mackey, Alison.

Nycz, Jen.

Obiri-Yeboah, Michael.

Ortega, Lourdes.

Schneider, Nathan.

Tadic, Nadja.

Zsiga, Elizabeth.

If you are interested in supporting the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University, we would like to ask you to please consider making a donation to help us sustain our mission of excellence in linguistics. Donations to the Department of Linguistics can be made through this link. Your generous contributions enable us to advance our research, enhance our educational programs, and foster innovation in the field of linguistics. We deeply appreciate your generosity. Please feel free to contact the Department Chair if you’d like to discuss a donation.

We wish everyone a wonderful rest of the summer, and we look forward to the coming 2024–2025 year.