Dr. Shushan Karapetian walking to the stage to receive the Young Scholar Award
LOS ANGELES—The National Heritage Language Resource Center at UCLA hosts an International Conference on Heritage/Community Languages every four years, during which the Russ Campbell Young Scholar Award in Heritage Language Education is presented. The award was established in 2014 in honor of Professor Russell Campbell, whose work was instrumental in launching the field of Heritage Language Studies. The aim of the award is to recognize outstanding scholarship by two individuals who are currently working on a dissertation, or who have filed one within the last five years, that focuses on topics related to heritage language. The award is accompanied by a $500 prize.
On February 16, during the Third International Conference on Heritage/Community Languages at UCLA, Dr. Shushan Karapetian was announced as the first winner of the Russ Campbell Young Scholar Award in Heritage Language Education for her work on Armenian heritage language speakers. The second winner was Dr. Marta McCabe from Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic for her work on Czech and Slovak languages in the U.S. context. The selection committee, comprised of several blind reviewers, received submissions from various disciplines, including sociolinguistics, linguistics, and pedagogy, covering a wide range of languages such as Armenian, Chickasaw, Chinese, Cornish, Czech and Slovak, Greek, Korean, Persian, Spanish, and Russian. In regard to Dr. Karapetian’s submission on heritage language anxiety and the debilitating impact of its manifestation on heritage language development and maintenance among Armenian heritage language speakers, one of the reviewers said: “This was a really strong paper that looked at the anxieties of Armenian heritage language speakers and how that maps on to anxieties of belonging. The discussion of the psychological aspect of heritage language learning, namely, the effects of shaming is crucial and insufficiently addressed in the field.â€