November 7, 2025

Highlights


  • Spotlight: Celebrating Nancy Monda's remarkable legacy
  • Alumna recognized with lifetime career award
  • Learning comes to life in LCAL classrooms
  • Now accepting summer 2026 study abroad applications
  • Upcoming Event: LCAL Languages Night on Nov. 12 and grad programs' open houses!

In the Spotlight

Celebrating Nancy Monda's Remarkable Legacy

After more than 40 years at Carnegie Mellon — including 36 years with LCAL — Nancy Monda has retired. As business manager, Nancy was the department's steady cornerstone, guiding it through decades of growth with unmatched dedication, warmth and institutional knowledge. Her colleagues describe her as "the heart of LCAL" and "a quiet force behind every success."


To celebrate her extraordinary career, LCAL hosted a heartfelt retirement gathering and launched a crowdfunding campaign in her honor to support awards recognizing exceptional service among LCAL staff. Read more.

Awards & Recognition

Liu Li (DC 2011), associate professor of Chinese at Ball State University, received the 2025 Indiana Foreign Language Teachers Association (IFLTA) William Hatfield Distinguished Lifetime World Language Career Award.


This award recognizes IFLTA members who have made significant contributions to the world language profession at the national, state and local levels. The committee commended Dr. Li's exceptional service as IFLTA Teacher of the Year Chair, AAPI Vice President at Ball State University, STARTALK program leader, student mentor and distinguished Chinese professor at Ball State.

Adam van Compernolle and Tianya (Sophie) Qin (DC 2018) were awarded a Research Priorities Grant by the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) to fund their study "Developing pragmatic competence in digital interaction: A computerized dynamic assessment of L2 Chinese learners."

Publication & Scholarship

Katharine Burns and her collaborator Tracy Quan (University of Colorado Boulder) published "The ideological positioning of heritage language learners: A critical discourse analysis of world language teacher preparation textbooks" in The Modern Language Journal. http://doi.org/10.1111/modl.70008

Michael McEachrane published the chapter "Situating Afro-/African Swedish Studies" in Black Studies in Europe: An Anthology of Soil and Seeds (Northwestern University Press, 2025).

Felipe Gómez virtually presented his paper “Balada para niños muertos: Memoria afectiva y espectralidad en el documental de Jorge Navas,” and led a conversation with the director of the film at the XXIV Congreso Bienal Asociación de Colombianistas: “Colombias posibles” hosted by Ithaca College from Oct. 8–10.

Lynette Shin, a Hispanic Studies major and pre-med student in the Humanities Scholars Program, recently co-presented research with Joshua H. Gordon, M.D., from the Department of Psychiatry at the Pittsburgh VA Medical Center. Lynette’s humanistic perspective helped shed light on Veterans who may be overlooked by current suicide risk prediction tools in their talk “Risk factors for suicide among Veterans suicide decedents who were not considered to be high risk for suicide.”

On Oct. 30, Pina Gemboni gave a guest lecture on Italian postcolonial literature to students in the University of Florida's Italian program. The talk was part of the course Translating Migration taught by professor Gabriele Belletti.

In the Classroom

On Oct. 24, Italian studies students enjoyed a performance of Giacomo Puccini's La Bohème by the Pittsburgh Opera with professors Pina Gemobini and Emanuele Stefanori.

On Oct. 28, students in 82-139B Chinese Learning Through Cultural Practices and Community Engagement participated in a special martial arts sessions with members of the CMU Washu Club. The club gave a demonstration and introduced students to basic Washu forms and techniques.

On the same day, students in 82-139A Chinese Learning Through Cultural Practices and Community Engagement were visited by master Kate Wang, founder of MW Taichi & Wellness. Students practiced Taichi and Qigong (Ba Duan Jin) in an energetic, hands-on class.

On Oct. 30–31, Candace Lukasik, assistant professor of religion at Mississippi State University, visited a Humanities Scholars class, engaging students in thoughtful discussion about religion, migration and global identity. During her visit, Dr. Lukasik also delivered a talk and led a workshop exploring Copts, Assyrians, transnational identity and the persecution politics of the U.S. empire.

After studying the history, origin and contested claims of Egyptian and Levantine dishes, students in Elementary Arabic and Global Food Cultures classes engaged in a hands-on 'cookalong.' They put their learning into practice by chopping, slicing and layering to make the very dishes they had researched.

Conversation Groups

Open to students of all levels — join a language conversation group to practice your speaking skills! (Please note: conversation groups will not meet over fall break.)


Chatto — Japanese

Every Tuesday. View the schedule for up-to-date locations and times.


Suda Pop — Korean

Every Wednesday at 5 p.m. in the LCAL Studio (POS 343). Join their Discord to stay up-to-date!


Tertulias — Spanish

Every Thursday from 6–7 p.m. in the LCAL Studio (POS 343)

In the Department

News

On Oct. 28, German studies in collaboration with the College of Engineering hosted the second event in the Germany on Campus series sponsored by the German Embassy. Guest speakers Mikael Lindvall and Prahlad Menon from Fraunhofer USA delivered a talk titled "Accelerating Innovation for Real-World Applications: Using AI to Solve Applied Research Problems." More than 140 students attended!

Announcements

Summer 2026 Study Abroad Programs

We are now accepting applications for our summer 2026 study abroad programs in Doha, Qatar; Freiburg, Germany; Madrid, Spain; Monteverde, Costa Rica; Nantes, France; and Shanghai, China! While our program in Seoul, South Korea has not opened applications yet, students can still fill out our inquiry form and will be notified when the applications go live.

Online Language Learning Has Launched Arabic I

Our Online Language Learning program has officially launched Arabic I for independent learners! This course is geared toward learners who are not enrolled at CMU (like CMU faculty and staff) who are interested in language learning. Learn more on our website.

Graduate Programs Accepting Applications for Fall 2026

  • Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition
  • M.A. in Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition
  • Open House on Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. (ET) — Register today!
  • M.A. in Applied Linguistics & Second Language Acquisition — Advanced Study
  • Open House on Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. (ET) — Register today!
  • M.A. in Global Communication & Applied Translation
  • Open House on Dec. 2 at 8 p.m. (ET) — Register today!


Visit our website for more details!

SONA: Immersive Storytelling Festival

The call for submissions for SONA 2026 is open until December 12. Following the success of the first festival, the second edition will showcase immersive technology in language and culture and bring creators from the immersive storytelling community to CMU. To discuss inviting artists or supporting new projects through the Immersive Cultural Innovation Fund, please email Stephan Caspar.

Upcoming Events


Germany's Economy and Opportunities in German Business in the U.S.

Join Rachel Mauer, president of the German American Chamber of Commerce, Pittsburgh Chapter, for an introduction to the German-American business community. This event is part of the Germany on Campus Series at CMU and is sponsored by the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany as well as CMU’s College of Engineering and LCAL.

Nov. 10 | 5–6 p.m. | Posner Hall Grand Room (POS 340)


LCAL Languages Night

Explore the many languages and cultures represented in our programs through fun, interactive activities at themed language tables. Complete activities to earn stamps and win prizes, all while enjoying authentic cultural snacks and drinks from around the world. Open to undergraduate students of all disciplines! Sign up here.

Nov. 12 | 6–7:30 p.m. | Posner Hall Grand Room (POS 340)


Spring 2026 Registration

Course registration for spring 2026 opens the week of Nov. 17–21.


Thanksgiving and Native American Heritage Day Break

There will be no classes on Wed., Nov. 26. The university will be closed Thurs., Nov. 27 for Thanksgiving Day and Fri., Nov. 28 for Native American Heritage Day. Normal operations and class schedules will resume on Mon., Dec. 1.


ICOR Series with Sanghee Kang

LCAL’s ICOR Series provides a welcoming forum for faculty and graduate students to share and discuss their most recent research in an engaging, accessible format. Designed to spark dialogue across disciplines, the next sessions will highlight the research of Sanghee Kang, assistant professor of second language acquisition, English as a second language and Korean studies.

Dec. 3 | 4–5:30 p.m. | LCAL Studio and Humanities Commons (POS 343)


View all upcoming LCAL events and details.

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