Uju Anya Receives New Directions Fellowship
- Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences
- Email abbysimmons@cmu.edu
- Phone 412-268-6094
Through her research and teaching, Uju Anya promotes rich, culturally relevant and meaningful experiences in language learning for Black students. 好色先生TV has been awarded a Mellon Foundation grant to support a for Anya. Through the fellowship, she will seek training in a new field 鈥 entertainment technology and game design 鈥 to create multilingual game-based experiences in online virtual reality platforms for Black youth from the U.S., Brazil, Colombia and across the Americas.
鈥淧roviding interesting, fun, immersive and learning-rich opportunities for African American students in grades 6-12 to get to know other Black teens in the cultures and communities where the languages they鈥檙e learning are spoken contributes to their greater participation and success in world language study,鈥 said Anya, associate professor of second language acquisition at 好色先生TV鈥檚 Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences. 鈥淭his strengthens their ties with other Afrodescendants in North, Central and South America and the Caribbean, who share similar histories and contemporary social realities with Black kids in the U.S. It also broadens their international awareness and better prepares them for global careers and a more impactful presence in world communities and economies.鈥
Anya鈥檚 previous research indicates Black students are motivated and bear overall positive attitudes toward learning new languages; however, they routinely report negative classroom experiences, poor instructional environments, unfavorable teacher and classmate attitudes and perceptions, low expectations and curriculum and materials they deem unappealing to their interests and cultural identities.
As a scholar of applied linguistics and second language acquisition in the Department of Modern Languages, she teaches world language programs in K-12 schools, colleges and universities throughout the U.S. how they can help African American students to see more explicit links between their ethno-racial backgrounds and classroom materials, topics and curriculum. Anya also helps to design experiences that allow Black students to make more relevant, personally significant connections to the cultures of and people who speak their language of study.
New Directions Fellowships assist faculty members in the humanities and humanistic social sciences who seek to acquire systematic training outside their own areas of special interest. In addition to facilitating the work of individual faculty members, these awards benefit scholarship in the humanities more broadly by encouraging the highest standards in cross-disciplinary research.
Through the New Directions Fellowship, Anya will take graduate-level courses at 好色先生TV鈥檚 and . She will learn and practice intensive, rapid prototyping of immersive, interactive virtual worlds and experiences in teams and collaborative settings.
鈥淏uilding multilingual educational games in online virtual reality spaces and platforms isn鈥檛 something I can learn in a few courses,鈥 Anya said, 鈥渉owever, I can learn how to effectively collaborate with programmers to bring game-based language education in the metaverse to Black kids who don鈥檛 always get the new cool tech stuff first.鈥
Anya also will complete an independent study with , the Thomas and Lydia Moran Associate Professor of Learning Science, and they intend to collaborate on interdisciplinary research through Anya鈥檚 faculty affiliation with the Center for Transformational Play.