UArizona receives $5.9M for international programs, including new National Resource Center for East Asian studies

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group of students jumping, with Shanghai in the background

Students in the Arizona-in-Shanghai program, an intensive language and cultural immersion program, celebrate at the Bund, a waterfront area in Shanghai. The skyline of the Pudong financial district is in the background.

Yan Liang

The University of Arizona will establish a new Center for East Asian Studies that will join three other longstanding international centers on campus. The four centers will receive a combined $5.9 million in federal Title VI grant funding over the next four years.

The funding, given as Title VI grants from the U.S. Department of Education, will support teaching, research and outreach programs and help affirm the university's status as a leader in foreign language and international studies instruction and international engagement.

The university's Center for Latin American Studies and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies have been awarded new grants to support their continued operation as Title VI National Resource Centers, or NRCs, which provide research and instruction in foreign languages and international studies, as well as outreach to K-12 schools and the wider community. The Center for East Asian Studies has been funded as an NRC for the first time.

The UArizona Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacy has been funded for its fifth round as a National Language Resource Center. These centers develop resources for the teaching and learning of foreign languages at K-12 and college levels across the United States and promote the learning of languages that are less commonly taught.

In addition, the Center for Latin American Studies and the Center for Middle Eastern Studies will receive funding for Foreign Language and Area Studies student fellowships.

According to the U.S. Department of Education website, these Title VI grants are designed to respond to the "ongoing national need for individuals with expertise and competence in world languages and area or international studies." They contribute to developing a globally competent workforce, expand access to foreign language learning, and support teaching and research on critical world regions and languages. 

"In our increasingly globalized world, the study of foreign languages and international cultures is as critical as ever," said University of Arizona President Robert C. Robbins. "This is a proud area of strength for the University of Arizona, and this new funding will allow us to continue as a world leader in international and foreign language teaching, research and scholarship."

Linking East Asia with the southwestern U.S.

The newly established Center for East Asian Studies in the College of Humanities will receive $782,686 over four years to support and promote East Asian language and cultural teaching and research across the university and through outreach to K-12 schools, higher education institutions and the broader community. The center is the first Title VI NRC at a Hispanic-Serving Institution to focus on East Asia, and the co-directors are Wenhao Diao and Scott Gregory, both associate professors in the Department of East Asian Studies.

With 67 UArizona faculty members in many disciplines doing work related to East Asia, the center aims to consolidate East Asia-related resources on campus, throughout southern Arizona and across the Southwest. One of the center's priorities over the next four years is to develop collaborative, interdisciplinary courses with higher education institutions in East Asia, on topics related to sustainability and diversity. The center will also aim to develop and grow the instruction of East Asian languages at UArizona and to provide opportunities for students to study and get internships in East Asia.

"The Center for East Asian Studies will focus on themes that simultaneously define our current national and international needs and are relevant to Arizona's concerns," Diao said. "As a brand-new center, we cannot be more thrilled for the great news. As you can imagine, it's incredibly difficult to get funded as a new application and this really means bringing visibility to our expertise in East Asia here on the University of Arizona campus and our potential role in linking East Asia with the southwestern U.S."

Educating the next generation on Latin America

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Attendees at a cooking class

UArizona students took a cooking class in Oaxaca, Mexico, as part of their Latin American Studies “Sabores de Mexico, From Farm to Table” course.

The Center for Latin American Studies in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences will receive approximately $2.2 million over the four-year cycle – $1,084,108 for NRC activities and $1,128,096 for Foreign Language and Area Studies fellowships.

The funding will allow the center to hire a full-time director of outreach and to fund – along with the Center for East Asian Studies and Center for Middle Eastern Studies – a new faculty position in international studies education. The three centers will also collaborate on a speaker series on important issues across world regions.

The Center for Latin American Studies will support its more than 160 core and affiliate faculty through faculty grants, as well as offer professional development opportunities for K-12, community college and university educators. In addition to its regular public lectures, the center will also sponsor the Cinema Tucson monthly film series.

With its record of excellence, geographic location, and cultural and historical ties to Latin America, the Center for Latin American Studies is uniquely positioned to educate the next generation of experts on Latin America, said center director Marcela Vásquez-León.

"Being recognized as a National Resource Center allows us to continue to provide enhanced opportunities for students at all levels through an expanded curriculum with a focus on Latin America and by offering scholarships for study abroad, internships, research and language immersion in Portuguese as well as in Maya and other Indigenous languages of Latin America," Vásquez-León said.

Increasing understanding of the Middle East

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Outreach scholars in the Center for Middle Eastern Studies

Outreach scholars in the Center for Middle Eastern Studies give presentations to school and community groups on request.

The Center for Middle Eastern Studies in the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences will receive approximately $2.2 million over four years – $1,087,836 for NRC activities and $1,128,096 for Foreign Language and Area Studies fellowships. An NRC since 1975, it is one of only two Middle Eastern studies NRCs west of the Mississippi River.

"This year's NRC competition was particularly keen, with 14 Middle East NRCs reduced to 11," said center director Anne Betteridge. "The center's success reflects the high quality of the University of Arizona's Middle East-related scholarship and teaching. It remains an honor to be able to support teaching, learning and research about the Middle East and North Africa – vitally important and diverse regions with deep histories, complex politics and cultural riches that are often little understood or misunderstood."

In the new funding cycle, the center will further develop and expand the university's Middle Eastern studies resources and teaching, and support public events aimed at increasing understanding of the Middle East. Planned activities include curriculum development for educators in both K-12 and higher education settings, as well as language instruction and language-learning opportunities. The center will help support hiring a new faculty member in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences to focus on environmental science in the Middle East. The center also will engage in and arts-related collaborations with the Center for Creative Photography and the Poetry Center.

The fellowship funds will also allow the center to award academic-year and summer funding to UArizona students in any discipline who study Arabic, Hebrew, Persian or Turkish. 

A commitment to integrating culture, literacy and language learning

The Center for Educational Resources in Culture, Language and Literacy in the College of Humanities will receive $699,640 over four years. Since its founding in 2006, the center has received Title VI funding to develop resources for teaching and learning foreign languages and culture, and to offer professional development opportunities for educators regionally, nationally and internationally.

 Housed in the College of Humanities, the center is led by co-directors Beatrice Dupuy, professor of French, public and applied humanities, and second language acquisition and teaching, and Chantelle Warner, associate professor of German studies and second language acquisition and teaching.

The center's 13 projects and seven initiatives address four areas that share a commitment to integrating culture, literacy and language learning.

"By taking many of our events online in the wake of the pandemic, we have been able to reach out further, increase our U.S. and global audience, and in doing so, we substantially increased our overall visibility and thus our impact," said Dupuy. "Our funding has created an opportunity for people from the U.S. to be a part of the international community, and also to be part of current national and international conversations on equity, diversity and inclusion, themes that will continue to be reflected in the set of projects we proposed for this new grant cycle."