Ben Calman, master's student in Second Language Education at ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ University, is the winner of the prestigious Graduate Student Award at the American Association for Applied Linguistics. This important award recognizes excellence in graduate student research submitted to the conference.
Ben Calman’s research explores the intersections of language and race . His master’s thesis focuses on the experiences of inclusion and discrimination among plurilingual international students at a Canadian university. Through this research, Ben has developed aÌýtaxonomy of raciolinguistic microaggressionsÌýto better understand how ideologies rooted in racism and linguicism co-construct and re-enforce each other. He has also shed light on howÌýplurilingual international students forge an inclusive plurilingual-international community through plurilingual practices and their plurilingual and pluricultural competence (PPC). Ben looks forward to continuing in this vein of research while shifting the focus onto perpetrators of discrimination to develop better understandings of the biases and ideologies at the root of raciolinguistic discrimination.