My Summer: Sabina Neugebauer
This is the seventh, and final, story in a series of articles exploring
the summer work of HGSE doctoral students.
Posted: November 17, 2006
Twelve thousand feet above sea level in the small town of Cusco, Peru, doctoral
student Sabina Neugebauer began to see her interests in language attitudes and
identities come alive. What began as a summer to learn fluent Spanish turned
into a summer of learning a lot more for Neugebauer.
Two grants, the David Rockefeller Fellowship and the Foreign Language Area
Studies Fellowship, provided her an opportunity to travel to Cusco, study Spanish,
conduct classroom observations, and live with a family. Initially, she planned
to improve her Spanish for the ICON Project, a digital literacy intervention
program for English Language Learners with Shattuck Professor Catherine Snow.
Instead, the unique makeup of Cusco--which has an indigenous Andean population--gave
Neugebauer a rare opportunity to examine the complex linguistic relationship
between the native languages of Quechua, an original language of the Inca Empire
still spoken in South America today, and Spanish, the other official language
of Peru. She conducted interviews on the history, language, and social experiences
of these different linguistic groups.
For nearly two months, Neugebauer took a notebook everywhere. She took four
hour-long classes in Spanish, followed by afternoon classroom observations in
the public and private sector, and then interviewed school officials.
“All the theory regarding linguistic capital that I learned in courses
in Language and Literacy at HGSE served to enhance my understanding in this
setting. There's no way I could've conducted those observations
without my training at HGSE,” she said.
While Neugebauer is indeed a better Spanish speaker now, she said she took
away so much more from the experience. As she moves forward, she plans to revisit
Cusco this fall and is currently developing an instrument that measures linguistic
self-worth and self-efficacy.
“I wish to return because of the responsibility I feel toward the people
I interviewed.”
she said.